Lewis v. Gary

439 So. 2d 1236, 1983 La. App. LEXIS 9444
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 12, 1983
DocketNo. 83 CA 267
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 439 So. 2d 1236 (Lewis v. Gary) 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
Lewis v. Gary, 439 So. 2d 1236, 1983 La. App. LEXIS 9444 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

KLIEBERT, Judge.

The defendant, Joyce Gary, the buyer, brings this suspensive appeal from a judgment awarding to the plaintiff, Kelly Lewis, the seller, liquidated damages of $11,-400.00 (10% of the purchase price) plus attorney fees of $3,472.50, for breach of an agreement, entered into on July 15, 1980, for the purchase of a house located in Sli-dell, La. At the time the agreement was executed, the buyer was voluntarily separated from her husband. On appeal, the buyer alleges two specifications of error: (1) the trial judge failed to find the agreement was subject to a suspensive condition, and (2) the trial judge failed to hold seller, rather than the buyer, breached the agreement. In the event this court upholds the [1238]*1238trial judge’s finding, as to the breach, the buyer alternatively argues for a credit against the rents and security deposit paid to the seller, while the buyer was in possession of the house. We affirm the trial judge’s decision, and reject the alternative argument.

The seller was occupying a house and lot he built in Slidell which was listed with a realtor in the Slidell area. The buyer, having three years of college courses, with a major in real estate, and fifteen years of experience in real estate marketing, contacted the seller seeking, according to her testimony, a lease with an-option to purchase the house occupied by the seller. On the same day the seller moved out of the house, the buyer moved in, paying a $500.00 security deposit for damages and $800.00 for the first month’s rent.

Subsequently, according to the buyer, the seller submitted to her an agreement to purchase, which was not a lease with an option to buy as she wanted. After approximately one month of negotiations, consultations with her attorney, the submission of addendums to the agreement, some of which were recommended by her attorney, they entered into the agreement to buy and sell which is at issue in this suit.

The agreement is on the standard printed form used by realtors in the area and provided for a deposit of $11,400.00 (10% of the purchase price) which was posted by the buyer in the form of a promissory note and called for the passage of the Act of Sale before purchaser’s notary on or before September 30; 1980. Under the agreement, the security deposit of $500.00 plus rentals of $800.00 per month were to be credited against the purchase price at the passage of the sale. The mortgage on the house was to be assumed by the buyer.

At the buyer’s request, based on the contention that she did not have the funds to make the purchase, by mutual agreement, sometime in September, 1980, the parties agreed to extend the passage of the Act of Sale to January 31, 1981. All other terms and conditions of the sale were to remain the same; except henceforth, only a sum equal to the portion of the monthly loan payments applied to the principal of the loan were to be applied as a credit against the purchase price instead of full monthly rentals.

In November, 1980, the buyer informed the seller she and her husband had reconciled; therefore, she would not go through with the Act of Sale then scheduled for January 31, 1981. By letter dated December 4,1980, the seller, through his attorney, informed the buyer the refusal to pass the sale as scheduled on January 31,1981 would constitute a breach and result in the seller filing suit to enforce the agreement. When no response was made to the letter or to a subsequent one dated January 7, 1981, by letter dated January 16, 1981, the seller’s attorney set the sale for January 31,1981 at his office. In response, the buyer’s attorney, by letter dated January 29, 1981, informed the seller, through his attorney, the buyer would not appear at the January 31, 1981 sale because the sale was conditioned upon the buyer’s obtaining funds for the purchase price from a settlement of the community of acquets and gains and the occurrence of a suspensive condition; namely, the performance of repairs by the seller. When the buyer did not appear for the passage of the sale, the seller brought this suit for specific performance or damages.

In the trial court and here, counsel for the buyer argues that the reconciliation between the buyer and her husband, and the seller’s failure to make the repairs called for in the agreement rendered the agreement null and void. The argument is legally based on the provisions of Civil Code Articles 2021 and 20431 and factually [1239]*1239grounded in the following addendums to the agreements:

ADDENDUM # 1
AMENDMENT TO AGREEMENT TO PURCHASE
BETWEEN JOYCE S. GARY AND KELLY S. LEWIS
RE: 311 ROYAL DRIVE, SLIDELL, LOUISIANA
This agreement shall be null and void if the sewerage system problems are not totally repaired to the satisfaction of Joyce S. Gary, whether those problems are the responsibility of seller, subdivision developer, building contractor or any other individual and/or firm.
S/ Joyce S. Gary
JOYCE S. GARY
S/ Kelly S. Lewis
KELLY S. LEWIS
This agreement shall also be null and void if Purchaser is not acceptable by the Mortgage Company, for the assumption of said existing mortgage loan.
S/ Joyce S. Gary
Joyce S. Gary
S/ Kelly S. Lewis
Kelly S. Lewis
ADDENDUM #2
THINGS TO BE DONE BEFORE ACT OF SALE:
1. Plans to house.
2. Garage side door fixed from leakage when it rains.
3. Fasher board installed in first bathroom.
4. Fix broken switch for ceiling fan.
5. New boards installed to secure house from rats to be painted.
6. One glass bulb type fixture in dining room broken.

One of the difficulties with the buyer’s position is that the record does not factually support the legal argument. Necessary to counsel’s legal argument is a factual finding that the seller was obligated to, but did not perform the repairs called for by the agreement. Counsel for the buyer contends the seller’s failure to repair the sewerage system to the buyer’s satisfaction was the basis for the buyer’s refusal to perform in accordance with the agreement.

The testimony of the seller and of his plumber and carpenter supports the conclusion that the agreed upon repairs were in fact made. The only evidence submitted by the buyer to contradict the seller’s evidence was the testimony of Mr. Segher, a plumber, who testified that he visited the property on January 29, 1981 and found a bleeder line running from the field bed into an open drainage ditch. He saw no connection to the four inch subdivision bleeder line. Since he made only a visual examination of the system and did not go into the house, he was not in a position to nor did he testify as to what, if anything, was wrong with the system. Rather, the essence of his testimony was that he would have to get into the system to determine what was wrong. At the time of his examination, the house had been vacated by the buyer for two months.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
439 So. 2d 1236, 1983 La. App. LEXIS 9444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-gary-lactapp-1983.