Coci v. Johness

37 So. 2d 823, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 639
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 13, 1948
DocketNo. 18771.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 So. 2d 823 (Coci v. Johness) 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
Coci v. Johness, 37 So. 2d 823, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 639 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

This litigation grows out of a written contract entered into on March 13, 1940, under which the plaintiffs, William S. Coci and Emanuel D'Antoni, agreed to buy, and defendant, Johness, Inc., agreed to sell, five lots of ground in what is known as the Bridgedale Subdivision in the Parish of Jefferson.

Plaintiffs allege that the defendant corporation breached the contract and failed, though put in default, to deliver the property in accordance with the contract, and they pray for judgment condemning the defendant to pay over to them double the amount of the deposit which was made when the agreement was entered into. They also pray for a reasonable attorney's fee, which is provided for in the contract in the event that either party should find it necessary to employ an attorney to enforce compliance.

Defendant corporation, admitting that the agreement was entered into, denies that it was in default, and avers that the plaintiffs themselves failed to take title to the property and should be held to have forfeited the deposit which was made when the contract was signed.

From a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for $1120, which is double the amount of the deposit, and for an attorney's fee of $200, defendant, Johness, Inc., has appealed.

The facts are more or less complex. On March 13, 1940, the written contract was entered into. Under it, Coci and D'Antoni agreed to buy, and Johness, Inc., agreed to sell, for $5600, "property located in Jefferson Parish, State of Louisiana, east bank of Mississippi River, situated in Section 'B', Square 51, Bridgedale Subdivision; same being all of lots 2, 3 and lots 1, 19, 20 except that part of said lots 1, 19, 20 which were sold to the Louisiana Highway Commission by Johness Investments, Inc., on Oct. 14, 1937, by act passed before Wm. J. Guste, N.P., in C.O.B. 138, folio 233, in records of Jefferson Parish or as per title, * * *."

With the exception of the words "or as per title," which are printed in the form, all of the other words of the description are typewritten.

The contract provided that the act of sale would be passed on or prior to April 10, 1940, before Sidney C. Schoenberger, notary public. Schoenberger is not only the notary named in the agreement, but he is the attorney for plaintiffs in this suit. It was also stipulated that a deposit of $560 would be made and that in the event that the vendees should fail to comply with the agreement, the vendor should have the right either to declare the deposit forfeited or to demand specific performance, and that in the event the vendor should not comply with the agreement, then the vendees should have the right to demand the return of double the deposit, or to insist upon specific performance.

In addition to the conditions and stipulations appearing on the printed and signed side of the contract, it was provided that other terms and conditions appeared "on reverse hereof." Among the terms and conditions which appear on the face or on the reverse, we note the following; that the unpaid balance would be secured by vendor's lien and mortgage and would be paid in monthly installments of $100 each; that as additional security, Johness, Inc., would be given a collateral note in the sum of $1,000, secured by first mortgage on certain other designated property and that the said note would be payable in one year with six per cent interest. It was provided that should this collateral note be paid on or before its maturity, "proceeds thereof shall be applied to the last maturing installments of said balance."

It was also stipulated that should the vendees, Coci and D'Antoni, decide within six months to borrow from a building and *Page 825 loan association a sum not to exceed $5,000 for the purpose of erecting a building on the property and doing certain landscaping, Johness, Inc., would agree to subordinate its mortgage to such mortgage as might be executed in favor of the building and loan association, and that in that event the monthly installments would be reduced by such monthly sum as it might be necessary for Coci and D'Antoni to pay to the building and loan association.

There is an additional stipulation relative to acceleration of payments of the monthly installments required on the main obligation. This provision reads as follows:

"It is also understood that we shall have the right to make additional payments in excess of the monthly installment of $100.00 provided herein, such additional payments are to be applied to the last maturing installments. In other words, these payments are to be applied in inverse order."

The final stipulation provides that title to all of the property, both that to be purchased by plaintiffs and that to be collaterally mortgaged to secure the balance, would be "subject to approval of the Lawyers' Title Guaranty Company" at the expense of Coci and D'Antoni.

It is very clear that although the agreement provides that the act of sale would be executed on or before April 10, 1940, neither the vendor nor the vendees really made any effort to carry out this provision of the contract. We say this because, although counsel for the vendees maintains that the record shows that the vendor was notified that the vendees would be ready to take title on the date specified, April 10, 1940, there is no dispute over the fact that the vendees did not even request the title company to examine the title until April 15, 1940, which was five days after the last day fixed in the contract for transfer of title. So much for any effort of the vendees to take title within the time specified.

As to the vendor, there is no contention that any effort was made to force the vendees to accept title within the time limit set in the contract. We, therefore, disregard entirely the assertion that on that day, April 10, 1940, the vendees were ready, willing and able to accept title and that, therefore, the vendor on that day was in default and should be considered as having defaulted on the contract. We mention at this time an interesting fact which, however, we consider of no importance in view of the ultimate conclusions to which we have come and that fact is, that on July 13, 1940, the lots which were to be collaterally mortgaged as additional security up to the sum of $1,000 were sold by one of the vendees who was the real though not the record owner of such lots and that, therefore, after that time it was no longer possible for those lots to be mortgaged as collateral security for the principal obligation.

When the Title Company completed its examination, it reported on April 24, 1940, that "the depths of lots 1 and 2 do not check with the plan." This is conceded to mean that those two lots contained a depth of 35 feet less than they should have contained according to the plans which all parties had in mind when the sale was made. When this came to light, there was apparently a discussion as to what should be done, and the attorney for the vendees agreed that he would undertake the necessary curative work and bring the necessary proceedings to obtain a judgment correcting the description of those two lots so as to have them include this additional 35 feet of depth and that he would make no charge for his services if the vendor would pay the court costs of that proceeding. This offer was accepted and the vendor paid the costs shortly after July 13, 1940, which was the day on which counsel for vendees advised the vendor as to what those costs had been.

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Related

Boudreaux v. Walko Builders, Inc.
130 So. 2d 684 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)
Di Cristina v. Weiser
42 So. 2d 868 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 So. 2d 823, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coci-v-johness-lactapp-1948.