Fernandez v. Soulie

28 La. Ann. 31
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
DocketNo. 4357
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 La. Ann. 31 (Fernandez v. Soulie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fernandez v. Soulie, 28 La. Ann. 31 (La. 1876).

Opinion

Lodeling, C. J.

On the twenty-fourth of October, 1870, the defendant ¡signed and delivered to the plaintiff the following instrument:

“ I hereby agree to sell and promise to give el good and sufficient title within sixty days and do sell unto Mr. Joseph A. Fernandez the plantation known as Monsecours, situated at Poverty Point, in. the parish of Plaquemines, with all its appurtenances, stocks, etc., for the price of thirty-four thousand dollars, of which one-fourth cash, balance one, two, and three years, with eight per cent interest.”

This act was recorded in the parish of Plaquemines on the twenty-third of January, 1871.

This suit is brought to recover $40,262 damages, resulting from the alleged non-execution of this contract and for property and improve-[32]*32meats placed on the plantation. The defendant denies that he has failed, to comply with his agreement. He alleges that a title was tendered to the. plaintiff in due time, hut that on the twenty-fifth of March, 1875, objections were urged to the title offered, and the plantation was abandoned, by the plaintiff, who had been in possession for some time. He alleges, that the objections were frivolous. And defendant claimed in reconvention 18333 33 for rents, 1800, the value of agricultural implements which belonged to the place, and 8830 for mules and other movables taken from the place.

There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff for 819,818 13, with legal interest from the date of the judgment, and costs, and dissolving the agreement to sell.

From this judgment the defendant appealed, and the plaintiff has. asked to have the judgment amended in his favor.

From the record the following facts appear: Monsecours plantation originally belonged to Alexander Lesseps and August Lesseps. In February, 1867, they leased the plantation to Leon Cusaohs till January, 1870, with the right to renew the lease for one year moro. The plaintiff is a witness to this contract. He was interested in the lease and took charge of the plantation. He subsequently became the sole lessee under said contract, assuming and paying the notes executed by Cu-sachs for three years; for the last year (1870) a verbal lease was agreed upon between plaintiff and defendant.

Alexander Lesseps died in October, 1867. Bernard Soulie was appointed his executor. In this capacity he controlled the Monsecours. plantation.

In May, 1859, Alexander Lesseps, as owner of two-thirds, and August Lesseps, as owner of one-third of said plantation and of an adjoining tract of land, had mortgaged both tracts to secure the payment of their .joint and several notes, amounting to 8105,000, in favor of one Shift Norbert Soulie, through his agent, Bernard Soulie, became the owner of several of these notes, amounting to 858,000. At the time of the death of Alexander Lesseps there remained outstanding of these notes 861,252 22, 846,028 15 whereof belonged to the succession of Norbert Soulie and 815,224 04 to Shift

On the twenty-fourth of April, 1868, upon the application of the executor of Alexander Lesseps, Bernard Soulie, the probate court granted an order to sell the property mortgaged as aforesaid. August Lesseps. consented that his share of the property might be sold, and that the sheriff should make a title thereto to the adjudicatee. Monsecours was adjudicated to Norbert Soulie for 818,000, less. than the appraisement. The executor of Alexander Lesseps filed his account and tableau and distributed the price between the concurrent creditors under the first, [33]*33mortgage, in accordance with the decree of this court. See Shiff vs. Succession of Lesseps, 22 An. 185. Other steps were taken to perfect the title then acquired, but it is not necessary to notice them further than to state that the sale made under the judgment obtained in the parish of Orleans was an absolute nullity, as the defendant resided in Plaquemines, and that the judgment homologating the sale on monition, by the probate court, only could cure defects or illegalities in regard to the public sale of the property of the succession; it did not affect the rights of the mortgage creditors of August Lesseps, who was alive. It did not affect •the rights of those who asserted rights dehors the title of Alexander Lesseps. It is true, as contended by plaintiff, that the interest of August Lesseps in the land could not be sold under an order of the probate court in the succession of Alexander Lesseps, and that the consent of August Lesseps that it should be thus sold could have no greatér effect than a private sale made by himself, as far as creditors having mortgages on his property were concerned. And though the first mortgage creditors, who took all the fruits of said sale, are estopped from attacking that sale, the subsequent judicial mortgage creditors of August Lesseps were not affected by those proceedings, and these mortgages, amounting to several thousand dollars, appear to rest upon the property. The plaintiff, therefore, had a right to object .to the title offered him. The objection that the title offered was from the heirs of Norbert Soulie and not from B. Soulie himself is not well'founded. We think the facts already stated show that'the plaintiff knew the capacity in which B. Soulie controlled the property, and that his engagement was to procure a title to Monsecours fox the plaintiff.

We have seen that late in March the plaintiff refused to accept- the title offered and gave up the property, which was received by the defendant. Practically, therefore, the only object in determining whether the instrument aforesaid, executed by Bernard Soulie in favor of Mr.' J, A. Fernandez, be a sale or a promise to sell, is to ascertain whether .the lease of Monsecours ceased to exist on the twenty-fourth Of October, 1870 (the date of said instrument) or continued' till the end of the' year for which it had'been made. ■

It is evident that the parties contemplated the execution of a formal act of sale, such as is usual in the transfer of a. plantation. ■ We canhdt presume the vendor intended toj sell on a credit without taking notes for the price, or that he intended to abandon the j>rivilege conferred by ■law, or the conventional mortgage usual in such transactions. . And it is well settled that.when parties agree to have their contract reduced to writing, the contract is not complete until the deed has' been signed by both parties. 3 M. 348, 527; 5 M. 677; 1 N. S. 422; 24 An. 433.

“La redaction d’un acto est'une .'condition suspensive du contrát.7 • 5 Boileux C. N., page 562. . / . .

[34]*34In Macdonald vs. Aubert tliis court said: “We understand article 2437 to mean that a promise to sell, when the thing to be sold and the price of it are agreed upon, is so íar a sale that it gives to either party a right to claim, recta via, the delivery oí the thing or payment of the price, but such a promise does not place the thing at the risk oí the promisee, nor does it transfer to him the ownership or dominion of it. If,;by consent of both parties, a promise to sell is canceled, such an agreement could not be received as a retrocession of the property, and third persons, having a general mortgage recorded against the prom-isee, would have acquired no right or lien on the same, because it never belonged to their debtor.” 17 La. 451.

The effect of the cancellation of the agreement between the parties was to place matters as they were before the agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 La. Ann. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernandez-v-soulie-la-1876.