Briede v. Lewis

49 So. 2d 349, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 766
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1950
DocketNo. 19423
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 So. 2d 349 (Briede v. Lewis) 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
Briede v. Lewis, 49 So. 2d 349, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 766 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit for damages for breach of contract. It is based on a 'contract of lease under which the defendant is alleged to-have- agreed to rent for a dwelling, for a term of sixteen months, an apartment in a building owned by plaintiff and to have vacated the apartment, contending that no contract of lease had been entered into.

At some time prior to May 1948, plaintiff, Albert E. Briede, Jr., commenced the erection, of a fourrplex -apartment- building in New Orleans. Shortly before the building was completed the defendant, Efton Lewis, entered into a verbal agreement with Briede under which he agreed to lease one of the apartments at One Hundred Dollars a month from June 1st, 1948, until September 30th, 1949, a .total term of sixteen months.

At that time, Lewis had certain furniture for which he required storage space and, at his request, Briede agreed that the furniture might be stored in the apartment, without cost, from that time until the term of the lease should commence.

The furniture was placed in the apartment on May 7th, and a few days later, as the apartment was-.practically- completed, in order to save hotel expense, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, with the consent of Briede, moved into the apartment and occupied it as a dwelling from May 10th or 12th, 1948.

The building was entirely completed before June 1st, 1948, at which time the term of the lease was to commence to run.

When the verbal agreement to lease was entered into all details and conditions were agreed upon and it was understood that the agreement would be reduced to writing, and that monthly rent notes would also be executed by Lewis," ¡but before this was done Mr. and Mrs. Lewis were permitted to move into the apartment as we have already stated. ■ ''

After Mr. and Mrs. Lewis had occupied the apartment for about eight days, Mr. Lewi's received from Briede the written lease and the rent notes. He returned them to Briede, calling -attention to the incorrect spelling of his first name and- also to the fact that-the apartment was "identified by the letter “-C” whereas it should have [350]*350been referred to as Apartment “3”. He did not question the correctness of any of the details or conditions set forth in the lease or in the notes. '

Briede, of course, made these minor corrections but, when he returned the lease and the notes to Lewis for execution, he was told that Mr. and Mrs. Lewis had changed their minds and did not intend to rent the apartment, and on May 28th, 1948, they vacated it.

It remained vacant during the month of June 1948, and Briede, in an effort to minimize his damage, obtained another tenant under a léase commencing on July 1st, 1948, but at a rental of only Ninety Dollars a month.

He then brought this suit against Lewis, claiming a loss of one hundred dollars for the month of May and a loss of ten dollars a month for each of the remaining fifteen months of the term of the lease. He also claimed Twelve & 95/100 dollars as the cost of cleaning up the premises and of making certain repairs, which he averred were made necessary 'by the occupancy of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis.

Lewis filed an exception of no cause of action and an answer.

The exception is based on the contention thalt, since it was understood that the agreement would be reduced to writing, no obligation resulted from the verbal agreement nor from his occupancy of the premises.

In his answer, he averred that the preliminary talks had been mere discussions and that it was understood that no contract would come into being until the contemplated written lease and the notes should be executed.

There was judgment in the First City Court of New Orleans in favor of plaintiff and against defendant in the sum of $250.00. Defendant has appealed. Plaintiff has not answered the appeal.

In spite of defendant’s averment that the preliminary talks were mere discussions, he admitted on the witness stand that a full and complete agreement had been reached and that, as a result of it, Briede had allowed him to move his furniture into the apartment and also to occupy it as a dwelling before the commencement of the term of the lease and before the execution of the written lease and of the notes.

We find that only a question of law is presented and we think that that question was correctly answered by the judge a quo.

Counsel for defendant 'contends that the situation is controlled by the doctrine announced by the Supreme Court in Laroussini v. Werlein, 52 La.Ann. 424, 27 So. 89, whereas counsel for plaintiff maintains that the views expressed and the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court in Johnson v. Williams, 178 La. 891, 152 So. 556, require a decree affirming the judgment appealed from.

In the Laroussini case, the Supreme Court found that the prospective lessor and the prospective lessee were already lessor and lessee in a lease agreement which was about to expire, and that they negotiated for a new lease and verbally agreed on all details and conditions, and' they also agreed that this verbal lease “was to be followed by a writing setting forth the same, and to be signed by the contracting parties, which writing should take the place of, and stand for, what had been agreed on verbally * * *”. [52 La.Ann. 424, 27 So. 90.]

The Court also found that the prospective lessee had suggested that the new agreement “be merely indorsed upon .the then existing written contract of lease, but plaintiff had not consented to this.” The Court further said that the plaintiff “desired a formal contract drawn in renewal of the lease, with ■ accompanying notes * * -pke prospective lessee refused to execute the written lease or to occupy the premises.

The prospective lessor then sued the prospective lessee “basing recovery on the verbal lease.”

The Supreme Court held that there could be no recovery on the verbal lease, saying:

“A verbal contract of lease, complete in itself, independent of any writing, and unaccompanied by an intention to have the same reduced to writing, as perfecting it, is an enforceable contract. And if such a verbal contract be made, and subsequently the parties agree that the same shall be re[351]*351duced to writing and be signed, and after-wards there is a failure to so reduce it to writing and to signature, — one of the parties refusing, — it is still enforceabe as a binding contract. Carlin v. Harding, 10 La. [223] 225; Avendano v. Arthur & Co., 30 La.Ann. [316] 321.
“But if, when a verbal contract of lease is agreed on, it is understood, contemplated, and intended that it should be reduced to writing, that there should be a written lease, that the written lease should take the place of, and stand for, what has been agreed on verbally in respect to the leasing of the property, then until the writing is drawn up and signed the contract is inchoate, incomplete, and either party, before signing, may recant, retract, recede, withdraw, decline to go further, refuse to consummate. Fredericks v. Fasnacht, 30 La.Ann. 117; Villere v. Brognier, 3 Mart., O.S., [326] 349-527; Bloeker v. Tillman, 4 La. [77] 80; Wolf v. Mitchell, Craig & Co., 24 La.Ann. [433] 434; Fernandez v. Soulie, 28 La.Ann. 31; Des Boulets v. Gravier, 1 Mart., N.S., [420] 421-422; Meyer v. Labau, 51 La.Ann. [1726] 1729, 26 So. 463.”

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 2d 349, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briede-v-lewis-lactapp-1950.