Landreneau v. Perron

174 So. 140, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 200
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1937
DocketNo. 1704.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 174 So. 140 (Landreneau v. Perron) 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
Landreneau v. Perron, 174 So. 140, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 200 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This suit has for its object the enforcement on the part of defendant, by specific performance, of a certain agreement alleged by plaintiff to have been entered into between himself and the said defendant on December 13, 1935, by the terms of which the defendant would purchase from the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, a certain tract or parcel of land, with improvements thereon, situated in the parish of Evangeline, and fully described in the petition, and that he would thereafter, at the request of plaintiff, transfer the same 'either to the plaintiff or any person designated by him, for the same consideration he had paid therefor.

It is alleged that in accordance with the said agreement, the defendant did, on or about December 17, 1936, purchase the said property from the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans for the price and sum of $1,400, on account of which the sum of $280 was paid in cash and the balance of the purchase price was represented by a promissory note payable in twenty installments of $56 each, over a period of twenty years, the said note being secured by a vendor’s lien and special mortgage bearing-on the property.

Plaintiff alleges that he actually paid the sum of $280 to the Federal Land Bank as the cash portion of the purchase price for the account of the defendant, all in accordance with the terms of the agreement between them, and that in further accordance therewith, the defendant, after the sale had been executed, took possession of the property, and farmed it during the year 1936, delivering to him one-third of the crops thereon raised. He then alleges that on November 20, 1936, again in accordance with their agreement, he requested the defendant to transfer the property to him for the consideration of $1,400, he to assume the mortgage indebtedness existing, but that defendant refused to do so and still persists in his refusal. He alleges further that he “desires to and is entitled to have himself recognized as the owner of the hereinabove described property, upon failure of the defendant herein to formally make title to him within a delay to be fixed by the Court, and upon petitioner assuming the aforesaid special mortgage indebtedness representing the unpaid purchase price of said property.” The prayer of his petition is in accordance with these allegations.

As an alternative, plaintiff alleges and' prays that in the event it be held that he is not entitled to specific performance of their agreement, that he recover judgment against the defendant in the sum of $280, with interest, that being the amount paid by him to the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, for the account of the said defendant, as the cash payment on the purchase price of the property.

Defendant, although personally cited, made no appearance in the lower court, and in due time judgment was rendered against him on confirmation of default ordering *142 specific performance of the agreement set out in plaintiff’s petition. From that judgment he has taken this devolutive appeal.

In this court, defendant has filed an exception of no cause or right of action based on the failure of the plaintiff to have alleged in his petition, that the agreement he seeks specific performance of, being one' relating to an immovable, was in writing, as it necessarily had to be in order to give him the right to enforce specific performance of same, and on .his further failure to have alleged, if the agreement was verbal, that he (defendant) had confessed it upon being interrogated on oath.

In the latest decision we find on the subject, it seems that the appellate court, in disposing of an exception of no cause or right of action, must be governed by the allegations of the petition and cannot take into consideration the facts, as found by the inferior court, in passing on the merits of the case. We refer to the case of Roy v. Mutual Rice Company of Louisiana, 177 La. 883, 149 So. 508, 510. We quote the following from the decision: “We wish, at the outset, to make it very plain that, in considering the exception of no right or cause of action in this case, the allegations of well-pleaded facts as set forth in plaintiff’s petition must be taken as true, for the purpose of disposing of this exception, and not the facts found by the Court of Appeal, First Circuit [143 So. 668], in passing upon the merits of the case.” Moreover, whilst it might be successfully urged that the facts shown on the trial of a case on the merits had the effect of curing the deficiencies of a petition which may not have disclosed a cause or shown a right of action, we find that such rule does not apply to cases in which judgment was rendered on facts introduced (on confirmation of default. In an excellent treatise on the subject “Exception of No Cause of Action” by George Henry McMahon, Professor of Law, Loyola University (New Orleans) published in Tulane Law Review, volume IX, in discussing the point we here have under consideration, he says: “In addition to the curing of defects in the petition by the allegations of the answer, there is another method, much more common, by which the deficiencies of the petition are remedied. Thus, in view of ■ the doctrine that evidence introduced without objection enlarges the allegations of the petition, the effect of the introduction of evidence extra petiiionem without objection by the defendant may be the curing of all the defects in the petition. However, there is at least one well defined exception to the rule stated above: evidence introduced on the confirmation of a default never has the effect of enlarging the allegations of the petition; so that in the trial of an exception of no cause of action filed in the appellate court in such cases the only facts which can be considered are the allegations of the petition. * * * ”

The author cites in support of his statement, the case of Smith v. Meyer et al., 142 So. 297, in which the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit, cited among others, as authority, the case of Craver v. Gillespie, 148 La. 182, 86 So. 730, on the proposition that evidence taken in proving up a default cannot have the effect of enlarging the pleadings in a case when the defendant is not present consenting thereto.

We think that there is considerable merit in the exception filed in thjs case, inasmuch, a.s on its face, the petition shows that the contract sought to be enforced is one that relates to an immovable and ,yet fails to allege that it is in writing. Article 2462 of the Civil Code under which plaintiff’s right of action, if he has any, arises, reads as follows: “A promise to sell, when there exists a reciprocal consent of both parties as to the thing, the price and terms, and which, if it relates to immovables, is in writing, so far amounts to. a sale, as to give either party the right to enforce specific performance of same.” (Italics ours.)

To give a person the right to specific performance of a contract relating to an immovable, it is apparent, from these provisions, thqt an essential requirement is that the contract be in writing, and there is much that' could be said in support of the argument that to avail himself of that right, the pleader should be made to state that the contract he relies on is in that form. However, it would appear from some decisions of our Supreme Court, that whether the agreement is in writing or not, is a matter which addresses itself to the merits of the case and not one which can form the basis of an exception of no cause of action. In the early case of Brown v.

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 140, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landreneau-v-perron-lactapp-1937.