Cox v. Kirkpatrick

404 So. 2d 999
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 1981
Docket14254, 14255
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 404 So. 2d 999 (Cox v. Kirkpatrick) 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
Cox v. Kirkpatrick, 404 So. 2d 999 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

404 So.2d 999 (1981)

Ross E. COX
v.
Claude KIRKPATRICK, et al.
Ross E. COX
v.
SOUTHERN COLONIAL INVESTMENT, INC., et al.

Nos. 14254, 14255.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

August 24, 1981.
Rehearing Denied October 10, 1981.

Eric A. Kracht, W. P. Wray, Jr., Bert K. Robinsin, Baton Rouge, for appellee.

Thomas K. Kirkpatrick and James B. Thompson, III, Baton Rouge, for appellants.

Before COVINGTON, CHIASSON and LEAR, JJ.

LEAR, Judge.

These two consolidated suits were filed by Ross E. Cox (plaintiff)[*] against Claude Kirkpatrick, Wayne D. Swenson, Sr. and Southern Colonial Investment, Inc. (defendants).

In the first ["paving"] suit, (Appeal Number 14,254), plaintiff sought recovery of an amount for paving work which plaintiff had performed on properties owned by defendants in the Interstate Shopping Center. Defendants filed a reconventional demand, alleging that plaintiff breached his agreement with defendants, whereby defendants were given the "right to earn" commissions upon obtaining leases on property owned by *1000 plaintiff. Defendants claim damage in the amount of $100,000.00.

In the second ["lease"] suit, (Appeal Number 14,255), plaintiff sought recovery of unpaid rental installments on a lease to defendants of property owned by plaintiff in the Colonial Shopping Center in the total sum of $75,000.00. Defendants in this suit also filed a reconventional demand, in which they sought cancellation of the lease sued upon by plaintiff, or a reduction of the amount owed, on the grounds that plaintiff had arbitrarily and capriciously denied defendants permission to sub-lease the premises in violation of the terms of the lease.

Defendants' reconventional demand in the first suit, and the lease sued upon by plaintiff and defendants' reconventional demand in the second suit are related to an exchange whereby plaintiff transferred Highland South Shopping Center to defendants in exchange for Colonial Shopping Center.

After a consolidated trial of these suits, plaintiff obtained judgment against defendants in the "paving" suit in the amount of $12,666.64, and in the "lease" suit in the amount of $52,500.00 subject to a credit to defendants of $6,358.32. Defendants' reconventional demands in both suits were dismissed with prejudice. Defendants then appealed both judgments.

Although consolidated for trial and on appeal, in order to avoid confusion, each suit is addressed separately.

The trial court, in a lengthy and well reasoned opinion, which we adopt in part, held as follows:

IN RE: APPEAL NO. 14,254

"The parties have stipulated that plaintiff furnished defendants paving for their Interstate Shopping Center in the amount of $21,666.64 (sic) [the correct amount is $12,666.64] for which defendants have not paid; the defense is that plaintiff agreed to permit defendants to earn real estate commissions by leasing for plaintiff a 12,000 square foot tract in Colonial Shopping Center, that defendants obtained and presented to plaintiff the lease prospects, but plaintiff failed to proceed in good faith to execute the leases.

"Accepting defendants' own testimony, they had an understanding with plaintiff under the terms of which plaintiff would afford them the `right to earn' commissions totalling between $70,000 and $132,000. At first blush, a contract which has as its object the obligee's `right to earn' money by obtaining leases acceptable to the obligor appears to be no contract at all. However, such a contract may constitute an innominate contract, as provided by CC Art. 1787 (sic) [CC art. 1777-78]. Assuming such an agreement could constitute the object of a contract, no contract was formed between these parties because there apparently was no certainty as to the amount which the defendants would have the right to earn. The testimony as to the total sum varied; the variance may be ascribed in part to the allowance for the $60,000 in paving which plaintiff subsequently gave defendants but, even allowing for this, there is uncertainty as to the precise amount which defendants would have the right to earn. For example, the petition sets forth the sum of $100,000, which bears no reasonable relationship to the sums of $70,000 and $130,000, allowing for the circumstance of the deduction of the $60,000 in paving. Under these circumstances, the court is of the opinion that there has been no meeting of the minds and thus no contract.

"Assuming that defendants' evidence had established the amount which they had the right to earn with sufficient specificity to reflect to (sic) meeting of the minds, they have failed to meet their burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, the existence of an innominate contract under the terms of which they received the right to earn commissions somewhere between $70,000 and $132,000.

"The testimony of defendants Kirkpatrick and Swenson is sometimes confusing as to when and how this contract arose, and the amount thereof. Plaintiff denies the contract's existence, and his denial is supported by three denials by defendants. The first denial occurred at the `dry run' a few *1001 days before the closing of the exchange on June 23, 1972. The second denial occurred at the closing. The third denial occurred on or about September 21, 1972 .... Additionally, defendants admitted that they did not talk personally to Cox about the matter. Apparently, if they received any representations about plaintiff's amenability to binding himself to giving them the `right to earn' commissions, it came through one Wicker, whom, under the circumstances, they could not reasonably have believed to be the agent of plaintiff.

"Another circumstance pointing away from any binding agreement is that the consideration for that agreement would have been, by defendants' contentions, an imbalance, in plaintiff's favor, in the values of the properties exchanged; however, defendants leased other property from plaintiff —the lease in suit No. 169,896 [Appeal No. 14,255]—to make up an imbalance, in their favor, in the same exchange.

"The court is troubled by the letter proposal of June 1, 1973 ....[[*]] This lends some force to defendants' argument that there was an agreement under the terms of which they were entitled to earn a commission for the leasing of plaintiff's properties. The force of this evidence is weakened, however, by the terms of the proposal, under which defendants were to do much more—and obligate themselves much more—and if they merely were to `broker' leases for plaintiff.

"Even more telling is the way in which the defendants in their personal testimony characterized their arrangement with Cox on the `right to earn' issue. They described it as a `gentlemen's agreement', and a `general understanding', and testified that it was `nothing that was legally binding.'[[1]]

"Considering all of the evidence, the defendants have failed to meet the burden of proof that there was in fact a valid and enforceable contract under the terms of which they had the `right to earn' certain moneys.

"There is still another reason why defendants cannot prevail on their claim of a contract giving them the right to earn $70,000, or $132,000, or some amount in between, by obtaining tenants for plaintiff's 12,000 square foot tract in Colonial Shopping Center. Defendants are not licensed as real estate brokers. At the time of the events in question in this lawsuit, R.S. 37:1450 provided that:

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404 So. 2d 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-kirkpatrick-lactapp-1981.