Blackshear v. Landey

46 So. 2d 688, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 633
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1950
DocketNo. 19344
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 So. 2d 688 (Blackshear v. Landey) 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
Blackshear v. Landey, 46 So. 2d 688, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 633 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit for a real estate agent’s commission which is claimed to have been earned by obtaining a purchaser ready, willing and able to buy at the price at which the prospective vendor agreed to sell.

The defense is that the sale could not be consummated because after the contract to sell had been entered into, the wife of the prospective vendor, (one of the defendants here) acting under authority of Section 2 of Act 35 of the Extra Session of 1921, now R.S. 1950, 9:2802, registered in the office of the Register of Conveyances for the Parish of Orleans a declaration that the property, which was involved in the transaction, constituted the family home.

The real estate agent, Mrs. F. Blackshea^ is the wife of Dr. Stephen M. Blackshear, and he, as head of the community, brought the suit for ,the commission claimed to have been earned by her in her capacity as real estate agent.

In the district court, there was judgment for plaintiff for $40.61, representing the expenses' which the real estate agent incurred in .’obtaining the prospective purchaser, but rejecting the claim for the commission stipulated for in the contract. From this judgment plaintiff has appealed. Defendants have not answered the appeal.

In a carefully prepared written statement of his reasons for judgment the district judge discussed all of the facts and the law. His discussion is so thorough, and so adequately presents our views, that we have decided to adopt it as our own and on our part to discuss none of the questions involved except the refusal to allow recovery for attorney’s fees. We discuss this matter because counsel for plaintiff complains -that in his opinion the district judge “glossed over the attorney’s fees.”

The written reasons follow:

“This suit is brought by Dr. Stephen M. Blackshear on behalf of his wife, Mrs. May-bart Frost Blackshear, against Herbert M. [690]*690Landey. Mrs. Blackshear is a real estate broker and agent in the City of New Orleans, and it is shown by the evidence that Mr. Herbert M. Landey solicited her services as real estate agent and broker to sell the premises 1309 Octavia Street, this city, which said property formed part of the community of acquets and gains existing between himself and his wife and was occupied by them as a family home.

“Mrs. Blackshear, at the instance of the defendant, listed the property on the regular form of the New Orleans Real Estate Board, on June 1,1, 1947. This listing included all the furniture except the furniture in the owner’s apartment. Mr. Landey signed an offer to sell, dated August 23, 1947, which is on file in these proceedings.

“It is shown by the record that on numerous occasions the property was shown to prospective purchasers by Mrs. Blackshear and her agents, and that Mrs. Landey, one of the defendants herein, cheerfully cooperated in exhibiting the property to the prospective purchasers, and that on August 23, 1947, through the efforts of Mrs. Blackshear and her agents, a prospective purchaser of the property was found in the person of Mrs. Evelina Crump, who signed an agreement to purchase in the sum of $15,500, which said agreement was accepted by the defendant Herbert M. Landey.

“It is also shown by the record that the date October 1, 1947, was fixed for the passage of the act of sale before Elmer D. Flanders, Notary Public, and that the Notary refused to pass the act of sale because of the fact- that between the date of the offer, August 23, 1947, and October 1, 1947, defendant Mrs. Erna Inez Spell Landey appeared before a Notary Public in the City of New Orleans on August 26, 1947, and executed a declaration of homestead as the wife in community insofar as the property 1309 Octavia Street was concerned, under the provisions of Act 35 of the Extra Session of 1921, declaring the said property as a home, said declaration being recorded in C.O.B. 557, folio 103; M.O.B. 1719, folio 599, for the Parish of Orleans, on August 27, 1947.

“Petitioner bases his claim first on a contract suit for commission, provided for in the employment agreement of June 11, 1947, and the agreement to sell dated August 23, 1947. Secondly he sues on a quantum mer-uit and relies upon the equitable doctrine of unjust enrichment. Thirdly, petitioner claims in tort, alleging that the recordation of the declaration of family home was the result of collusive conduct between the two defendants, the husband and wife, for the purpose of making impossible the sale of the property in question, and thus wrongfully attempting to deprive Mrs. Blackshear of her commission.

“Mrs. Landey never signed the contract in question. Plaintiff seeks to hold Mrs. Landey because plaintiff claims she assented to the sale of the premises by her actions in cheerfully showing prospective purchasers through the premises and never at any time interposing any objection to the sale prior to the time that the act of sale was set before the Notary, at which time there was evidence to the effect that she asked for additional time in order that she might obtain another dwelling for herself and her family.

“Mrs. Landey testified she is an ill woman, that she has children, and that she had no other place in which to live. She further testified that she was always against the sale of the property, that she discussed the matter with her husband on many occasions. She also testified that the sale of the premises 1309 Octavia Street became such á heated subject that it almost caused an estrangement between them. ■

“Mrs. Landey stated that she had shown prospective purchasers through the premises, and had not remonstrated, but that she didn’t conceive it was any of the business of the general public who were being shown ■through her premises, or of the real estate agents who accompanied them, that she was having an argument with her husband concerning the sale of the premises. No benefit accrued to her because of plaintiff’s efforts, and she was enriched in no way. It is true that the house sold one year later for approximately one thousand dollars more, but the furniture was included in the sale, whereas in the offer on file the furniture was not included in the sale.

[691]*691“Mrs. Landey testified that at one time she did agree with her husband to the sale of the premises, but later changed her mind and decided to avail herself of the protection of Act 35 of the Extra Session of 1921, and without her husband’s knowledge she proceeded to the office of Oscar J. Tolmas, Notary- Public, and executed an instrument declaring the property to be a family home, and caused the same to be recorded. The record also shows that about one year later the property was sold for one thousand dollars more than the offer previosuly referred to.

“Mrs. Landey didn’t sign the contract, and the court does not believe she made herself a party to the contract by her remaining silent and her actions in showing people through the house. Plaintiff contends that his principal claim is based upon quantum meruit. Insofar as Mrs. Landey is concerned, she did not employ the plaintiff or his wife, by direction or indirection. She simply showed prospective purchasers through the house. No benefits accrued to her and she was enriched in no way.

“Plaintiff’s claim against Mrs. Landey, thirdly, sounds in tort. Plaintiff claims Mrs. Landey colluded with her husband to prevent the consummation of the contract in question by the recordation of the family home exemption.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 2d 688, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackshear-v-landey-lactapp-1950.