Gray v. James
This text of 503 So. 2d 598 (Gray v. James) 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.
Opinion
Gloria GRAY
v.
Judy Debose, Former Wife of/and Kenneth JAMES.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*599 Randy D. Florent, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.
George H. Jones, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Before SCHOTT, BYRNES and WILLIAMS, JJ.
BYRNES, Judge.
By this appeal Gloria Gray asserts that the trial court erred in awarding her only $4,620.00 in damages as a result of a failed real estate transaction. We agree and amend the judgment.
The facts of this case are as follows: On March 24, 1981, Mrs. Gray entered into a written agreement with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth James whereby she would purchase the James' property located at 1666-68 Jo Ann Place. The terms of payment were: 1) $5,000 cash to be paid on March 24,1981; 2) $10,000 to be paid on June 23, 1981 and; $10,000 to be paid on February 23, 1982. The act of sale transferring title of the property from the Jameses to Mrs. Gray was to take place on the date of the last payment. Mrs. Gray was also to assume the outstanding balance of the two mortgages which burdened the property on that date. The agreement also provided that Mrs. Gray would begin making the payments on these mortgages on June 23, 1981, even though she was not to assume the mortgage obligations themselves until passage of the act of sale.
Other pertinent provisions of the sale agreement provided that if any installment was not timely paid, all amounts previously paid would be forfeited. Further, it was agreed that as of June 23, 1981, (the date of first $10,000 installment) Mrs. Gray would have the right to renovate the property at her expense but that all sums expended in the renovation would be forfeited to the Jameses should she fail to pay all installments on time.
In accordance with the agreement, Mrs. Gray timely paid the first two installments, and began renovation of the bottom floor of the building while residing in the upper floor. By the date of trial, Mrs. Gray had allegedly spent $11,701.30 on renovations. When the third and last installment became overdue, Mrs. Gray requested and received *600 an extension of time to pay the final installment in consideration of the sum of $1,000. On May 31 and June 18, 1982, Mrs. Gray paid sums totalling $3,200 towards satisfaction of the final installment. When Mrs. Gray discontinued payments under the agreement, she had paid $3,490.00 towards the mortgages on the property and $18,200 towards the purchase price. Because the $25,000 purchase price was never paid in full, the act of sale did not take place.
On October 22, 1984 Mrs. Gray filed suit against the Jameses to annul their agreement and recover the money she had paid, claiming she was entitled to a refund under the provisions of Louisiana's bond for deed Statute, R.S. 9:2941-47. By the date of suit the Jameses had divorced and Mrs. James, who had reverted to her maiden name of Debose, claimed full ownership of the property. However, both Kenneth James and Judy Debose, were named as defendants in Mrs. Gray's suit.
After trial, the judge held that the agreement between the parties was a sale with an assumption of the existing mortgages. The judge further found that the forfeiture clauses of the agreement were only valid as to the initial $5,000 installment, construing this provision as a "forfeiture of deposit". The other forfeiture provisions, were found to be "relative nullities" and without legal effect. The judge granted Mrs. Gray $4,620.00 in damages. This award reflected a refund of the total sum she had paid towards the property less the $5,000 "deposit", and deductions made for reasonable rent and "negative repairs" which the trial judge concluded had caused the property to depreciate since the initial sale agreement was signed.
Mrs. Gray asserts by assignments of error one and two that the sales agreement which she entered into with the Jameses was a bond for deed contract and not a contract of sale. In support of this assertion, she cites R.S. 9:2941 et seq. which govern bond for deed contracts. Under R.S. 9:2941:
"A bond for deed is a contract to sell real property, in which the purchase price is to be paid by the buyer to the seller in installments and in which the seller after payment of a stipulated sum agrees to deliver title to the buyer."
Under the terms of the March 23, 1981, agreement the purchase price consisted of three installments totalling $25,000 and the assumption of the balance on existing mortgages on the property. The agreement further provided that after receipt of all stipulated installments, the act of sale conveying title to Mrs. Gray would be passed. In our opinion, the terms of this agreement show clearly that it contemplated a bond for deed and not a sale. See Leinhardt v. Marrero, Land & Improvement Association, Ltd., 137 So.2d 387 (La. App. 4th Cir.1962).
The fact that the act of sale was not to take place until after a certain sum had been paid is to us determinative of the agreement's characterization. In reaching this conclusion we note that the agreement itself did not perfect a sale. The parties intended no title to pass until after $25,000 in installments had been paid. Under these circumstances, this contract to sell real property should have been characterized as a bond for deed agreement, R.S. 9:2941, and the trial court's conclusion to the contrary is reversed.
Appellees argue in brief that even if the agreement fits the definition of a bond for deed contract set forth in R.S. 9:2941, the parties did not intend the agreement be a bond-for-deed. In support of this argument, they cite the fact that the parties did not attempt to comply with the statutory requirement for bond-for-deed contracts provided in R.S. 9:2942, and 2943. We are not persuaded by this argument.
To begin with we note that counsel for the Jameses acknowledged in a letter to Mrs. Gray that their agreement was a bond-for-deed contract. Moreover, we do not believe that the parties' noncompliance with parts of R.S. 9:2942 and 2943 undermines our characterization of this agreement.
R.S. 9:2942 provides that it is unlawful for the vendor to sell, by bond for deed, immovable property encumbered by a mortgage *601 or privilege without first obtaining from the mortgagee or privilege holder, a written guarantee to release the property upon payment by the buyer of a stipulated mortgage release price. R.S. 9:2943 provides that all payments toward the purchase of property burdened by a mortgage or privilege under bond for deed contracts shall be made to a bank which has been designated as an escrow agent by the parties. Although these provisions were not complied with in this case, the jurisprudence holds that strict compliance is not essential to a valid bond for deed contract. Scott v. Apgar, 238 La. 29, 113 So.2d 457 (1959). The clear purpose of R.S. 9:2942 and 2943 is to safeguard the buyer of mortgaged property from fraud, deceit and misrepresentation and to assure that all payments made by the buyer will be apportioned and distributed between the seller and mortgagee, thus ensuring the buyer an unencumbered title up to the amount of the sale price stipulated in the contract. Scott v. Apgar, supra 113 So.2d at 459.
In the present case, Mrs. Gray was aware at the time she signed the contract that two mortgages burdened the property and under the express terms of the agreement she agreed to assume both mortgages as of February 23, 1982. The record indicates Mrs.
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