Lakeside Dairies, Inc. v. Gregersen

59 So. 2d 701, 221 La. 503, 1952 La. LEXIS 1222
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 2, 1952
DocketNo. 40113
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 59 So. 2d 701 (Lakeside Dairies, Inc. v. Gregersen) 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
Lakeside Dairies, Inc. v. Gregersen, 59 So. 2d 701, 221 La. 503, 1952 La. LEXIS 1222 (La. 1952).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

This case was previously before this court at which time the judgment of the lower court which had been in favor of plaintiff was reversed and the suit remanded to the lower court for a certain specific purpose. See Lakeside Dairies, Inc., v. Gregersen, 217 La. 510, 46 So.2d 752.

The suit is one for specific performance of a contract involving the sale and purchase of certain land and improvements located in Bridgedale Subdivision, Jefferson Parish, and designated as 5100 Airline Highway.

As will appear in the opinion on the original hearing the parties entered into a written contract of lease dated September 22, 1942 under the terms of which the lessee was given the privilege of purchasing the property leased at any time during the life of any extension or renewal thereof, for the price and sum of $11,100. The contract further provided that if the lessee should take advantage of the option, one hundred dollars out of the stipulated monthly rental of $150, was to be applied to the purchase price at the time of the transfer of title. The contract further provided that should the lessee exercise the option, lessors would have the privilege to purchase lots Nos. 7-16 inclusive which form the rear part of the property facing Rose Avenue, or any of them, for the price of $150 per lot within a period of six months from the time lessee would take title to [508]*508the whole of the property in the exercise of its option.

The principal and resolving contention presented on the first hearing was a plea of lesion beyond moiety. The plea had been rejected in the lower court but was sustained in this court and the case remanded to the district court -for the restricted purpose of permitting both parties litigant to introduce in evidence proof of the value of the property as of the month of July 1945, that being the time at which the defendant was placed in default and called upon to deliver title to the plaintiff.

Under Article 2590 of the Louisiana Statutes Annotated — Civil Code it is provided that in order “to ascertain whether there is a lesion beyond moiety, the immovable must be estimated according to the state in which it was, and the value which it had at the time of the sale.” The controversy arose over the fact that in this case there had not been a sale but merely a contract of sale and the query was whether the provisions of the cited article should be applied to such a contract. With one of the justices dissenting, the court held that the value of the immovable at the time of the sale governs in ascertaining whether there is lesion and that in a contract containing an option to purchase the value of the property is to. be determined not as of the date of the contract but as of the time of the exercise of the option. It was found that the exercise of the option in this case occurred in July, 1945 and that is -why the case, was remanded to the district court for the purpose of determining the value as of that time.1

The District Judge heard considerable testimony relating to the value of the property and the improvements thereon as of July, 1945. From the evidence he found that the land itself had a total value of $12,-700, allowing $7700 for the front portion and $5000 for ten lots in the rear. He found the value of the improvements to be $13,500, making a total of $26,200 for both land and improvements. Then, taking into consideration, as he was permitted, according to the case of Linkswiler v. Hoffman, 109 La. 948, 34 So. 34, 36, “the circumstances by which the vendor [was] surrounded and [giving] weight to the same in determining the value of the property to him at the time he makes the sale”, he fixed a fair value of the whole property in July, 1945 at $22,500. He was of the opinion that the circumstances under which a part [510]*510of the amount paid as rent was to be applied to the purchase price of $11,100 stipulated in the contract between the parties at the time the lease was entered into had the effect of reducing the actual purchase price to the sum of $7700. At that price, lesion would be present if the value in July, 1945 was held to be as low as $15,-400; so naturally, at the values found by him it was for greater reason found to apply and accordingly he ordered the defendants to deliver title to the plaintiff upon payment of the sum of $22,500 less credits for payments made on the purchase price and various other credits which he found it was entitled to, reducing the payment to be made to the sum of $9,201.07, plus interest at 5% per annum from July 27, 1945, until paid. He reserved to the defendants the right which they had under the contract to redeem the ten lots in the rear of the property at the sum of $500 per lot, for a period of six months following the date upon which this judgment was to become final. From a judgment so decreeing the defendants took a devolutive appeal which the plaintiff has answered.

It is apparent that what the lower court was concerned with and what we are now concerned with on this appeal is a question of fixing the value of property as of a given date several years ago, and in view of the changes in our economic conditions involving the rise in the costs of labor and materials, which were even then growing rapidly, it is a rather difficult matter to be exact in fixing such values and courts must necessarily be guided by the opinions and the testimony of people who are engaged in businesses relating to real estate and the construction of buildings and improvements and more particularly those who are recognized as experts in those fields. The Code prescribes no formula to be followed in fixing, values in cases of lesion and courts are therefore left to the use of their own discretion, (with due observance of the usual rules of evidence, of course) except that in certain instances they may derive some assistance from jurisprudence found in the decisions of cases bearing on the subject.

In this case the learned trial judge seems, to have gone into the matter in a very methodical manner as he considered the intrinsic value of the land and the improvements at first separately, and then as a unit. Afterwards he considered the rental value of the property and finally the circumstances under which the contract for the sale and purchase óf the property was entered into. Not only that, in view of the fact that the rear part of the property had been sub-divided into lots, and apparently the front portion abutting the Airline highway had a greater value, he divided the whole property in two parts seeking appraisals and estimates of the front portion first and then the value of the lots in the rear.

Nine real estate men, all qualified as experts, testified as to the value of the [512]*512land. The estimate of one of them was so much out of line with that of the other ■eight that his testimony need not be given any consideration.

The front portion of the property measures 140 feet front on the highway and has a depth of 100 feet on one side and 150 feet on the other.' The eight witnesses whose testimony is to be considered, estimated its value at so much per lineal front foot. These estimates range from $35 per foot, which we might state here is considerably lower than any of the other estimates, to $60 per foot. A fair average of all of these estimates, even including the lowest ■of $35 is $55 which is the estimate adopted by the district judge in reaching a value of $7700 for that portion of the property.

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Bluebook (online)
59 So. 2d 701, 221 La. 503, 1952 La. LEXIS 1222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeside-dairies-inc-v-gregersen-la-1952.