Maison Blanche Co. v. Schutten

8 La. App. 224, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 476
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 26, 1928
DocketNo. 11,258
StatusPublished

This text of 8 La. App. 224 (Maison Blanche Co. v. Schutten) 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
Maison Blanche Co. v. Schutten, 8 La. App. 224, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 476 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

CLAIBORNE, J.

This is a suit for the balance of the price of a superphonic Yictrola and ten records, .$154.20, subject to a credit of $10 paid on account.

Said contract provided that the balance was payable at the rate of $10 iper month between the 9th and 14th of each month thereafter, and that any default ip making payments according to the terms aforesaid would cause the entire balance of the price to at once become due and exigible, “and will further entitle the Maison Blanche Company, without resort to legal process and without incurring any liability for trespass, to at once take the articles sold from the residence of the purchaser or wherever they may be found. In any such event payments theretofore made shall be retained by the said Maison Blanche Company as liquidated damages for breach of obligation.”

The defendant pleaded that the petition disclosed no cause of action under the contract. He admitted the purchase of the Yictrola and the payment of ten dollars; he further averred, that the machine was defective, and that he had so informed the plaintiff who promised him a new machine but failed to do so. He claims in re-convention return of the $10 paid on account, $26 attorney’s fees, and $20 for loss of time.

There was judgment maintaining the exceptions and dismissing the suit, and (plaintiff has appealed. ■

The defendant’s exception of no cause of action is based exclusively upon the proposition that the plaintiff, on defendant’s failure to make the payments stipulated in the contract is only “entitled to at once take back the Victrola, and to retain by way of forfeit the amount paid on account as liquidated damages.”

We believe this to be a strained construction of the contract. Upon the failure of a purchaser to pay the credit portion of a sale, the law gives the vendor two remedies: One for the dissolution of the contract of sale, C. C. 2561, and the other for its enforcement by demanding the price of sale, C. C. 2551-2549. The stipulation in. an act of sale that the failure of the (purchaser to pay the price shall entitle the vendor to take back the thing sold, is nothing more than a contractual affirmance of the law and does not either expressly of impliedly carry with it a renunciation of the other right of demanding specific performance of the contract.

Waivers of rights are not presumed; they must bé expressly made. A vendor of property on credit who waives his mortgage on the property sold does not thereby waive his vendor’s privilege. 2 H. D. 1244 C-1; Gumbel & Co. vs. Beer, 36 La. Ann. 489.

It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be reversed and set aside and that this case be remanded to be tried upon the merits in accordance | with the answer herein.

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Related

Gumbel v. Beer
36 La. Ann. 484 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 224, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maison-blanche-co-v-schutten-lactapp-1928.