General American Life Ins. v. Natchitoches Oil Mill, Inc.

160 F.2d 140, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2583
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 11, 1947
DocketNo. 11785
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 F.2d 140 (General American Life Ins. v. Natchitoches Oil Mill, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General American Life Ins. v. Natchitoches Oil Mill, Inc., 160 F.2d 140, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2583 (5th Cir. 1947).

Opinions

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

The suit was by the seller for specific performance of a written contract1 for [141]*141the sale of a gin house and site. The claim was that, plaintiff, while not in any respect in default and while the agreement was in full force and effect, had tendered the defendant a warranty deed and a policy of title insurance as agreed, but that defendant had refused to accept the deed and pay the purchase price.

Defendant moved to dismiss because the complaint failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, and, after hearing, the court deferred ruling until the merits had been heard. The defendant thereupon answered, admitting the execution of the contract and that defendant had agreed in writing that plaintiff had complied with its obligations to secure written agreements from the tenant purchasers. It pleaded, however, that at the time it did so agree, defendant did not know that many of the prospective tenant purchasers were unreliable and financially irresponsible, and that more than half of them had moved off the land in 1944. Not denying that plaintiff had tendered the deed as alleged, defendant placed its reliance on the clause in the contract referring to November 1st. Pleading that the contract fixed that date as the termination date of the contract, if the suspensive condition it referred to was not by then complied with, it insisted that because the sales of the plantation were not completed by November 1st, the contract was at an end and when the sales were later completed and the deed tendered, the defendant was [142]*142no longer obligated to accept the deed and pay the purchase price.

Plaintiff, by an amended and supplemental complaint, sued for taxes and insurance premiums it had been compelled to pay since the rejection by defendant of the property.

The parties stipulated substantially all of the material facts.2 In addition to the material facts stipulated, there was oral evidence, most of it offered and received over- defendant’s objection. This evidence in effect established that defendant did nothing on November 1st, to avail itself of either of the options granted it, (1) to denounce the contract, or (2) to ask for a six months’ extension of it, and nothing was said by it to indicate that it regarded or claimed that the contract was off, but on the contrary, it continued to' deal with plaintiff in complete recognition of the contract’s continuing existence. In December, plaintiff sent defendant a form of deed, and defendant returned it approved, and when on January 24th, after plaintiff had completed the sales to the • plantation purchasers, it tendered the deed to defendant. At no time until after defendant had received the tender of the deed did it say or do anything to indicate that it was not, or would not be bound to carry out its contract to purchase.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the district judge gave his opinion. First he construed the November 1st date set out in the contract attached to the complaint, not as an option date on which defendant had two options (1) to cancel and avoid the agreement or (2) to extend it for “an additional six months”, but as a date when the contract would expire of its own force unless the suspensive condition as to effecting sales of the plantation had been by then complied with. So construing it, he determined that the complaint in not alleging that plaintiff was in a position on November 1st, to insist upon performance, failed to state a right or cause of action, and that defendant’s motion to dismiss it should be sustained. In addition, he held that if wrong in this view, and the contract was still in force' when plaintiff tendered the deed, the defendant was justified in refusing to buy because of the unsatisfactory character of the tenant purchasers to whom plaintiff had sold the land.

Appellant is here insisting that the court erred in both respects. Appellee, insisting that the judgment on the pleadings was [143]*143right and that the evidence offered on the facts was immaterial, urges upon us that if wrong in this, still specific performance is not a matter of right, and the district judge had the right in the exercise of his discretion to refuse it on the merits.

We do not think so. On the pleadings the case is a very simple one of a contract clear, definite and precise in its terms, binding each of the .parties to it, the one to sell, the other to buy,3 “within five days after Alford and his assignees have taken title to Brookwater from the insurance company”. No time limit was fixed for the taking of such title and the closing of the contract of purchase on the gin, five days thereafter. The law, therefore, fixed a reasonable time for doing so and bound defendant to take the property if the deed was tendered within such time.4 The November 1st date in the contract did not purport to be a termination date. It was merely an option date on which there was extended to defendant two alternative options, one to declare the contract at an end, the other to extend it for six months. It is not claimed that the defendant took up either option, and it follows that after November 1st passed with nothing done to take the option up, the contract continued in force and effect for a reasonable time as though that date had not been written in it. The evidence establishes that the delay was due to the difficulty m getting the tracts properly surveyed. It is not claimed, there is no basis for the claim, that when the deed was tendered more than a reasonable time had elapsed for performing the suspensive condition. It is clear then that there is no sound basis for the claim that plaintiff' was in default when it tendered the deed, and defendant was, therefore, not obligated to accept the tendered deed and pay the purchase price.

As to the alternative contention, that even if the contract was in force when the deed was tendered, still the remedy of specific performance is not a matter of absolute right and it was within the court’s discretion to refuse it, we think defendant stands no better. It is true in Louisiana, as elsewhere, that whether specific performance will be granted rests in the sound discretion of the court.5 But it is true in Louisiana, as it is elsewhere, that the discretion exercised must be a sound and informed discretion and not a capricious or unsound one, that is, the judge must be able to give á sound reason for refusing the remedy. Where, as here, the contract deals with land, is clear and unambiguous in its terms, and plaintiff’s performance is unexceptionable, it was not the exercise, but the abuse, of discretion to refuse performance.6 The facts found by the district judge as justifying defend[144]*144ant’s refusal to perform and the judge’s refusal to compel him to, do not at all support his action. The record establish-, es without dispute that the defendant, through its president, Hayne, was at all times fully cognizant of the nature and character of the Farm Securities Administration experiment and its proposed purchasers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 F.2d 140, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-american-life-ins-v-natchitoches-oil-mill-inc-ca5-1947.