Demarest v. Enna

472 So. 2d 56, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8808
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1985
DocketNos. CA-2382, CA-2383
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 472 So. 2d 56 (Demarest v. Enna) 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
Demarest v. Enna, 472 So. 2d 56, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8808 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

BYRNES, Judge.

This appeal arises out of a real estate transaction. The facts of the case are as follows:

In 1981, appellant Mrs. Anita Silvernail, a Louisiana real estate agent, was contacted by Mrs. June Shotwell, a Texas real estate agent who had a client interested in purchasing motel property in New Orleans. The two agents agreed to work together and divide equally any commission which might be earned from their efforts.

When the client, Mr. Charles LaCoste Jr., expressed interest in the Yieux Carre Motor Hotel on Rampart Street and an adjoining vacant lot, Mrs. Silvernail went to the Orleans Parish Assessor’s office to ascertain the owner of the lot. There she met appellee, Mr. Anthony Enna, who worked in the office.

Mr. Enna owned an apartment house in the same square as the property Mrs. Sil-vernail was investigating, and he expressed an interest in selling it. When Mrs. Silver-nail brought this information to Mr. La-Coste’s attention, he expressed an interest which culminated in the execution of a Purchase Agreement for the property. The buyer named in the agreement was not Mr. LaCoste, but Noleasco, an ordinary partnership in commendam whose sole general partner was Noleasco Inc., a corporation of which Mr. LaCoste was president. The act of sale was scheduled to be passed before Francis J. Demarest, Mr. Enna’s attorney. Prior to scheduling the sale, Mr. Demarest requested and received a copy of Noleas-eo’s Articles of Partnership.

At the act of sale, Mr. LaCoste gave Mr. Demarest an uncertified check for $50,-000.00, drawn on a Noleasco account, as payment of the cash portion of the sale. Mr. Demarest then issued three checks drawn on his account; one to Mr. Enna for the cash amount of the purchase price less seller’s closing costs, one to Mrs. Silvernail for her half of the $12,000.00 real estate commission, and one to Mrs. Shotwell for the other half.

Mr. Demarest testified that he instructed Mrs. Silvernail and Mrs. Enna, who represented her husband at the act of sale, not to negotiate these cheeks until his account had been credited with the deposit of No-leaseo’s check. Mrs. Silvernail testified that Demarest only requested that they wait until Noleasco’s check was deposited in his account. She further testified that several days later, Mr. Demarest personally told her it was alright to negotiate the check. Mr. Demarest denied this. The day after the act of sale, Mr. Demarest deposited Noleasco’s check in his account. The check was later dishonored.

[58]*58In the meantime, Mrs. Silvernail had forwarded Mrs. Shotwell’s check to her. Both real estate commission checks were negotiated and honored by Mr. Demarest’s bank, even though his account did not have a sufficient balance to cover them due to the dishonoring of the Noleasco check. When Mr. Demarest became aware of this situation, he stopped payment on the check to Mr. Enna, which had not yet been negotiated. All parties attempted to contact Mr. LaCoste and have Noleasco’s check made good, but without success. Mr. Demarest then filed suit against Mr. Enna, seeking recovery of the real estate commissions and closing costs which he had paid on Mr. Enna’s behalf at the act of sale.

Just before Mr. Demarest filed suit, Mr. Enna executed and recorded a unilateral affidavit declaring his belief that the sale was “null and voidable ab initio” because Noleasco, the partnership, did not have the legal capacity to enter into an act of sale, and because the consideration for the sale (the NSF Noleasco check) had failed. He later induced Mr. LaCoste to execute a similar affidavit, acknowledging that the partnership lacked legal capacity and that the sale was null and voidable. This document was also subscribed to by Mr. Enna and recorded in the notarial archives of Orleans Parish.

Learning that Mr. Enna had re-offered the property to Mr. LaCoste on slightly different terms, Mr. Demarest obtained an injunction, forbidding the sale of the property and freezing Mr. Enna’s checking account. Mr. Demarest obtained summary judgment against Mr. Enna, who then sued Mrs. Silvernail and Mr. LaCoste to recover the amount of the judgment. In her answer, Mrs. Silvernail alleged that by executing and recording the affidavits of nullity, Mr. Enna had breached the purchase agreement and was therefore liable for the real estate commission.

The trial judge ruled in favor of Mr. Enna, awarding him a total of $33,025.21, with legal interest on $21,025.21 from the date of judicial demand until paid. Included in that judgment were sums intended to compensate Mr. Enna for the real estate commission and closing costs he was forced to repay Mr. Demarest, attorney’s fees incurred in his defense of Mr. Demarest’s suit, attorney’s fees incurred in prosecuting his suit against Mrs. Silvernail and Mr. LaCoste, and a final amount which the court felt was “.... the amount of damage sustained by Mr. Enna as a result of his being forced to borrow funds to repay Mr. Demarest and to pay the attorney’s fees charged by Lanne & Reed [Enna’s attorneys in the present suit].. ”

Mrs. Silvernail has appealed this judgment, urging that under the terms of the purchase agreement she was entitled to her real estate commission and that Mr. Enna was not entitled to attorney’s fees.1 She further argues that she was not liable for the return of Mrs. Shotwell’s half of the real estate commission and that she is not liable to Mr. Enna for incidental expenses he incurred in borrowing money to pay his attorneys and satisfy Mr. Demarest’s judgment against him. We agree in part, and amend the judgment so that Mrs. Silvernail is liable only for the $6,000.00 commission which she actually received.

Generally, a real estate broker earns a commission even if the sale is not consumated, provided he produces a buyer who is ready willing and able to buy on the terms set forth by the principal Eanes v. McKnight, 262 La. 915, 265 So.2d 220, (1972). However, an “able” buyer must have the financial ability to perform the purchase contract. Morere v. Dixon Real Estate Co., 188 So.2d 623 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1966).

The articles of partnership of No-leasco, the supposed buyer in this case, specifically provided that.

The partnership shall commence when the General Partner and the one Partner-[59]*59in-Commendam named hereinabove shall have executed this agreement and transferred their capital contributions and this agreement shall have been recorded in the mortgage records of the Parish of Orleans, Louisiana. The partnership shall continue until terminated as provided hereinafter, (emphasis added)

The record reveals that these articles were never recorded. Thus, by the terms of the articles themselves, the partnership never came into being. Moreover, the record also reveals that Noleasco Inc., the alleged general partner, was not organized as required by law, and therefore did not exist as a corporation. Thus, the true buyer in this case was Mr. LaCoste, who represented himself as President of Noleasco Inc., and who purported to act for that non-existent corporation, as well as for the non-existent partnership in commendum.

The record leaves no doubt that Mr. La-Coste was not financially able to meet his obligation as buyer. Not only did the $50,-000.00 check to Mr. Enna bounce, but Mr. LaCoste testified at trial that he was unable to secure a commitment from any bank to cover that downpayment check, much less the remainder of the purchase price. Mr-.

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Related

Demarest v. Enna
477 So. 2d 103 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
472 So. 2d 56, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demarest-v-enna-lactapp-1985.