Brown v. Lancaster

51 So. 2d 617, 218 La. 1036, 1951 La. LEXIS 839
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 19, 1951
Docket39841
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 51 So. 2d 617 (Brown v. Lancaster) 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
Brown v. Lancaster, 51 So. 2d 617, 218 La. 1036, 1951 La. LEXIS 839 (La. 1951).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

This is a suit for specific performance of a certain contract for the sale and purchase of real estate. The contract was entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant, Samuel B. Lancaster, on August 23, 1946. The property to be conveyed is a lot of ground in Metairie, with improvements thereon, bearing Municipal Number 150 Gruner Road.

*1040 Lester F. Hyman, in whose name title to the property stood at the time suit was filed, and John E. Ruiz, the record holder of a mortgage bearing against the property were also made parties defendant and judgment is prayed for against them asking that the sale to Hyman be declared null and void and that the mortgage in favor of Ruiz, insofar as it affects the property be also declared null and void and of no effect. .

A rather complex statement of facts led to this litigation and it becomes important to recount them at this time. This we will do as briefly as possible.

On or about March 15, 1946, the Delta Realty Company, a commercial partnership engaged in the real estate business, composed of Samuel B. Lancaster and his wife, Mrs. Joyce Witherspoon, solicited from the plaintiff, a loan in the amount of $5000.00. The loan was granted on the Lancasters giving the plaintiff two post-dated checks in the amount of $2625.00 each, one check being payable in six months and the other in one year. The two hundred and fifty dollars over and above the five thousand dollars represented a bonus which the plaintiff was to' receive for having granted the loan.

The Lancasters were borrowing the money in order to construct homes on certain properties which they owned and, on April 25, 1946, they informed plaintiff that they needed an additional amount of $7000.-00 in order to complete three houses then in the course of construction. Plaintiff agreed to increase the loan and, as evidence of the increase, the Lancasters issued a post-dated check payable June 25, 1946, in the sum of $7500.00, the additional $500.00 again representing a bonus for the granting of this loan.

The check for $7500.00 was not paid on June 25, 194.6 and on August 23, 1946 the parties entered into an agreement giving Brown, the plaintiff, the right to purchase certain property and the. improvements thereon which resulted in the contract, specific performance of which is now being sought.

The agreement was in the form of a letter dated August 23, 1946, addressed to Delta Realty, in which Brown offers and agrees ■ to purchase “150 Gruner Ave. on grounds measuring about as per title or as per title, for the sum of Nine Thousand Five Hundred ($9500.00) Dollars on the terms of 8000.00 Cash. Balance at Act of Sale.” The letter contains various other stipulations which it is unnecessary to refer to for the purpose of disposing of the issues in this suit. At the bottom of.the letter there is an acceptance of the offer on all of its terms and conditions signed by Samuel B. Lancaster.

The act of sale was never executed although plaintiff in his petition avers that he made repeated attempts to contact the defendant in regard to effecting title to the property. The agreement, however, was not recorded in the Conveyance Records of Jefferson Parish until October 1, 1946.

*1042 On October 3, 1946, the defendant Lancaster executed a mortgage on this and other property he owned in favor of Mrs. Elsa Capo, wife of Dr. John T. Capo, for $27,000.00, which mortgage was recorded on October 5, 1946. At this time there were two outstanding mortgages on the property, one in the sum of $6177.50 and the other for the sum of $2000.00. Both these mortgages were paid off with the proceeds from the Capo mortgage and part of the proceeds was also used to acquire title to an adjoining lot on which the house involved in this suit was partly built.

On April 29, 1947, Brown instituted a suit in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, against the Delta Realty Company, Samuel B. Lancaster and his wife, and their,bondsman, the United States Casualty Company in which he prayed for judgment against the Lancasters in the sum of $3250.00 and further judgment against them and also against the Bonding Company, in solido, in the sum of $10,000, that being the extent of the surety company’s liability on the bond, with legal interest and attorneys’ fees.

In his petition in that suit, Brown set out various facts, much the same as those here recited and then alleged that in all of the said transactions, Lancaster deliberately acted with the view and purpose to defraud him out of the monies which he had advanced, in violation of the terms and stipulations of the bond which had been executed by the United States Casualty Company as surety.

On May 6, 1947, Lancaster conveyed by notarial act of sale to Lester F. Hyman, the property which is the subject of this suit for'the alleged consideration of $7050.- . 00, of which $50.00 is stated as being a cash payment and the balance represented by the assumption of the balance of the Capo mortgage note which had been reduced to $7000.-00 and which was then and is now held by John E. Ruiz.

On June 11, 1947, Brown compromised his suit as against the United States Casualty Company for $2500.00. In the compromise agreement it is recited that he “releases and acknowledges satisfaction of any and all claims, demands, causes of actions whatsoever, which he has against” the surety company on their bond in favor of the Lancasters and especially any claims, demands and causes of action on account of or arising from the real estate deposits which he had made with them. The agreement also recites that Brown reserves all of his rights against the Lancasters “in the aforesaid suit filed in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans to claim the balance in excess of $2500.00 from them” and that for the consideration therein set forth he transfers, sells and assigns to the United States Casualty Company $2500.00 of any and all claims, demands, causes of action which he has against the Lancasters growing out of the' suit he had instituted and agrees to furnish on its re *1044 quest conclusive evidence of such claims, demands and causes of action.

On June 24, 1947, on motion made on his behalf, this suit of Brown’s was discontinued at his costs.

In the present suit he alleges that of the purchase price in the sum of $9500.00 for the property Lancaster had agreed to sell to him, he had paid the sum of $8000.00, leaving a balance due and owing pf $1500.00. He then further avers that he paid the defendant, Samuel B. Lancaster, the said balance of $1500.00 due under the said agreement, or the entire purchase price of the property, and that notwithstanding the execution of the said agreement and its recordation in the Conveyance Office and the payment of the entire purchase price, .'Lancaster, on May 6, 1947, sold the property to Lester F. Hyman. He alleges further ■.that the purported mortgage dated October .3, 1946 which was assumed by the said Hyman in purchasing the property was not recorded until October 5, 1946, which was subsequent to the registry of his agreement to purchase. He avers that he believes, and therefore alleges that the sale to Hyman was a simulation intended to remove the registered title of the said property from the name of Samuel B. Lancaster and thereby.

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 2d 617, 218 La. 1036, 1951 La. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-lancaster-la-1951.