Blache v. Goodier

22 So. 2d 82, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 354
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketNo. 18217.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 82 (Blache v. Goodier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blache v. Goodier, 22 So. 2d 82, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 354 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

This is a suit by a real estate agent to collect a commission from a prospective *Page 84 purchaser who is alleged to have made an offer to purchase a piece of real estate, and to have then refused to complete the purchase after the acceptance of the offer by the owner. The defense of the defendant is his averment that he signed the printed offer form in blank and that the real estate agent in filling it in afterwards inserted terms and conditions entirely different from those which had been agreed upon. From a judgment for the defendant the real estate agent has appealed.

Gerald L. Blache, the plaintiff, is a real estate agent in New Orleans. His father, J. Henry Blache, who, according to the record, has been a real estate agent for more than twenty-five years, was enployed in the office of his son, Gerald, in whose name the business is operated. Mrs. Josephine Larrain desired to sell a piece of improved residential real estate and "listed" it for sale with the Blache office. That office advertised it in a local newspaper.

Elbert H. Goodier saw the advertisement and, becoming interested, called at the Blache office on July 21, 1943, to discuss the matter with J. Henry Blache, and agreed to make an offer of $7,000 for the property. He says that he explained to Blache that he could not pay the entire amount in cash and that it would be necessary that he make his offer subject to a homestead loan in the sum of $5,400. He says too that on that day he was anxious to return to his office as soon as possible, as he was interested in a War Loan Drive which was being conducted, and that, therefore, he signed three triplicate original offer forms in blank under the agreement that Mr. Blache would fill them out but would hold them until the next day when he could return to check them over to see that they were filled out in accordance with his verbal understanding. These triplicates were on standard forms adopted and approved by Real Estate Board of New Orleans, Incorporated, and bore at the top the name "Gerald L. Blache". On them, among other stipulations, was the following:

"If this offer is accepted _____ will deposit with vendor's agent immediately in cash __________ dollars."

He says that on the next morning he telephoned to the Blache office to say that he could not come until later and that at that time he reported to Blache that he and Mrs. Goodier and Mrs. Goodier's father and mother had been to the property and had found that children of the tenants were "pumping water on the floors of the house and so forth". He says that he did not mention this as an objection to taking the property but merely because he thought that the owner should notify the tenants to put a stop to such acts of vandalism. He says also that at that time "not a word was mentioned" by Blache about Mrs. Larrain's having already accepted the offer.

Blache says that the forms were fully filled out and dated when Goodier signed them, and that there was no agreement that the offer was to be subject to a homestead loan. He submitted the offer to Mrs. Larrain on that day and she signed her acceptance of it at once.

He states also that although Goodier did say that he did not have sufficient cash for the entire purchase price, he said that he thought that he could borrow enough from his father-in-law and mother-in-law who "were going to buy with him" or from some other source, and that he mentioned the fact that the store in which he had been employed for many years had a "bureau for lending" and that he might be able to borrow the balance from that bureau.

Blache testified that he told Goodier that $7,000 cash was the "rock bottom" price which Mrs. Larrain would accept and that he knew this since she had just refused a similar offer because it contained a "potestative" or homestead clause.

He explained that since he knew that Mrs. Larrain would accept nothing less than $7,000 cash, he had already prepared a set of forms, inserting the price "$7,000.00 cash" and that he intended to use these should anyone offer that amount, and that as Goodier agreed to offer that amount he used these forms and merely had the date of the offer and the date of its expiration written into them, and that then Goodier signed them. And that Goodier agreed that the offer would be presented to Mrs. Larrain at once, and that if she would accept it, as Blache knew that she would, he, Goodier, would return on the next day and make the deposit of $700 as required by the offer.

Blache further says that at about 10 o'clock on the next morning, Goodier 'phoned him and asked whether the offer had been accepted, and was told that it had been and that Goodier then said that he was busy on the War Loan Drive and "would see me about 1 o'clock", but that *Page 85 at 1:30 or 2 o'clock he telephoned to say that his mother-in-law and his father-in-law had been to see the house, and had found children "pumping water into the back room", and that his father-in-law was the one who was going to put up some of the money with him to buy it and that they "were about to change their mind".

Goodier came in again about 2:30 o'clock that afternoon and Blache says that he looked at the agreement and the acceptance and was shown a letter which Blache was about to send to him confirming the sale and was also shown a receipt which was to be given him for the deposit.

Goodier demanded one of the executed triplicate originals of the agreement but refused to make the deposit. Blache refused to give him one of the triplicate originals.

Goodier then called on Mr. Alvin P. Frymire, an attorney, and Mr. Frymire telephoned to Blache. He says that he advised Goodier not to make the deposit until he could first make certain that the offer contained a stipulation that it was subject to a homestead loan in the sum of $5,400, and that he sent Goodier back to Blache to request a "copy" of the contract. He says, too, that Goodier returned and said that Blache had refused to give him a copy and that therefore he had telephoned to Blache, and that in that conversation "I was not as well pleased as I would like to have been"; that Blache refused to give him a "copy" of the contract and that his "recollection" was that Blache had also said that he would not let him see the contract.

Blache testified that he was at all times willing for Mr. Frymire to see the contract and that Goodier did see it, and that what they both wanted was not a copy but one of the triplicate originals, and that he would not give them one of the originals because Goodier had not put up the deposit. He gave the following reasons for his refusal to deliver one of the triplicate originals without first receiving the deposit: * * * after you advise them that the offer has been accepted, if you turn them over the agreement, they will delay five or six or ten days before making the deposit, and they will change their mind, or they will take that agreement, maybe, and record it, and it would take you two or three months to get it straightened out, and in the meantime you would have the client's property tied up and you couldn't sell it to anybody else. * * *" An impasse resulted from Goodier's refusal to make the deposit. Thereafter Goodier caused his attorney to write to Blache a registered letter stating that he would not make the deposit, and confirming his "withdrawal of the offer".

A few days later, after this letter of withdrawal had been received, Blache, in cooperation with another real estate agent, found another purchaser for the property at the same price. The property was sold and a commission was paid, which was divided equally between Blache and the other agent.

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 2d 82, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blache-v-goodier-lactapp-1945.