Marsh v. Lorimer

113 So. 808, 164 La. 175, 1927 La. LEXIS 1980
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 25, 1927
DocketNo. 28425.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 113 So. 808 (Marsh v. Lorimer) 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
Marsh v. Lorimer, 113 So. 808, 164 La. 175, 1927 La. LEXIS 1980 (La. 1927).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a suit for the specific performance of a contract to purchase over 8,000 acres of lands in this state, and to annul a contract entered into with the Zenoria Lumber Company by which the contemplated vendors, in the contract which it is sought to enforce, later agreed to sell the same land, or practically all of it, to the Zenoria Lumber Company. The suit was also instituted for the purpose of obtaining, in the alternative, certain relief, should specific performance be denied.

The plaintiffs in the suit are those, or their representatives, who bound themselves to sell by the contract which they now seek to enforce. They were before this court on the same instrument in another suit, in which they treated the contract as a sale, and sued for the balance of the alleged purchase price. It was held, however, that the contract was merely one to sell and not a sale, and the judgment of the lower court sustaining an exception of no cause of action was affirmed, and the case dismissed. McMillan et al. v. Lorimer, 160 La. 400, 107 So. 239. Having failed in that suit, plaintiffs now sue to force the defendant Lorimer to comply with the contract by purchasing, and to recover the consideration alleged to be due, as well as for the remaining relief, mentioned above.

The contract entered into by plaintiffs, or those whom they represent, with the defendant Lorimer, which they are now endeavoring to enforce, is dated May 20,1920, and was acknowledged on May 25,1920. By it, plaintiffs agreed to sell and Lorimer agreed to purchase a large quantity of land, mostly covered with hardwood timber, situated in the parish of Catahoula, for the sum of §400,000, of which §75,000 was to be paid, and was actually paid, on the signing of the contract, and the balance was to be paid in installments, maturing 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 years after the date of the contract, the last installment amounting to $50,-000, and the remaining installments to $55,000 each, all of them bearing 6 per cent, per annum interest, payable annually.' The deeds to the land were to be executed and delivered on demand, after all installments were paid, save in those instances in which Lorimer might desire to cut timber from parts of the land before payment of all the installments, in which instances it was agreed that deeds would be *179 executed and delivered to him for such parts on his paying for them $45 an acre. The contract contains a provision requiring Lorimer to pay all taxes and assessments of whatever kind, levied or that'may be levied against the land from January 1, 1920, until all the installments provided for by the contract shall be paid, and also another provision according to him the right to take possession of the property and to hold it from the date of the contract until the payment of all installments, as the tenant of plaintiffs by sufferance, and also requiring Lorimer, during said period, to maintain in good condition such improvements as were then on the land and such .as might be erected thereon during that time. The contract also contains a provision to the. effect that, should the title to 90 acres of the land prove to be not good or merchantable, then Lorimer should have the right to reject the 90 acres and to deduct their value from the final payment, unless plaintiff should perfect title to them within one year from the date of the contract. The instrument also contains a provision reading as follows:

“If the title to any of said lands, except said 90 acres (referring to the foregoing 90 acres), shall be found not good or merchantable in first parties (plaintiff) and title to the same cannot be perfected in first parties within a reasonable time, then and in that event, second party. (Lorimer), shall purchase all of said above-described real estate to which the title is good and merchantable, and in case within one year from the date hereof first parties shall perfect any or all of said titles which may be found- to be defective, then and in that event second party shall purchase all of the above-described real estate title to which is good, ór has been perfected in first parties.”

And the contract, after providing for deductions from the final payment or payments, as fixed therein, for lands, the titles to which cannot be perfected, and after making other provisions unnecessary to mention, provides as follows:

“And (parties of first part) will also furnish to second party abstracts of good and merchantable title to the lands and premises above-described free and clear of all liens and incumbrances, except taxes herein' agreed to be paid by second party, and except liens and incumbrances created by the act or default of second party, his heirs, legal representatives, or assigns.”

Apparently, plaintiffs had the abstracts, called for by the contract, already prepared when the contract was signed, for approximately a week thereafter, Dale, Young & Dale, the attorneys for Lorimer, returned to R. M. Talliaferro, the abstracter employed by plaintiffs, the abstracts, wliich he had delivered to them, with numerous objections to the title, these objections covering a number of typewritten pages. Plaintiffs undertook to have the defects pointed out by Dale, Young & Dale corrected. On June 1, 1921, a few days over a year after the contract had been signed, the abstracts not having been returned with the defects in the title pointed out by Dale, Young & Dale corrected, Lorimer wrote and mailed to each of the plaintiffs a letter in which, after quoting parts of the contract, relative to defective titles and the furnishing of abstracts, he said:

“Under provisions of said contract, abstracts showing good titles were to be delivered to me within one year from date of contract, May 25, 1920, or, namely, on or before May 25, 1921. The time for this has elapsed, and abstracts showing goo.d and merchantable title have not been delivered. I therefore have the right to terminate the contract for the purchase of said lands, which I hereby do, and this is your notice thereof.
“As to such lands as good title has been shown or delivered and to which Judge Dale made no objection, I will make an adjustment and a payment therefor, under the terms .of the contract, and release the other lands to which you have failed to show good title from the terms of the said contract.”

With further reference to the defects in the title and the curing of them, it appears from an admission made by counsel for the defendant Lorimer that the defects pointed out by Dale, Young & Dale were cured, and their, correction shown by supplemental ab- *181 ¿tracts, and that all documents, curing the defects, were executed and properly recorded within one year from the date of the contract, but it does not appear from the admission when the abstracts showing the correction of the defects were delivered to Dale, Young & Dale. It appears, however, from the evidence of Judge Dale, which is uncontradicted, that the abstracts, showing any corrections that might have been made, were not returned or offered to his firm until after June 27, 1921, and probably not until July 16, 1921, and that he advised the abstracter that, in view of the position taken by Lorimer, his firm, unless instructed to do so by the latter, would not complete the examination of the titles.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 So. 808, 164 La. 175, 1927 La. LEXIS 1980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-lorimer-la-1927.