Bornemann v. Richards

161 So. 2d 741, 245 La. 851, 1964 La. LEXIS 2999
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 24, 1964
Docket46860
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 161 So. 2d 741 (Bornemann v. Richards) 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
Bornemann v. Richards, 161 So. 2d 741, 245 La. 851, 1964 La. LEXIS 2999 (La. 1964).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Walter E. Bornemann, ¡the testamentary executor of the succession, of, Mrs. Carla Hellmers Bornemann, instituted this specific performance action against Mrs. Loretto McKenna Richards to compel her to take title to certain residential property in the City of New Orleans, owned by the succession and located at No. 1630 Arabella Street, in accordance with an alleged agreement of purchase and sale entered into on November 14, 1961. Alternatively, he prayed that the court decree a forfeiture of the deposit of $6600 (10% of the proposed purchase price) made when the contract was confected.

In her answer the defendant admitted her having entered into the agreement. Then she set forth two grounds in defense of her act of withdrawing therefrom, namely: (1) before title was tendered á substantial part of the flower garden, which was one of the property’s principal attractions, had been ruined by a heavy freeze that occurred in mid-January, 1962, and, (2) a survey revealed that the brick walls surrounding the rear portion of the property, and which she had good reason to believe were being sold to her, did not even belong to the succession.

Maintaining the first defense, the district court dismissed the suit and ordered that the defendant’s deposit be returned to her. In appealing, the plaintiff abandoned his demand for specific performance and sought only to be decreed entitled to the funds deposited. The Court of Appeal, following a hearing, reversed the district *856 court’s judgment and ordered that the deposited $6600 be forfeited to the plaintiff. La.App., 153 So.2d 456.

To review the decision we granted certiorari. 244 La. 1007, 156 So.2d 58.

The first defense — that the defendant was relieved from complying with the agreement to purchase because of the partial destruction of the flower garden — is based on the provisions of Revised Civil Code Article 2455 which read: “If, at the moment of the sale, the thing sold is totally destroyed, the sale is null; if there is only a part of the thing destroyed, the purchaser ■has the choice, either to abandon the sale, or to retain the preserved part, by having the price thereof determined by appraise.ment.” (Italics ours.)

Revised Civil Code Article 2461 provides .that “Accessories included unless reserved. —The sale of a thing includes that of its accessories, and of whatever has been destined for its constant use, unless there be a reservation to the contrary.” Unquestionably, particularly since there was no reservation in the instant contract, the garden was a part of, and an important accessory to, the residential property which plaintiff proposed to sell to the defendant. Further, the evidence conclusively shows that a substantial portion of it was destroyed by the unusually severe freeze of several days in January, 1962 — prior to the time plaintiff tendered title.

Of course, there is a discrepancy between the estimates given by the two expert gardeners for the cost of replacing the ruined plants. Plaintiff’s expert said that it could be accomplished for $350, although he also testified that the replanting of a cocculus tree of the size killed would alone cost approximately $300. On the other hand, the defendant’s expert testified that it would necessitate an expenditure of approximately $911, this including a $240 labor charge for pruning and cleaning up the damaged shrubbery. However, both agreed that the replacement work would not immediately result in putting the flower garden in the same condition that it was prior to the freeze; that only much care and time thereafter could achieve that end. In this connection, their testimony was that the time required for the new plantings to reach the former growth would be from one to five years.

While conceding some destruction in and to the garden, the plaintiff insists that the incidence of damage relative to the entire value of the property is not so much as would justify the court in applying the provisions of Revised Civil Code Article 2455 as written. It is contended that such article should be interpreted to mean, as in actions of redhibition, that the buyer has not the option to withdraw from the agreement unless the partial destruction be such as would bear a substantial relation to the value of the thing to be sold; or, as stated in *858 his brief to this court, “ * * * that, in order to vitiate the sale, the thing itself (not an ‘accessory’ not essential to its use for the purpose intended) would have had to be, not ‘damaged’ but at the very least ‘partially destroyed to the extent that it could not be used for the purpose for which it was intended.’ ”

The fault in this argument, which was accepted by the Court of Appeal, is that the unambiguous provisions of Revised Civil Code Article 2455 do not lend themselves .to such an interpretation. The language of this article, which permits the prospective purchaser either to abandon the sale if the thing has been partially destroyed or to take the property at its diminished value, is in no way comparable to that of the codal article wherein a redhibitory defect (that for which an executed or completed sale may be set aside) is defined as one which renders the thing sold “either absolutely useless, or its use so inconvenient and imperfect, that it must be supposed that the buyer would not have purchased it, had he known of the vice.” (Revised Civil Code Article 2520.) Moreover, in the articles dealing with redhibition the court is specifically authorized, in an action to annul a completed sale, to “decree merely a reduction of the price” (Revised Civil Code Article 2543) if the defect is such as merely to diminish the value; whereas, there is no corresponding article among those relating' to a- promise to sell, such as we have here.

It occurs to us that we are compelled to note the vastly different language used in the articles pertaining to a promise to sell (looking forward to a future sale) and in those which permit the dissolution of a completed sale, and to conclude that because of such difference the redactors of the Code did not intend that the result in the two situations would be the same. Consequently, we find no justification for applying the principles involved in the redhibitory actions (reláting to completed sales) to the present suit,- for'herein we are concerned with only a promise to sell and buy. (Incidentally, the plaintiff, in this suit, by his course of action, has prevented the courts from ordering a sale with a diminution of price. The result of this is that if we adopted the conclusion now sought by him, and reached by the Court of Appeal, the defendant will be compelled to surrender her full deposit, although the plaintiff is not offering the damaged property at a diminished price.)

Since Revised Civil Code Article .2455 was adopted almost verbatim from the Code Napoleon we have recourse to the observations of the French commentators which have been thoroughly briefed by counsel for both parties. At best, it can be said that their opinions. are divergent, some holding that the purchaser has the option to. abandon the sale in. all cases, ..no *860 matter how insignificant the loss might be, while others recognize that there are situations wherein the courts would uphold the contract.

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161 So. 2d 741, 245 La. 851, 1964 La. LEXIS 2999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bornemann-v-richards-la-1964.