Colbert v. District Grand Lodge No. 21

178 So. 694
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1938
DocketNo. 1806.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 178 So. 694 (Colbert v. District Grand Lodge No. 21) 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
Colbert v. District Grand Lodge No. 21, 178 So. 694 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

The issues in this case are stated in our original opinion reported in 176 So. 633. A reference to. our original opinion will show that we there passed on all; issues raised by the pleadings. We found, as did the trial judge, that plaintiff was. not induced by fraud or misrepresentation to accept the loan agreement for the-balance of $400 due by defendant order-on the _ certificate issued to her deceased' husband, in which loan agreement plaintiff agreed to consider this balance as a loan to the order, to be repaid when the order was in financial condition to do so, the loan to draw interest at the rate of 3-per cent, per annum, payable semiannually.. And we also agreed with the trial judge that the loan agreement constituted a novation of the original debt due plaintiff as. the beneficiary under the certificate after the death of her husband, and that there was a sufficient consideration to support the loan agreement. These were all the-issues raised by the pleadings.

Then on application for a rehearing,, plaintiff strenuously urged that the so-called loan agreement, which is set up by the order as a bar to plaintiff’s suit for-the balance on the original certificate, is,. null and void for the reason that it contains a potestative condition. Another- *695 ground of nullity is urged against this loan agreement on the application for rehearing and by argument and in brief on the rehearing, to the effect that this loan agreement was a composition with the creditors of the order and is null for the reason that all creditors were not treated alike and on the same basis.

The rehearing was granted solely for the purpose of giving consideration to the question of the alleged potestative condition contained in the loan agreement, as we felt that, if this agreement was void because of this reprobated condition, plaintiff had a right to urge such nullity, even though it was not set up in the pleadings, as the condition attacked is in the agreement itself, and if the agreement is null, plaintiff could pursue her claim under the original certificate.

' While plaintiff did not plead the nullity of the loan agreement in the lower .court on the ground that it was a composition with creditors and invalid for want of equality among them, the question was pressed in the trial court and passed on ■by it adversely to plaintiff’s contention. The point seems to have been discussed in plaintiff’s brief in this court on the. original hearing, but more in connection with the charge of fraud and misrepresentation ■on the part of the officers of the order in prevailing on plaintiff to accept this loan .agreement in settlement of her claim. As we reviewed the facts on this point in our original opinion, we do not consider it necessary to give further consideration to this phase of the case. However, we might observe in passing that the loan agreements accepted by a large number of creditors of the order did not constitute a .composition with creditors, as the order, while financially embarrassed, did not propose to settle with these creditors on a dividend or pro rata basis, but, on the contrary, was endeavoring to pay the claims in full. Such an arrangement could not be classed as a composition with creditors. 11 American Jurisprudence, page 233, Composition with Creditors, § 1.

We will now proceed to a consideration of the question for which the rehearing was granted.

The obligation which the order assumed in the loan - agreement to pay plaintiff the balance of $400 was made subject to the following condition: “The principal to be paid only in the event that after such repayment the Order shall be left possessed of sufficient assets to meet all its liabilities and to maintain a fund for payment of all death claims arising after this date (May 1, 1936), and such agreement, accepted by me, provides that the Order shall have the option to make such repayment whenever it shall be able to do so in accordance with the aforesaid conditions.”

Of course, the last part,of the above condition, to the effect that the order reserves the right to make the payment of the principal of the loan agreement whenever it shall be able to do so in accordance with the foregoing provision, means nothing more than that the order, when its financial condition permits in accordance with the previous statement, will have the right to take up the loan agreement and thereby discharge the obligation and prevent the running of interest.

It is contended that the obligation of the order to pay is subject to the happening of an event, viz., the acquisition by the order of sufficient assets to meet its current liabilities and the accumulation of a fund sufficient to take care of death claims arising thereafter, and that the happening or nonhappening of that event is within the power of the officers of the order to bring about or hinder, making the condition potestative under article 2024 of the Revised Civil Code, and the obligation depending on the condition null under articles 2034 and 2035 of 'the Civil Code.

We were influenced very largely in granting the rehearing in what we first thought to be a similarity in the condition in the loan agreement involved in this case and the condition involved in the agreement of the International Trade Exhibition, Inc., with its general manager, Avery, wherein Avery agreed to wait for payment of his back salary until the Exhibition had a net cash balance in its treasury of $100,000, and which condition the Supreme Court held to be potestative on the part of the obligor, the Exhibition, and therefore null and void. Avery v. International Trade Exhibition, Inc., 163 La. 454, 112 So. 44, 45. We quote from that case as follows:

“And moreover, the provision that plaintiff, should wait until the exposition should have a net cash balance of $100,000 in the treasury was a potestative condition of the kind reprobated by R.C.C. art. 2034. For the moneys of the defendant are un *696 der the control of its board of directors, who might always, and without the least impropriety, determine that the interests of the exposition would be better sub-served by using or investing its funds, rather than by accumulating- a large and idle net cash balance in the treasury.”

The same holding was made and practically the same reasons given in the companion case of Wallace v. International Trade "Exhibition, 170 La. 55, 127 So. 362.

Our examination of the cases decided by the courts of this state interpreting potestative conditions in contracts has left us with a rather unsettled, if not confused, impression on this subject. In an effort to clarify the matter in our minds, we have examined a number of cases on tire subject, and have read the very illuminating and instructive articles on the question in Volume 5, Tulane Law Review, page 396 et seq., where the history and meaning of the condition is given, and Volume 6 of the same Review, beginning at page 23, where the cases oir the subject are analyzed and discussed.

The potestative condition repro-bated by the Code is that condition or event upon which an obligation depends, and which it is entirely within the will and power of the obligor to bring about or hinder, without himself suffering some material detriment or disadvantage. In other words, it is where the condition is dependent -merely on the state of mind or whim of the obligor to do or not to do.

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178 So. 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colbert-v-district-grand-lodge-no-21-lactapp-1938.