Hutchinson v. A. L. Bufkin Corp.

265 So. 2d 635, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6023
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 1972
DocketNo. 11886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 265 So. 2d 635 (Hutchinson v. A. L. Bufkin Corp.) 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
Hutchinson v. A. L. Bufkin Corp., 265 So. 2d 635, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6023 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

PRICE, Judge.

Freddie Hutchinson brought this action as a possessory action against A. L. Bufkin Corporation, alleging he has possessed as owner a certain residence in the City of Shreveport purchased from defendant on March 19, 1951, and that his possession has been disturbed by the filing of a lawsuit by defendant seeking to have him evicted from the subject property.

By the allegations contained in defendant’s answer and reconventional demand, the action was converted into a petitory action.

This litigation arises out of a contract entered into on March 19, 1951, styled a “Contract of Sale”, wherein defendant contracted to sell plaintiff Lots 214 and 215 of [637]*637the Gold Coin Subdivision of Caddo Parish for the total sum of $7,150, payable $350 cash and the balance at $50 per month, beginning April 1, 1951, to be first applied to interest and then to principal at 6 percent annual interest. The contract contained the following provisions: “Sale to be evidenced by Contract of Sale until the full amount of purchase price is paid.”

In his answer and reconventional demand, defendant contends the contract was only a contract to sell (not translative of title) and that pursuant to the terms thereof, plaintiff having made no payments thereon since July 1, 1969, all previous payments should be considered as rent. Defendant also claims plaintiff should be ordered to pay an additional amount equal to $50 per month for the period from July, 1969, until such time as plaintiff vacates the premises. Alternatively, defendant asks that should it be held the contract was translative of title and therefore a completed sale, that a vendor’s lien and privilege be recognized in its favor against the property and that judgment be rendered for the balance due under the contract of $4,155.-67.

Plaintiff answered defendant’s reconven-tional demand, alleging that should the court find the contract sued on was not translative of title but only a contract to purchase, that the credit amount of $6,800 at 6% per annum would be completely liquidated in 19 years at $50 per month, and, therefore, the contract has been fully paid and plaintiff is entitled to have the property conveyed to him free and clear of encumbrances.

Alternatively, plaintiff alleged the property was mortgaged by defendant without his knowledge to Louisiana Fire Insurance Company, who notified him in July of 1969 to begin making payments directly to them, thus defendant should be held liable for payments made by plaintiff on defendant’s behalf to this mortgagee.

After a trial on the merits the trial judge found the contract to be an agreement to buy and sell property under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 9:2941 et seq. (bond for deed contracts) and not transla-tive of title as claimed by plaintiff. The court further found plaintiff had fulfilled the payment requirements of the contract, had never been in default and was entitled to have title conveyed to him free and clear of encumbrances.

For an understanding of the issues raised on this appeal we quote the reasons given by the trial judge for reaching his conclusions on the performance of plaintiff under the terms of the contract, as follows :

“Under the contract the plaintiff was to pay the defendant $50.00 per month for the purchase of his home. These payments were made from April of 1951 through the trial of this case. A standard amortization table was filed in evidence which indicated that the purchase price of the property would have been paid in 19 years at $50.00 per month at the stated interest rate. This would have meant that the property would have been paid for by March of 1970.
“During this same period of time the plaintiff also paid to the defendant, through its proper agent, an additional $600.00 for the purported securing of a deed to the property and attorney’s fees. No deed was ever delivered to the plaintiff nor was any attorney’s services secured. Therefore, said payments should be applied to the purchase price.
“Plaintiff, with regularity, made all of the payments except during the year 1966 when, due to illness, he missed seven payments. Since he paid the $600.00 in 1959 and 1960 (said $600.00 placing him twelve payments ahead) he was not in arrears when he missed the seven payments. Actually, at the end of 1966, he was still five payments ahead. From June, 1969 until May of 1971, the plaintiff paid directly the sum of $46.56 to Louisiana Fire Insurance Company as the result of their instructions to him to [638]*638pay directly against a mortgage which the Bufkin Corporation had placed on the property in question. This consisted of twenty-four payments at $46.56. This left him some $72.80 behind on the $50.-00 per month payments due Bufkin Corporation. However, at that time he was still the five payments ahead. Therefore, applying the advance payments against this shortage we see that through the payment of May of 1971 he was still three payments of $50.00 per month and an additional $27.20 ahead on any of his alleged payments.
“The Court fails to find at any stage of the relationship between plaintiff and defendant that the plaintiff was in default on the contractual obligation of the $50.00 payment. Since the amortization schedule shows that $50.00 per month would pay out in nineteen years, the plaintiff has had his property paid for since the March payment of 1970. The contract between the parties did state that the plaintiff, in addition to the $50.-00 per month payment, was to pay the taxes on the property. However, nothing in the contract provided for the withholding of the taxes from the $50.00 payment. It is quite true that if the Bufkin Corporation paid the taxes for the period 1951 through 1970 they should be entitled to reimbursement. It is the Court’s opinion that the plaintiff’s overpayment more than compensates for the taxes which would be subject to reimbursement.
“The only other condition of importance in the contract was the right of the defendant to hold the contract in default if the plaintiff failed to insure the property. Again nothing in the contract authorized the defendant to withhold the insurance premiums from the $50.00 per month payment. In fact, nothing in the contract required the plaintiff to have the property insured. Such failure to insure by the plaintiff only gave the defendant the right to either mature the note in full or order the contract to have been violated and convert the contract to one of rent. Prior to the time that the plaintiff paid the obligation in full, i. e. March of 1970, the defendant failed to avail himself of this right of election. The Court does not feel that the defendant can now go back and attempt a redress under this non-insurance clause. Even if it is presumed that the plaintiff was unjustly enriched by the defendant paying for the insurance premiums, the Court feels that the defendant has been justly compensated by the (overpayment to it as well as the payments to Louisiana Fire Insurance Company.”

Pursuant to this opinion of the court, formal judgment was signed ordering defendant to deliver title to the subject property to plaintiff free and clear of encumbrances and rejecting defendant’s claim for reimbursement of taxes and insurance. Additionally, the judgment awarded plaintiff attorney’s fees in the sum of $500 for a failure of defendant to comply with the provisions of LSA-R.S. 9:2941 et seq.1

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Bluebook (online)
265 So. 2d 635, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-a-l-bufkin-corp-lactapp-1972.