Cabral v. Barkerding

50 So. 2d 516, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 564
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 12, 1951
Docket19481
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 So. 2d 516 (Cabral v. Barkerding) 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
Cabral v. Barkerding, 50 So. 2d 516, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 564 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

50 So.2d 516 (1951)

CABRAL
v.
BARKERDING et al.

No. 19481.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

February 12, 1951.

*517 William M. Campbell, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Edward F. Stauss, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Mrs. W. J. Heintz, defendant-appellant, in proper person.

JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiff, Harry R. Cabral, a prospective purchaser of improved real estate, appeals from a judgment which awarded him only the return of his deposit and certain expenses, though he had prayed for double the amount of the deposit when the prospective vendor, Harry F. Barkerding, could not deliver title to the property because his wife, acting under authority of Section 2 of Act No. 35 of the Extraordinary Session of 1921, LSA-RS 9:2802, had registered in the office of the Register of Conveyances for the Parish of Orleans a declaration that the property constituted a family home.

Mrs. W. J. Heintz, the real estate agent, also appealed from the judgment which ordered her to turn over to the plaintiff the amount of the deposit which was in her possession, and which dismissed her demand against Mr. and Mrs. Barkerding for a commission.

At the request of the parties, the Judge of the District Court handed down written reasons for judgment. He carefully reviewed the facts and discussed in detail every argument, both on law and on fact, made on behalf of all parties.

After a study of the record, we have reached the conclusion that it would be useless excess to attempt to add anything to what appears in those reasons. We therefore set them forth in full and adopt them as our own.

"Plaintiff, Harry R. Cabral, brought this suit to enforce a contract for the sale of certain real property situated in the City of New Orleans, which arose out of an offer to purchase made by him and accepted by defendant, Harry F. Barkerding, Jr., on February 16, 1948. The defendant, Mrs. Magda Helen Janssen, wife of Harry F. Barkerding, Jr., under date of February 19th, 1948, registered in the Conveyance Office of the Parish of Orleans in Book 555, Folio 519, a declaration wherein she designated the said property as a family home in accordance with the provisions of Section 2 of Louisiana Act No. 35 of the Extra Session of 1921. The above mentioned agreement to purchase the said property was registered in the Conveyance Office of the Parish of Orleans in Book 554, Folio 664, on April 26, 1948, more than two months after registration of the designation of the property as a family home.

"Plaintiff originally asked for judgment for specific performance, or alternatively, in the event of nonperformance within a specified time of the said judgment, for judgment recognizing the plaintiff herein as owner upon his depositing the purchase price in the registry of the Court.

"As a second alternative prayer for relief, petitioner asked for:

"(1) Solidary judgment against the defendant, Harry F. Barkerding, Jr., and *518 Mrs. W. J. Heintz, the realtor, for the amount of the deposit made by the plaintiff;

"(2) Judgment against the defendant, Harry F. Barkerding, Jr. in an amount equal to the amount of the deposit, `in accordance with the penalty provision of the contract;' and,

"(3) Judgment against the defendant, Harry F. Barkerding, Jr. in an amount equal to `the expenses incurred by petitioner in the preparation of the act of sale and preservation of his rights.'

"The defendants Barkerding interposed certain exceptions to plaintiff's petition, all of which were overruled by this Court. Thereafter each defendant filed a separate answer, and the defendant real estate agent additionally filed what was termed a reconventional demand against her co-defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Barkerding, wherein she asked for judgment against them, in solido, for the sum of $812.00, the amount of the realtor's commission under the terms of the contract.

"At the commencement of trial of the case upon the merits, counsel for plaintiff announced that he had abandoned the original relief prayed for, as well as that sought in the alternative prayer, when he declared that the petitioner was no longer desirous of obtaining specific performance of the contract, and now sought judgment only for double the deposit plus his expenses. In consequence, this Court was thereafter concerned only with the relief sought by the plaintiff under his second alternative prayer.

"Mrs. Barkerding was the first witness called to the stand, having been called by plaintiff for cross-examination under the Act. She testified willingly and at length concerning the occurrence and events which culminated with the filing of these proceedings. The Court was greatly impressed by her straightforward testimony and the manner in which she conducted herself, both at that time and later when she was called as a witness for the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Barkerding. Mr. Barkerding was called next by the plaintiff, and corroborated his wife's earlier testimony concerning the circumstances which led to the filing by her of a declaration of family home in an attempt to prevent his selling of the family dwelling. His testimony in its entirety presents a very credible explanation for his having entered into an agreement to sell the family dwelling despite his wife's known objections to any such action, and the Court is convinced that he spoke truthfully in recounting the happenings of what for him must have been `trying' times.

"The real estate salesman, W. J. Heintz, who testified on behalf of both the plaintiff and the defendant real estate agent, Mrs. W. J. Heintz, to some extent corroborated the testimony of the defendants, Barkerding, while in other instances, his testimony was at variance. This witness cannot be classed as having been entirely impartial in the matter before the Court, for he was materially and pecuniarily interested in seeing that judgment was rendered against the Defendants, Barkerding; but even were the Court to give full weight to his testimony, it remains convinced that the defendant, Barkerding, and the defendant, Mrs. Barkerding, did not at any time act in collusion or in any manner suggestive of fraud, as is claimed by the plaintiff.

"It seems clear that Mrs. Barkerding, in filing the declaration of family home, which she had the perfect right to do, effectively prevented the sale of the family domicile without her approval, and apparently this was known to the plaintiff, for he advised Barkerding that it would be necessary for Mrs. Barkerding to be present at the passage of the Act of Sale. As stated by the Supreme Court in Baumann v. Michel, 190 La. 1, 181 So. 549, 550, `the wife had a perfect legal right to do what she did and the husband and the court were powerless to take that right away from her.' Consequently, the defendant, Harry F. Barkerding, Jr., was unable to comply with the agreement notwithstanding his desire to comply therewith. The action of his wife in recording the declaration of family home made his compliance with the agreement impossible.

"Under such circumstances, the contractual right of the purchaser to demand the *519 return of double the deposit seems analogous to the contractual right of the real estate agent to claim his commission when the sale of the property is not consummated because of the filing of a declaration of family home by the vendor's wife. That question was determined in the case of Guy L. Deano, Inc., v. Michel, 191 La. 233, 185 So. 9, 10.

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Bluebook (online)
50 So. 2d 516, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabral-v-barkerding-lactapp-1951.