Barrow v. Cazeaux

5 La. 72
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 La. 72 (Barrow v. Cazeaux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrow v. Cazeaux, 5 La. 72 (La. 1833).

Opinion

The facts of the case are fully stated in the opinion of the court delivered by

Pouter, J.

The defendant sold, by authentic act to the plaintiff, a tract of land, and took out an order of seizure and sale, to enforce payment of part of the purchase money.

The plaintiff, by his petition, alleges this writ issued improvidently, and should be enjoined on these grounds. He was induced to make the purchase of the land from a belief that it was high and elevated. The defendant exhibited a plat of survey, by which the tract bought was so represented; he was put in possession in conformity thereby, and continued so until the.day of....when it was discovered that the original location was erroneous; and the same was accordingly altered by the surveyor who acted under the authority of the United States. In consequence of this alte[75]*75ration, he has been ousted of his possession, by which he has suffered great injury. A considerable part of what was high land in the plat of survey exhibited to him at the time of purchase, is excluded from the last made, and one hundred and fifty acres of swamp substituted in its stead. The defendant was cognizant of these facts, and promised to reimburse him the difference in value between these portions of land.

The answer avers, that the defendant sold to the plaintiff a tract of land containing thirty arpents front on each side of bayou Terre Bonne, with such depth as to include six hundred and forty superficial acres, bounded above by lands of respondent, and below by lands confirmed in the name of Joseph Gereno, with general warranty for the sum of eighteen thousand dollars; and that to receive the payment of the purchase money, a mortgage was reserved on the premises; that the sum claimed on the executive process is justly due; and that the injunction, in this case, issued contrary to law, and should be set aside.

To these special averments is joined a denial of all the other allegations in the plaintiff’s petition.

The court below was of opinion that the writ of injunction had issued improvidently, and ordered it to be dissolved, but as no motion had been made on the face of the papers, to have this disposition made of the cause, and as the parties have gone to trial on the merits, the court considered the defendant bound by his promise to pay the difference in value, proceeding from the first and second location of the title. This value is fixed at two thousand four hundred and twenty dollars. From this judgment the defendant has appealed.

The first questions in the cause, are, whether the case, as exhibited by the plaintiff’s petition, is such a one as autho-rised an injunction? or, if it be not, whether advantage can be taken of this defect, after the parties have joined issue on the merits, and have gone to trial on them.

We are inclined to the opinion, the case was one which authorised an injunction. Defendant’s counsel have argued as if the matters set up here arose out of claims distinct [76]*76from the debt attempted to be enforced, and were indepen- dent of it. If such were the case, the objections made to the ¿amages not being liquidated, and the consequent inability pjeaci them in compensation, would probably be found correct. But, in the instance before us, the ground laid for the injunction is the failure of the vendee to carry into effect the agreement which created the debt sued on. If this fact be true, as alleged in the petition, and if it be, as is also there alleged, that the obligee admitted the fact and promised to make a deduction to the extent of the injury sustained, it would seem to be a fair conclusion that the whole amount originally promised was not due, and that the debt was extinguished in whole, or in part, as the case might be. See Code of Practice, 739, art. 3.

Several bills of exceptions, taken on the trial, present questions which we do not find necessary to examine, as we are of opinion that the promise which the defendant made is binding on him, and that there was a good consideration for the promise.

When the last survey was made, the defendant stated that he was sorry any alteration had been made, and that he would make good the damage to the plaintiff.

Subsequently, when presented with a paper, the purport of which was, that the amount of the damages should be left to arbitration, he refused to sign it, saying that he had not then time to do so; that reliance should be placed on his honor, as he had never deceived the plaintiff and that when he returned from New-Orleans, he would leave the question as to the amount of damages to men, or arbitrators.

The objections made to the admissibility and effect of this evidence may be classed under these heads:

1. That the agreement to have the damages left to arbitration, was null and void, in consequence of its not being reduced to writing.

2. That it was a mere pollicitation, and not binding for want of acceptance.

3. That parol evidence was improperly received of the defendant’s acknowledgment of a change in the location.

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4. That admitting it to be properly received, and that charge established by it, there was no good consideration, as there was no actual eviction.

The first and second points may be properly considered together.

The acknowledgment to a third party by the defendant, that he owed the damages and would pay them, is, in our opinion, binding on him, and enures to the advantage of the plaintiff. In the argument, counsel has considered the case before us, as one of contract, which it was perfectly free for tile defendant to give his assent to or not; but it is not one of that kind. It is a confession which there was a moral obligation in him to make, and which (as Toullier well states it) he could not justly refuse to make. By the former, a man consents to oblige himself. By the latter, he consents to acknowledge a pre-existing obligation, or an anterior fact. An admission of the kind hinds the maker, if made in the presence of the creditor, although the party to be benefited by it, does not express his assent. And it is good if made to a third person, if supported hy other facts and circumstances which render it probable, and it receive the assent of the party in whose favor it is made. In this case, there is evidence of such assent, for the plaintiff subsequently demanded of the defendant that the amount of the damages should be left to arbitration. Toullier, vol. 10, chap. 6, sec. 4, nos. '260, 304 and 307.

As connected with this part of the subject, it is proper to notice an objection that the proof of this promise was established by the oath of one witness alone, and that the amount attempted to be proved was above five hundred dollars. His testimony, however, has the strong corroborating circumstance, that the defendant promised to have the amount of damages settled by men, or arbitrators. The value of this fact as auxiliary proof, is not diminished, in our judgment, by the consideration that the agreement not being reduced to writing, was not valid as a compromise.

3. The agreement being thus established to pay the damages, we have next to consider of the third objection, that a [78]*78legal cause is not shown for it. By our law. an agreement is not less valid though the cause be not expressed. La.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 La. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrow-v-cazeaux-la-1833.