Moore v. O'Bannon & Julien

52 So. 253, 126 La. 161, 1910 La. LEXIS 625
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 11, 1910
DocketNo. 17,750
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 So. 253 (Moore v. O'Bannon & Julien) 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
Moore v. O'Bannon & Julien, 52 So. 253, 126 La. 161, 1910 La. LEXIS 625 (La. 1910).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

Plaintiff entered into a contract with O’Bannon & Julien (an ordinary partnership), witnessed by an instrument in writing, as follows:

“That for * * * $2.50 to us cash in hand paid, and a further consideration of the sum of $7.50 to be paid on or before 30 days from date, [163]*163* * * by O’Bannon & Julien, we hereby grant, bargain, sell, and convey unto the said O’Bannon & Julien, and unto their heirs and assigns, all the pine timber situated on the following lands, to wit: S. % of S. E. %, S. 15, T. 23, N. R. 6 E. The said O’Bannon & Ju-lien shall have seven years from the date of this deed in which to cut and remove said timber and the right of ingress and egress over and through said lands. In case O’Bannon & Ju-lien shall not have paid the sum of $7.50 within 30 days from date, this contract shall be null and void. . The condition and consideration of this sale is that the grantors are to receive, and the said O’Bannon & Julien are to pay,* * * $1.00 per 1,000 ft., log scale, out of the first timber cut, and that the balance, after enough timber is cut to pay the above sums, is to be paid by O’Bannon & Julien as the timber is cut and removed, and the payments are to be made at the sawmill of the said O’Bannon & Julien on the regular pay day at said mill each month after said timber is cut and removed. We hereby agree to warrant the title of said timber against all claims, and that said timber is free from incumbrances. O’Bannon & Julien agree to locate a sawmill within three miles of said timber within six months from date. This deed is, and shall be, binding on the grantors from its date, and in no event shall it become void unless O’Bannon & Julien fail to meet the above payments. Given under our hands and seals, this 12th day of July, 1905.”

This instrument was duly signed and recorded, and the wife of the plaintiff added to it a waiver of homestead. The two amounts ($2.50 and $7.50) referred to therein were duly paid, and in October, 1905, the partnership of O’Bannon & Julien having been converted into the O’Bannon & Julien Lumber Company, the timber in question was sold to that company, by which on December 29, 1906, it was sold to Gulledge Bros. Lumber Company; neither of the parties mentioned having cut any of the timber (so far as appears) up to the present time.

Plaintiff brings this suit to annul the contracts thus mentioned, to cancel the registration thereof, and to have himself quieted in the possession of the timber in question; the gist of his complaint being that O’Bannon & Julien failed to erect the sawmill and appoint the times and place of payment, as stipulated ; that their sale of the timber was unauthorized, and renders his position more insecure; and that Gulledge Bros. Lumber Company knew when the deeds to them were executed that the original contract had not been complied with. O’Bannon & Julien Lumber 'Company, cited through a curator ad hoc, made no appearance. Gulledge Bros. Lumber Company, similarly cited, and appearing through the curator ad hoc appointed by the court, filed exceptions of no cause of action and prematurity, which were overruled, and of prescription, which was referred to the merits, after which it answered, affirming the validity of its title to the timber, and, when the case was called for trial, it further excepted that plaintiff had made no tender of the amounts received by him (which exception was overruled, as coming too late), and that he is estopped to attack the transfer by O’Bannon & Julien to O’Ban-non & Julien Lumber Company by having received from the company mentioned on February 13, 1906, a sum of $100, for which he gave a receipt, reading:

“Received of O’Bannon & Julien Lumber Co. $100, in addition to the sum of $10 paid by them. 'Said sum of money is given now as part payment of the purchase price of timber situated upon the following lands, on which O’Bannon & Julien Lumber Co., have a deed, to wit:” (and then follows a description of the lands).

This plea of estoppel was objected to as coming too late, and, the objection having been overruled, plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, alleging that he received the money and gave the receipt on the representation that the mill would shortly be put up, and that O’Bannon & Julien would personally make payments there for the timber cut.

It was shown on the trial that work was begun on the mill referred to in the contract in March, and that the mill was completed in December, 1906; that O’Bannon & Julien Lumber Company operated it for a few days, and sold it (together with the timber in question) to Gulledge Bros. Lumber Company, [165]*165by which it was operated for about three months (though without cutting any of the timber acquired from plaintiff), at the end of which period the boilers and some parts of the machinery and appliances were removed ; and that the mill has not since been operated. Some testimony was taken, the purpose of which appears to have been to show that the Gulledge Company knew, when it bought the property, that O’Bannon & Ju-lien had not complied with those conditions of the contract relating to the erection of the mill within six months, and the establishment there of pay days, but the, result of which was to show that said company had the title to the property examined by an attorney at law and bought on the faith of his report that it was good. It was also shown that the Gulledge Company is stronger financially than either O’Bannon & Julien or O’Bannon & Julien Lumber Company. And in the course of the trial that company repeated an offer, which is, substantially, made in the answer filed by it, to the effect that, when it cuts plaintiff’s timber, it will pay him therefor, if the mill in question is not then in operation and pay days shall not have been established there, “at his residence, or at any bank or other place that he may designate, and at any time during the month following that in which the timber has been cut that the plaintiff may designate.” To which offer plaintiff, in effect, replied that, having under the law the right to demand the dissolution of the contract, and having availed himself of that right, his answer to the proposition was to be found in his petition.

Opinion.

The contract for the dissolution of which plaintiff sues was not specifically annexed to, and made part of, his petition, and hence the exception of no cause of action was properly overruled; but it was offered in evidence by plaintiff at the opening of the ease, and thereafter, as it seems to us, all the other evidence offered in behalf of plaintiff (and which was admitted over the objection of the curator ad hoc representing Gulledge Bros. Lumber Com-pahy) was for the most part useless, if not irrelevant, since, conceding the truth of the allegations upon which plaintiff relies, he would not be entitled to the judgment prayed for. True, the contract provides that payments for the timber to be cut by O’Bannon & Julien “are to be made at the sawmill of the said O’Bannon & Julien on the regular ■pay days at said mill each month after said timber is cut and removed,” but it is not pretended that any of the plaintiff’s timber has yet been cut, and the vendees and their assigns are allowed seven years from July 12, 1905, within which to do the cutting, so there has been no default as to either the time or place of payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 So. 253, 126 La. 161, 1910 La. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-obannon-julien-la-1910.