Louis Werner Saw Mill Co. v. White

17 So. 2d 264, 205 La. 242, 1944 La. LEXIS 668
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 7, 1944
DocketNo. 37069.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 264 (Louis Werner Saw Mill Co. v. White) 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
Louis Werner Saw Mill Co. v. White, 17 So. 2d 264, 205 La. 242, 1944 La. LEXIS 668 (La. 1944).

Opinion

ODOM Justice.

This is a suit to enforce the resolutory condition. Revised Civil Code, Articles 2045, 2046, 2047. The facts are not disputed. Only a question of law is involved.

According to the agreed statement of-facts, the Louis Werner Saw Mill Company, on June 23, 1930, sold 80 acres of land in Ouachita Parish to E. J. White for $800, of which amount $400 was paid in cash. It was agreed that the balance of the purchase price, $400, would be paid one year from the date of the sale, or on June 23, 1931.

To represent the balance of the purchase price, the vendee gave his note, due in one year, secured by mortgage and vendor’s lien on the land sold. The act of sale containing the mortgage and privilege was duly recorded in both the conveyance and the mortgage records of the Parish of Ouachita on June 25, 1930. In the act of sale and mortgage, the vendee agreed that he would not alienate, deteriorate, or encumber the property to the prejudice of the rights of the vendor. The balance of the purchase price, $400, was never paid by White, the purchaser, or by anyone else.

On November 12, 1940, which was more than 10 years after the sale of the land and the recordation of the mortgage but less than 10 years from the maturity of the note representing the credit portion of the price, E. J. White sold the property to his daughter for the purported consideration of $100.

This suit was instituted by the original vendor, Louis Werner Saw Mill Company, against the original vendee, E. J. White, on June 10, 1941, which was more than 10 years after the recordation of the mortgage and vendor’s lien but less than 10 years after the maturity of the note representing the credit portion of the purchase price.

The purpose of the suit was to dissolve the sale, or set it aside, for the non-payment of the deferred portion of the purchase price. The suit was instituted against E. J. White, the original purchaser of the property, and his defense was that he had sold the land on November 12, 1940, and that “this sale was made more than five years after the due date of the mortgage *247 note and more than ten years after the granting of the mortgage by your respondent to the. plaintiff and, therefore, your respondent specially pleads the prescription of five and ten years”.

There was judgment in the district court in favor of the Louis Werner Saw Mill Company and against the defendant E. J. White, “rescinding and dissolving that certain sale from Louis Werner Saw Mill Company to E. J. White, dated June 23, 1930”, and decreeing that “Louis Werner Saw Mill Company have and recover said land, free from any mortgages, claims, liens, encumbrances or sales of said land or a portion thereof by the defendant, E. J. White; and more particularly that sale by E. J. White to Miss Willie Evelyn White, dated the 12 day of November, 1941 [1940]”.

The plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit. The Court of Appeal reversed the judgment of the district court, its decree reading as follows:

“For the reasons herein assigned, the judgment appealed from is annulled, avoided and reversed; plaintiff’s demand is hereby rejected and its suit is dismissed at its cost.”

Thereupon the plaintiff applied to this court for writs, which were granted.

Counsel for plaintiff and counsel for defendant filed in the record an agreed stipulation of facts, and in Paragraph VII of that stipulation it is agreed that:

“* * * based on the aforesaid statement of facts, the sole point of law involved in this case is whether or not the resolutory condition in an act of sale can be enforced ten years after the date of the recordation of the mortgage but within ten years of the maturity date of the mortgage note, where the property has been, sold to a third 'party more than ten years after the recordation of the mortgage but within ten years of the maturity of the note.”

The plaintiff’s purpose in bringing this suit was not to enforce the contract of sale but to dissolve it, to set it aside. As the Court of Appeal said, “The note is not sued upon. There is no demand nor prayer for the enforcement of the mortgage and privilege”. The suit is one to enforce the resolutory condition.

This court has repeatedly and consistently held that the right to dissolve or set aside a sale for the non-payment of the purchase price is an independent, substantive remedy which is in no wise dependent upon the existence of a mortgage or a privilege. As Judge Spencer said in the case of Stevenson v. Brown, 32 La.Ann. 461:

“A demand in resolution is a demand for the property itself, and embraces in it the abrogation of any and all alienations and encumbrances placed upon it by the vendee.”

In that case, the court said further:

“The fact that the vendor has lost, or not preserved, his vendor’s lien, or mortgage, presents no sort of obstacle to the exercise of this right of resolution.”

In the case of McKenzie v. Bacon, 41 La.Ann. 6, 5 So. 640, 642, the court, speaking *249 through Judge Poche, approved the ruling in the case of Stevenson v. Brown, supra. The court said:

“It was said in the case last referred to [Stevenson v. Brown], and it has always been previously held, in actions on the dissolving condition, that ‘The question of registry has nothing to do with the case. The right of resolution is an independent substantive remedy, and is in nowise dependent, upon the existence of a mortgage or privilege.’ ”

In McKenzie v. Bacon it was held, as it had been held in Stevenson v. Brown, that the non-payment of the purchase price constituted a resolutory condition in the contract of sale, and that its effect is in no manner affected by the fact that the vendor has failed to preserve his privilege.

In the case of Heirs of Castle v. Floyd, 38 La.Ann. 583, this court, speaking through Judge Watkins, said:

“In our opinion the two remedies of the vendor — one for the enforcement of the contract and the other for the resolution of it- — are diametrically opposed, in the very nature of things.
“A suit to enforce the vendor’s lien is an affirmance of the contract; while a suit for the resolution of it must be preceded by the restitution of the purchase notes and such part of the price as shall have been paid to the vendee, and same is a condition precedent to institution of the suit.”

In an earlier case, Johnson v. Bloodworth, 12 La.Ann. 699, Judge Spofford, speaking for the court, said:

“It is true that the vendor of an immovable or slave only preserves his privilege as against third persons by recording the act of sale. C.C. 3238. But it is impossible to confound the resolutory action with the vendor’s privilege. The former is not a mere appendage of the latter. It is a distinct substantive, and independent right or remedy.”

In a much later case, Ragsdale v. Ragsdale, 105 La. 405, 29 So. 906, this court referred to, and reaffirmed, the rulings in the above cited cases.

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Bluebook (online)
17 So. 2d 264, 205 La. 242, 1944 La. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-werner-saw-mill-co-v-white-la-1944.