Louis Werner Saw Mill Co. v. White

16 So. 2d 666
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1942
DocketNo. 6525.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 So. 2d 666 (Louis Werner Saw Mill Co. v. White) 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
Louis Werner Saw Mill Co. v. White, 16 So. 2d 666 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

By this suit plaintiff seeks to have dissolved for non-payment of the deferred portion of the purchase price of sale by it to defendant on June 23, 1930, of Northwest Quarter (NW 1/4) of Northwest Quarter (NW 1/4) of Section 32 and Southeast Quarter (SE 1/4) of Southwest Quarter (SW 1/4) of Section 29, Township 17 North, Range 2 East, containing 80 acres, in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana. The price of sale was Eight Hundred ($800) Dollars, of which Four Hundred ($400) Dollars were paid in cash. Defendant gave his note to represent the balance of Four Hundred ($400) Dollars, due one year after date of sale, which was secured by mortgage and vendor's privilege on the land. The act of sale containing the mortgage and privilege was registered in the proper record books of the parish on June 25, 1930.

This suit was filed on June 10, 1941. Defendant sold the land to his daughter, Willie Evelyn White, on November 12, 1940.

Defendant, in limine, filed an exception of misjoinder of parties defendant which was properly overruled. It has passed from the case. He then answered. The case was tried and submitted for decision on January 22, 1942, upon an agreed statement of facts which recites the uncontradicted facts covered in the above narrative, and concludes as follows:

"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.

"It is further agreed that in the event the court should uphold plaintiff's contention, then the prayer of plaintiff's petition shall be granted, and in the event defendant's contention shall be upheld then the suit as brought by plaintiff shall be dismissed at plaintiff's costs."

While the court had the case under advisement defendant filed a plea of prescription of five years against the note of Four Hundred ($400) Dollars and a plea of prescription of ten years against enforcement of the mortgage and vendor's privilege securing payment of the note; also on said date he excepted to the petition as disclosing neither a cause nor a right of action. The exceptions were not passed upon and are not urged here. We assume that they have been abandoned. The pleas of prescription were overruled and judgment was rendered for plaintiff, dissolving the act of sale in question and recognizing it to be the owner of the land described therein, free of any lien, mortgage or encumbrance placed thereon or alienation thereof by the defendant, especially from the purported sale by him to his daughter. From this judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The pleas of prescription are specifically directed, one against the note and the other against the mortgage and privilege. Neither plea is pertinent to the sole *Page 668 issue tendered in the case. The note is not sued upon. There is no demand nor prayer for the enforcement of the mortgage and privilege. The present action is authorized by Articles 2046 and 2561, as amended by Act No. 108 of 1924, of the Civil Code. Such an action is commonly referred to as one to enforce the "resolutory condition." This condition is implied in all commutative contracts. The suit has for its objective the dissolution of the act of sale because all the purchase price has not been paid, the effect of which, if successful, will restore the property in full ownership to the original vendor free of any and all mortgages, encumbrances, etc., placed thereon by the vendee or alienations thereof made by him.

However, an answer to the question propounded in Article 7 of the agreed statement of facts, quoted supra, will finally dispose of the case. We shall do so upon this warrant as authority for our action.

Article 2561 of the Civil Code before being amended by Act No. 108 of 1924, read as follows: "If the buyer does not pay the price, the seller may sue for the dissolution of the sale."

The amendment adds the following: "This right of dissolution shall be an accessory of the credit representing the price, and if it be held by more than one person all must join in the demand for dissolution; but if any refuse, the others by paying the amount due the parties who refuse shall become subrogated to their rights."

The Supreme Court prior to 1924 repeatedly held that under the original article, even though the purchase price note be prescribed, this fact would have no effect upon the right to sue for dissolution of the sale for non-payment of the price as that right did not prescribe until after the lapse of ten years from maturity of the note. Article 3544 of Civil Code. Templeman v. Pegues, 24 La.Ann. 537; George v. Knox et al., 23 La.Ann. 354; Jones et al. v. Crocker, 1 La.Ann. 440; Hunter v. Williams et al., 16 La.Ann. 129.

The court by many decisions has also held that the right to enforce the dissolving condition is not accessory to but independent of the right to sue to collect a purchase price note and/or to enforce a mortgage and/or vendor's privilege securing its payment. Johnson v. Bloodworth, 12 La.Ann. 699; Ragsdale et al. v. Ragsdale et al., 105 La. 405, 29 So. 906; Stevenson v. Brown, 32 La.Ann. 461; Consoulin v. Adams Co., 28 La.Ann. 598.

If the question propounded by the parties (Article 7 agreed statement of facts) should be answered in the light of the articles of the Civil Code and pertinent jurisprudence prior to the adoption of Act No. 108 of 1924, an affirmative reply would have to be given because this suit to enforce the resolutory condition was filed less than ten years after the maturity of the note, and notice that a portion of the price was on credit appeared from the public records through registry of the act of sale in the conveyance and mortgage books of Ouachita Parish.

Defendant's counsel contends that the 1924 amendment, in saying "this right of dissolution shall be an accessory of the credit representing the price", puts the right to dissolve, as is herein invoked, on a parity with a mortgage which, by Article3284 of the Civil Code, is declared to be accessory to the principal obligation and which, by the terms of Article 3285 of the Civil Code, expires, ceases to have existence when the principal obligation is extinguished. In other words, it is contended that under the unambiguous language of the amendment the right to dissolve an act of sale for non-payment of the purchase price note falls the moment the right to enforce the note is extinguished by prescription or any other mode ordained by law.

The function of an accessory contract is described in Article 1771 of the Civil Code, as follows: "An accessory contract is made for assuring the performance of a prior contract, either by the same parties or by others; such as suretyship, mortgage and pledge."

The dissolving condition implied in a credit sale is a creature of law; not to any extent dependent upon the volition of the contracting parties. It is a right that inheres in the seller, automatically arising on the execution of every credit sale. In this respect it is not unlike the vendor's privilege which the law creates as security for payment of the deferred part of the price in every credit sale.

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Bluebook (online)
16 So. 2d 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-werner-saw-mill-co-v-white-lactapp-1942.