Blaize v. Cazezu

26 So. 2d 689, 28 So. 2d 689, 210 La. 176, 1946 La. LEXIS 777
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 27, 1946
DocketNo. 38003.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 689 (Blaize v. Cazezu) 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
Blaize v. Cazezu, 26 So. 2d 689, 28 So. 2d 689, 210 La. 176, 1946 La. LEXIS 777 (La. 1946).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Frank J. Blaize, on February 16, 1944, sold to the defendant, William Cazezu, for $2,000 his undivided one-third interest in a tract of land containing approximately 104% arpents, together with the improvements thereon, situated in the Town of Buras. The tract originally measured three arpents front on the Mississippi River by a depth of forty arpents, but its area was reduced when fifteen arpents, taken from the rear of the tract on the forty-arpent line were sold to J. B. Faster-ling and a lot measuring 120 square feet fronting on the highway was sold to Cognovich who in turn sold it to Fred S'tockfletch.

On June 19, 1944, which was about four months after the act of sale was recorded in the clerk’s office, Frank J. Blaize, the vendor, brought the present suit, against *180 William Cazezu, the purchaser, to set aside the sale for lesion beyond moiety. Plaintiff, who is eighty-three years of age, alleged that on the day the sale was executed his wife was seriously ill and at the point of death and he himself was not in good health and was in a condition of great worry and mental upset due to the illness and approaching death of his wife; that he was not in a condition to transact business, and that defendant took advantage of “his distraught condition in proposing to pay him the small sum of $2,000.00, which was a great deal less than the • true value of his property.” Mrs. Fannie Hays Blaize, the wife of plaintiff, died on'February 17, 1944, the day following the execution of the act of sale whereby defendant acquired plaintiff’s interest in the property.

Plaintiff alleged that the entire tract, with the improvements thereon, was worth at the time of the sale $20,000; that therefore his undivided one-third interest in the property was worth $6,666.66, thereby bringing the transaction under the provisions of the articles of the Civil Code providing for the rescission of sales for lesion beyond moiety. Plaintiff prayed for judgment setting aside the sale and for the fruits and revenues received by the defendant from the time he took possession of the property, upon plaintiff depositing for the account of defendant in the registry of the court $2,000, the' full amount of the purchase price, together with the costs incurred by defendant in connection with, the sale.

Defendant, in his answer to the petition,, denied that the sale was made for less than one-half the value of plaintiff’s interest in, the entire property. He alleged that the-value of the property as a whole does not exceed $6,000, and that the value of plaintiff’s interest therein did not exceed the-purchase price of $2,000. In the alternative, defendant prayed that should the court hold that lesion beyond moiety did exist, the value of plaintiff’s interest at-the time-of the sale be fixed and that defendant be granted the right to elect as provided by the pertinent articles of the Civil Code.

After a trial on the merits, the judge,, applying the rule that in a suit for the rescission of a sale on account of lesion beyond moiety, plaintiff must establish the-value of the property by strong and conclusive evidence, held that plaintiff had not made out his case. Accordingly, he rendered judgment in favor of defendant rejecting plaintiff’s demands. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled and he-then applied for and obtained an appeal to-this Court.

This suit is brought in accordance with the statutory provisions by which the vendor of an immovable, even though of mature age and proper understanding, may, at any time within four years, have the-sale set aside by proving that the price he received was less than one-half of the value of the immovable at the time of the *182 sale, unless the purchaser should elect to Leep the property by making up the difference between the price paid and its just value. Civ.Code, Articles 1861, 1862, 1871, 2589, 2590, 2591, 2595, Fernandez v. Wilkinson, 158 La. 137, 103 So. 537.

The law presumes juris et de jure that he who sells an immovable for less than half its value is acting under an error of fact sufficient to invalidate the sale. 'Civ.Code, Articles 1860, 1861. This presumption is so strong and conclusive that ■even if the vendor should know and expressly declare he knows the value of the property exceeds twice the price received, and should even declare that it is his purpose to give the purchaser the surplus of the thing’s value over the price received, and that he expressly abandons the right to rescind the sale, nevertheless the law still gives him that right. Civ.Code, Art. 2589; Fernandez v. Wilkinson, 158 La. 137, 103 So. 537. The one prerequisite that-the price paid be less than one-half the value of the property as established at the time of the sale.

The entire property involved in this suit is a portion of the property which was acquired by Louis Cazezu, a brother of the defendant, William Cazezu, and A. A. Buras by purchase from B. Anticich on October 8, 1921. The consideration for the sale was $7,000, paid in cash. On October 18, 1921, which was ten days later, the plaintiff, Frank J. Blaize, acquired an undivided one-third interest in the property by purchase from Louis Cazezu and A. A. Buras, for which he paid $2,233.33. On July 12, 1922, Louis Cazezu purchased the interest of A. A. Buras in the property for $2,400. Therefore, at the time Frank J. Blaize sold his undivided one-third interest in the property to William Cazezu the remaining undivided two-thirds interest was owned by Louis Cazezu, the brother of William Cazezu.

On the question of value plaintiff offered the testimony of a number of witnesses living in the vicinity of and who are familiar with the property. Some of these witnesses are property owners themselves. The substance of their testimony is that the entire tract of land, with the improvements, owned in indivisión by Frank J. Blaize and Louis Cazezu before the sale by Blaize of his interest to William Cazezu, was worth at the time of that sale at least $20,000.

Walter-Blaize, a son of plaintiff who resides about four blocks from the property in his own home where he conducts an automobile garage business, testified that, in 1921, he purchased for $450 a two-room cottage, together with an acre of ground on which it is located, in the Town of Buras, and that two weeks prior to the date on which he testified he was offered $6,200 for the property. He further testified that from his knowledge of values and from what he had seen of different transactions and offers he placed a value of $30,000 on the property as a whole and *184 stated that he would give plaintiff, his father, “right now” $7,000 for the one-third interest he sold to William Cazezu. He further stated that if he had known about the proposed sale to William Cazezu, he would never have allowed his father to sell the property; that' his father did not sell his interest in the property — “he gave it away.”

Opposed to this testimony is the testimony of defendant himself who stated that his brother, Louis, informed him ' that Blaize offered to sell the property to him on the basis of a value of $6,000 for the whole, but that he did not want to buy it and referred Blaize to him; that the following morning he saw Blaize on the road and asked him to go to the notary’s office. When they got there everything was prepared and Blaize fixed the price.

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 689, 28 So. 2d 689, 210 La. 176, 1946 La. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaize-v-cazezu-la-1946.