Holifield v. General Development Co.

7 Teiss. 168, 1910 La. App. LEXIS 19
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1910
DocketNo. 4883
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Teiss. 168 (Holifield v. General Development Co.) 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
Holifield v. General Development Co., 7 Teiss. 168, 1910 La. App. LEXIS 19 (La. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GODCHAUX, J.

Plaintiff, according to his petition, sues on a contract of employment as broker of date June 22,1908, to effect the exchange of the property of defendant for other property known as No. 1325 Calhoun Street, and alleges that though he had secured the consent of the owner of the Calhoun Street property to make the exchange, the defendant declined to comply with his part of the transaction. Claiming that he has thus performed his contract, he sues for the recovery of a fixed and agreed commission of two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars, and the defense is substantially a denial of the contract of employment.

It will elucidate matters by stating that the exchange of the properties was, in fact, never consumated; so that plaintiff’s right of recovery, if any exists, must be based upon the proposition that, having been employed by defendant on June 22, 1908, to procure the exchange, and having, pursuant to that employment, secured the consent of the owner of the Calhoun Street property to make the exchange, he is entitled to his commission, even though the exchange was never effected, since the failure to do so is chargeable solely to the act of the defendant whose refusal to exchange cannot operate to defeat his rights.

On the trial below, and in brief and argument in this court, plaintiff insisted and sought to establish, contrary to the express allegation of his petition, that an oral employment dating long prior to June 22, 1908, existed. Without discussing whether, under the pleadings and in view of the admission of testimony on that subject without objection, his cause of action could be thus varied or enlarged, this claim of a prior oral contract can be dismissed with the statement that, prior to June 17, 1908, the negotiations between plaintiff, on the one hand, and Huston and Lynn, officers of the defendant company, on the other hand, relative to the exchange of the properties, [170]*170evidenced a transaction in which the two latter were acting and interested in their individual capacities and .not as representatives of the corporation. Prior to June 17, 1908, the company was never formally advised of any contemplated exchange. These two parties were seeking to acquire personally the entire outstanding stock of the defendant corporation, and were treating with Holifield for an exchange of the properties with a view of individually reaping (indirectly, it is true, by their acquisition of the entire capital stock) any profit or advantage that might result from the' exchange. Their efforts to acquire the stock having failed, they then concluded to submit the subject of the exchange and the employment of plaintiff to the company for its consideration, and as an advantageous proposition to it and its stockholders generally. In so far as the rights of the parties to this litigation are concerned, the transaction should and will be considered as beginning at this point, and what previously transpired must be ignored.

When it was concluded to- submit the matter to the company, Holifield insisted that his contract of employment as broker, as well as the authority from the company, to effect the exchange, be evidenced in writing, and be passed upon formally by the Board of Directors. To this end he drafted two documents dated June 17, 1908, one in the form of a letter addressed to himself, to be signed by the defendant, through its president (as evidenced by the form of the document itself), wherein, after reciting the employment of plaintiff for a term of ten days to effect the exchange of the properties on a commission of two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars, it is provided that the amount of the commission shall, as soon as the agreement, as distinguished from the final notarial act, of exchange is signed be deposited in trust in some bank until the transaction of exchange is finally consumated. The other document which, from its character [171]*171required and on its face contemplated, the signature of the defendant corporation, through its president, was in the form *of an offer to exchange the properties, stating the precise terms and conditions that should govern the transaction in all its details and concluding by the recital that “this offer will hold good until 12 o’clock, June 18, 1908.”

No meeting of the Board was held until June 20, 1908, when, these documents having been submitted for approval and for the grant of the requisite authority of the President to execute same, the date of each was changed to June 22, 1908; the letter to Holifield was, among other things, altered by eliminating entirely the clauses as to the deposit in trust of the amount of the commission and as to the ten-day term of employment; and the draft of the offer off exchange was amended so as to provide that said offer “shall hold good until 12 o’clock, June 23, 1908.” In all other respects essential to this controversy the two documents were allowed’ to remain unchanged and were embodied in the minutes in the following manner:

“On motion, * * * seconded, * * * it was resolved that the President be authorized to make the following offer to C. Gr. Holifield, representing the owner of the property, No. 1325 Calhoun Street, New Orleans”:

(Heré follows in full the form of the offer of exchange drafted by Holifield, as amended by the Board in the respects above recited.)

“Carried.”
“On motion, * * * ^ seconded, * * * it was resolved'that the President, R. C. Huston, be authorized to make the following offer to C. Gr. Holifield to pay him a commission in the event the above exchange is finally consumated:”

[172]*172(Here follows the letter of employment drafted by and addressed to Holifield, as amended by the Board in the respects above recited.)

‘ ‘ Carried. ’ ’

At this point it is pertinent to state that the Court finds from the foregoing facts, as well as from others disclosed in the record, two things to be true:

First, that the draft of proposals covering respectively plaintiff’s employment and the exchanges, though contained in separate documents, as the necessity of the case clearly required, constitute legally one single instrument and the provisions of the one must be considered in connection with and read into the other as part and parcel thereof — the result of which is, among its other effects, to constitute, as far as plaintiff is concerned, these instruments, when signed as contemplated, a proposal to employ plaintiff on a fixed commission of two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars, to secure, on or before “twelve o’clock, June 23, 1908,” a valid acceptance of the offer of exchange on the part of the owner of the Calhoun Street property. Plaintiff’s contention that the term of his employment was based upon the offer of exchange, is wholly untenable and contrary to the evident intention and understanding of the parties.

Second, that it was within the clear intention and •contemplation of the parties that neither the employment of plaintiff nor the offer of exchange or the instruments drafted to evidence them should be binding or complete until written instruments evidencing these transactions should be drafted and should be signed at least by or on behalf of the defendant corporation.

In as much as neither instrument was ever signed by plaintiff or defendant or by the owner of the Calhoun Street property, these considerations become essential in the case, for plaintiff jdeads the existence of the con[173]

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Bluebook (online)
7 Teiss. 168, 1910 La. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holifield-v-general-development-co-lactapp-1910.