Hayward v. Campbell

4 Teiss. 96, 1906 La. App. LEXIS 129
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1906
DocketNo. 3976
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Teiss. 96 (Hayward v. Campbell) 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
Hayward v. Campbell, 4 Teiss. 96, 1906 La. App. LEXIS 129 (La. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

MOORE J.

Alleging that the defendant had promised in writing to sell to her a certain piece of real property situated in the City of New Orleans for the price and sum of $14,000.00; that ten per cent of the purchase price had been deposited with defendant, that upon examination of the title it was discovered that defendant had no title to the property; that thereupon defendant was notified that the title was rejected and a demand made for the return of the ten per cent, [97]*97($1400.00) deposit, which demand' was' refused, the' plaintiff prays judgment against the defendant for the said sum of fourteen hundred dollars.

The answer simply “denies all and singular the allegations, of the petition.”

There was judgment for plaintiff as prayed for and defendant appeals.

The facts are that on the 18th April* 1905* plaintiff agreed to purchase of defendant and the latter to sell to plaintiff, the defendant’s residence on St. Charles Avenue, in the City of New Orleans and which is fully described in the written contract, for the sum of fourteen thousand dollars, whereof fourteen hundred dollars was then and there paid; the contract stipulating that the “Terms (are) to be determined upon later, after examination of titles.” Upon examination of the title the attorney for plaintiff discovered that defendant was not the owner of the entire property which, in its entirety, it was in the contemplation of the parties should be convej'ed, but that on the contrary the property was owned in indivisión by defendant and her children. Thereupon plaintiff’s counsel, some time in May, 1905, “reported the title bad to Mrs. Campbell’s, (the defendant’s) representative” and on the first day of June, 1905, he addressed and mailed to the defendant the following letter:

New Orleans, La., June 1, 1905.
Mrs. William Campbell, City,
Madam — As I have reported adversely on the title, I am requested by Mrs. Hayward to ask that you return me for her account, the $1400.00 deposited with you.
I will surrender receipt upon payment of the money.
Yours respectfully,
(Signed) W. S. Parkerson.
No reply having been máde to this communication, the counsel (Mr. Parkerson) again wrote to the defendant enclosing a copy of his letter of the 1st June. To this letter the following reply was made by defendant’s counsel:
New Orleans, June 9, 1905.
Mr. W. S. Parkerson, City,
Dear Sir--Mrs. William Campbell has referred }mur letter to me for attention. Replying thereto, I beg leave to advise [98]*98that Mrs. Campbell is prepared to give a good and valid title to your client, Mrs. Hayward, at any time she desires it. I will be glad to confer with you at your convenience.
Yours truly,
(Signed) J. Zach. Spearing.
Thereafter the suit followed.

It appears that after the defendant had been advised by the plaintiff’s counsel that the defendant had no title to the property and that the title was rejected and after a demand had been made for the return of the amount deposited, the defendant set to work to acquire the interest of her children in the property. This interest she acquired by purchase on the 3rd June, 1905, putting the same of record, however, only on the 9th June, 1905.. At no time, so far as the record shows, did she advise the plaintiff that she was contemplating, or negotiating a purchase of her children’s interest in the property or, subsequently, that she had acquired such interest; nor does she in her answer to the instant demand of plaintiff for the restitution of the purchase price, nor by her evidence or otherwise tender a perfected title or offer to complete or execute the contract by transferring the property. The argument of her counsel is that notwithstanding these facts plaintiff may not recover what has.been paid on account of the purchase price:

First. Because the defendant has not been put in default “in accordance with the provisions of Art. 410 C. ,P;’’ and,

Second. Because, admitting argtiendo, that the defendant failed to comply with her engagement, the resolution of the contract — the contract not having been dissolved of right — can be enforced only by a suit brought for that purpose.

1.

So far as concerns the question of putting in default the defendant’s sole complaint is that it was not made “in accordance.with the provisions of Art. 410 C. P.” This article directs how the. debtor who “has promised to sell, transfer or convey to the creditor, real property, a debt or some other personal right,” shall put the creditor (the purchaser) in default by giving the latter a previous written notice “to be and appear on a certain day and at a fixed hour, at the office of soine public notary or of some other officer exercising similar [99]*99functions, or at such other place as he may designate, in order there to receive the sale, cession, transfer or conveyance, which he is ready to make to him, either of the real estate> debt or personal right which he had contracted to transfer to such creditor.” It does not require the creditor, (the purchaser), to pursue any such course in order to put the debtor., (the seller) in mora.

But more than this, plaintiff was not, under the facts of this case, required to put the defendant in default at all as a condition precedent to the right to demand a resolution of the price, because, in the first place, it would have been legally impossible for the defendant to have complied with her obligation for, as the evidence shows, she was not the owner of the property at the time she made the promise of sale, (18th April, 1905) nor subsequently in May, 1905, and still later on the 1st June following, when the demand was repeated. It would, therefore, have, been a vain thing for the plaintiff to have demanded from the defendant the doing of something which the latter could not legally have done. Lex neminem cogit ad vana.

* In the second place a putting in mora was not required because the defendant in her answer denies the existence of the contract. The answer, without limitation, or exception, or reservation or in the alternative, denies “all and every the allegations of plaintiff’s petition,” the principal allegation of which, and necessarily so as it is the basis of the action, is the existence of the contract. It is not probable that the defendant would offer to execute a contract which she denies ever existed. In Beck vs. Fleitas 37 A. 492-494, the Court, referring to the rule that where the alleged violation of the contract is passive the putting the defendant in mora is an indis-pensible prerequisite to recovery, adds. “But from the very nature of the rule jurisprudence has deduced several unavoidable and important exceptions. The object of putting in default is to secure the creditor his right to demand damages or a dissolution of the contract, so that the debtor can no longer defeat this right, by executing or offering to execute the agreement, Moreau vs. Chauvin 8 R 61; Pratt vs. Craft 20 A. 291.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Teiss. 96, 1906 La. App. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayward-v-campbell-lactapp-1906.