Hunley v. Ascani

141 So. 385, 174 La. 712, 1932 La. LEXIS 1717
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1932
DocketNo. 30903.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 141 So. 385 (Hunley v. Ascani) 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
Hunley v. Ascani, 141 So. 385, 174 La. 712, 1932 La. LEXIS 1717 (La. 1932).

Opinion

ST. PAUL, J.

The district judge has 'correctly disposed of this case and assigned his reasons in an elaborate opinion which we adopt as our own, except in so far as hereinafter modified, to wit:

Opinion of the District Judge:

“On January 31, 1929, an ordinary partnership engaged in the business of real estate agents, now euphonically called ‘Realtors,’ had in their possession a mandate from Enrico Ascani, authorizing these real estate agents to sell a piece of property belonging to him. These agents, or one of them, interested Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hunley in the property. They were carried up and shown the piece of property, which was a double cottage on Seventh street between Carondelet and Baronne streets, bearing the municipal Nos. 172S-1730 Seventh street. The premises were shown to the prospective purchasers and were by them examined. The property appeared attractive, and the two plaintiffs in this case became desirous of purchasing it and becoming the owners thereof. The plaintiffs made an offer to the agents on January 31, 1929, about ten days after this inspection, to purchase this property for the sum of $7,400, the description in their offer reading: ‘The double cottage Nos. 1728-1730 Seventh street between Carondelet and Baronne, the ground measuring approximately 30'xl20', or as per title.’ The offer made by these two plaintiffs then went on to say that the terms by which this property was to be purchased were to be $1,400 cash and the balance of $6,-000 through any New Orleans homestead, ‘said loan may be obtained by purchasers or Wise-Miller, Agents,’ and then followed the words ‘community drive privilege’ inserted in the title. The plaintiffs, or one of them, the wife, together with Wise-Miller, applied to the Liberty Homestead Association of this city and obtained grant of a loan on the property in question of $6,100. Subsequently, the plaintiffs wrote to Wise-Miller through their attorney, Mr, L. R. Wertheimer, denouncing the contract and stating that the title offered was not merchantable, and that they would not comply therewith, and demanded the return of the $740 which had been deposited with them, and on failure of *715 Wise-Miller to return the $740 brought this suit against Wise-Miller and against Ascani asking a judgment ordering the return of the deposit and further judgment annulling the contract of purchase and sale on two grounds: First, that the contract contained a potestative condition and was therefore null and void ab initio; and, second, that the property in question, instead of 30' front on Seventh street, contained only 26'4". We will take up their first objection first, that the contract contained a potestative condition. This is urged upon the court under the jurisprudence established by the Court of Appeals and subsequently affirmed by the Supreme Court, that, where the validity of a contract was made to depend upon the obtaining of a loan from a homestead where the question whether the loan would be applied for or not was entirely within the will and pleasure of the proposed purchaser, and therefore the carrying out of the contract rested entirely upon his will and pleasure, it was one containing a potestative condition and therefore null and void ab initio. In my opinion,, this jurisprudence will not apply to this case, for the reason that after the words ‘balance of $6,000 through any New Orleans homestead’ there followed the words, ‘said loan may be obtained by purchasers or Wise-Miller, Agents’; therefore, it did not depend upon the will of the purchasers alone as to whether application could be made to any homestead and the loan obtained. Wise-Miller, the agents of Ascani had it in their power to apply for and obtain the loan, and the purchasers had no power to prevent them from so doing, and when they did exercise the power granted to them the contract, so far as that portion was concerned, became a condition fulfilled, which made an absolutely good contract.

“Now, as to the second objection, that the property, instead of being 30' front on Seventh street only had 26'4". The words' describing the property, after declaring it to be the double cottage Nos. 1728-1730 Seventh street between Carondclet and Baronne, proceeded with these words ‘the grounds measuring, approximately, 30' by 120' or, as per title.’ The question then arises: What was offered for sale, what was seen, what was contracted for? The evidence convinces me that what was offered was this double cottage situated on Seventh street, and that the grounds, as shown by visual observation to the two prospective purchasers was the property they saw. They saw the lines, they saw the community driveway, they saw the rear of the property, they saw everything connected with it; and then they agreed to purchase that property with the dimensions, first 30'xl20’, if such it was, or more or less, if the title held by the owner was more or less.

“In my opinion, the canon of construction which requires the court in construing either the law of the state, an ordinance of a city, or a contract between two people, which is a private law, to give effect to each and every word therein contained, if it is possible so to do, and never to strike out and refuse to consider words contained unless no reasonable construction could be given thereto, must apply in this case and forbids this court to read out of this contract the words ‘or as per title’ ; and, when the court finds itself unable to read these words out of the contract, to consider them not written, it is considered by the court to be a reasonable construction and *717 interpretation of these words that the parties to the contract haying seen the property themselves, the estate, as it is sometimes called, desired to be the owners of it and were willing to take it as viewed, according to the title, which would embrace the physical things that they saw. The house and the grounds, in the front and rear, and that, if the title of the owner called for a little more-or a little less, the object which they desired to purchase would be acquired, and that is that estate consisting of this double cottage with its community driveway and the physical improvements put upon it which had become part of the immovables by destination.

‘'Counsel for plaintiffs in this suit refers me to a case that went up from this court to the Supreme Court, Jacobs v. Freyhan, 156 La. 589, 100 So. 726. Instead of that case being one beneficial to the plaintiffs’ case, it is, in my opinion, one damning thereof. In that case the prospective purchaser, Jacobs, was shown a certain house in this city, and he contracted to buy with an instrument similar to the one now before me, in which the words were used giving supposed measurements in feet and inches, followed by the words ‘or as per title.’ When Jacobs had the property surveyed, he found that the house he proposed to buy and which it was proposed to sell to him was some 6 inches over on the adjoining property’s line. He refused to take it and I upheld him in it in a written opinion, which I find the Supreme Court copied in its opinion in full. After copying my opinion, the Supreme Court then said: ‘Defendants take the position that the property which they obligated themselves to convey was described by reference to their title papers; that the frontage on Dufossat street called for by them is there and that it could make no difference that an actual survey showed the improvements to encroach upon adjoining property to the extent mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 385, 174 La. 712, 1932 La. LEXIS 1717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunley-v-ascani-la-1932.