Llopis v. Mills

5 La. App. 647, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 110
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1927
DocketNo. 10,744
StatusPublished

This text of 5 La. App. 647 (Llopis v. Mills) 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
Llopis v. Mills, 5 La. App. 647, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 110 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

JONES, J.

Plaintiff alleges that defendant verbally agreed on June 28, 1926, to pay him for her ■ husband’s funeral one hundred and fifty dollars ($150.00) out of an insurance policy of which she was the beneficiary; that he performed the service tendered her one hundred dollars ($100.00) in cash, dmanded that she endorse a check for two hundred and fifty d liars ($250.00), the proceeds of the insurance policy, which had been turned over to him by the insurance company under her instructions.

After praying for a judgment of one hundred and fifty dollars ($150.00), plaintiff prays that defendant be ordered to endorse the draft, upon receiving from plaintiff one hundred dollars ($100.00)' in ca.'h, less court costs and also for all general and equitable relief.

Defendant, after denying the contract and all indebtedness, admits that plaintiff conducted her husband’s funeral; that the insurance company gave plaintiff the draft for two' hundred and fifty dollars ($250.00) and that she refused to endorse it. The answer is dworn to by defendant.

■ The judge of the lower court gave judgment for one hundred and thirty dollars ($130.00) and plaintiff appealed to this court. As defendant did not answer the appeal the only questions before us are plaintiff’s right to twenty dollars ($20.00) additional and to a judgment ordering plaintiff to endorse the check upon proper cash tender to her.

The judge of the lower court evidently deducted twenty dollars ($20.00) from amount claimed for price of coffin, because he thought that plaintiff had failed to credit defendant with that sum, which had been paid or was payable, on account by a benevolent association to which the deceat.ed belonged. Careful reading of the testimony convinces us that proper credit for this item had been allowed in' plaintiff’s bill and that the judgment should be amended by increasing the amount allowed to one hundred and fifty dollars ($150.00).

In his brief plaintiff suggests that this court, under her prayer for general relief, should' order defendant to endorse the draft, and if she fails to do so in a apecified time should authorize plaintiff to endorse her name when depositing the balance due her in the registry of the court. In support of this contention plaintiff refers us to City of New Orleans, et al., vs. N. O. & N. E. Railroad Co., 44 La. 64, 10 South. 401, and Pratt vs. McCoy, 128 La. 570, 54 South. 1012.

In the case first cited the court held that a decree of specific performance should not be granted unless the terms of the agreement are clearly proved and the duty qf defendant clear and unmistakable and readily executed.

Here the evidence as to the agreement is conflicting and the terms of the agreement are not clearly proved.

In the second case cited the court, after stating that specific performance was not favored in law, and that1 equity would not [649]*649compel defendant to deliver paving certificates tq plaintiff before construction contracts were completed, even though strict terms of the contract so required, finally ordered the certificates deposited in a bank to be selected by both parties.

As plaintiff cites us to no authority going to the extent he asks, and as our research has proved equally futile, we are constrained to follow the judgment of the lower court. We take this step with less regret, because we do not agree with plaintiff in thinking that he has exhausted other possible methods of collecting his judgment.

For the reasons above assigned, it is now ordered, adjudged and decreed that there be judgment in favor of plaintiff, Raoul Llopis, and against the defendant, Sarah Mills, in the full sum of one hundred and fifty ($150.00) dollars, with legal interest from judicial demand, and all costs of both courts.

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Related

Pratt v. McCoy
54 So. 1012 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 La. App. 647, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/llopis-v-mills-lactapp-1927.