Nabors Oil Corporation v. Samuels

127 So. 363, 170 La. 57, 1930 La. LEXIS 1668
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 5, 1930
DocketNo. 29857.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 127 So. 363 (Nabors Oil Corporation v. Samuels) 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
Nabors Oil Corporation v. Samuels, 127 So. 363, 170 La. 57, 1930 La. LEXIS 1668 (La. 1930).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a suit for $10,352.50, claimed as damages for the alleged breach of a contract, entered into on October 1,1920, by W. C. Nabors and defendant. Nabors assigned the contract, which it is alleged was breached, to the Nabors Oil Corporation, Inc., and both Nabors and that corporation are the plaintiffs herein, the former suing for the use and benefit of the latter.

The contract, alleged to have been breached, is one by which Nabors, who was engaged in selling automobile lubricating oils and gasoline by wholesale, agreed to sell and deliver to defendant, who was engaged in the retail of these commodities from certain premises, in Mansfield, La., leased by him, for his use as a filling station, for the period of the contract. By this contract, defendant agreed to purchase from Nabors all the automobile lubricating oils and gasoline, during that period, which he might require to operate his filling station. The price at which Nabors agreed to sell defendant lubricating oils was stated in the contract to be a. fair competitive one, quality and service to be considered, and the price at which he agreed to sell defendant gasoline was 3 cents a gallon less than the retail price in the territory including and surrounding Minden, La. Nabors paid defendant $3,000 cash as consideration for the contract. He reserved the right to cancel the contract, with or without cause, upon forfeiting the amount paid and upon releasing defendant from all further liability under the contract. Defendant also reserved the right to cancel the contract, with or without cause, upon giving Nabors six months’ written notice of the intention to cancel, and upon returning to him, at the time of the cancellation, the pro rata balance of the $3,000 paid by Nabors, as consideration for the contract; that balance to cover the unexpired term of the contract, figured on a time basis.

The foregoing contract is made part of the petition herein. The petition, inter alia, sets forth that, on May 24,1927, defendant, acting under the terms of the contract, elected to terminate it, as of date November 24, 1927, and returned to the Nabors Oil Corporation, Inc., the assignee of W. C. Nabors, a pro rata portion of the amount originally paid as consideration for the contract, the amount returned being proportionate to the unexpired term of the contract; that, during the time the contract remained in force, Nabors or his assignee, the Nabors Oil Corporation, Inc., as well as defendant, remained in business; and that, although either of thq former was ready, willing, and able to comply with the contract, and was, at no time, in default, defendant breached it by purchasing, during the period from November 1, 1923, until the diay the contract was terminated, lubricating oils from others than either of the plaintiffs, and dispensed them from his filling station; and that from November 1,1926, until the day the *62 contract was terminated, defendant, in violation of the contract, purchased gasoline from others, and dispensed it from his filling station ; and that, as a result of these breaches of the contract, occurring prior to the day it was terminated, which took place, in the face of protests made, plaintiffs have suffered damages in the sum of $10,352.50, the amount sued for.

In defense of this demand, defendant filed an exception of no cause or (right of action. This exception, after argument had, was referred to the merits. After the disposition thus made of that exception, defendant filed a plea of estoppel. This plea was sustained by the trial court, and plaintiffs’ demand was dismissed.

While the exception of no cause or right of action was not formally passed upon by the trial court, nevertheless both sides have argued it fully in their briefs. In view of the fact that both sides have discussed the exception fully in this court, and in further view of the fact that the exception might have been filed here, we shall consider and dispose of it.

The exception rests upon the grounds, first, that the contract, sued on, is null and void as containing a potestative condition, in that plaintiff was given the right to cancel the contract, with or without cause; secondly, that the contract is null and void, since it is a nudum pactum, in that it lacks mutuality, because it places no obligation whatever on defendant to purchase from Nabors or his assignee any oil or gasoline, or to do so for any given time; and, thirdly, if it be held that the contract was a valid one, then that plaintiffs have waived any breach thereof by accepting a pro rata portion of the consideration paid for it, and have thereby estopped themselves from claiming damages for any breach of the contract that may have occurred.

The law governing potestative conditions is to be found in the Civil Code. Article 2024 thereof provides that “the potestative condition is that which makes the execution of the agreement depend on an event which it is in the power of the one or the other of the contracting parties to bring about or to hinder.” Article 2034 of the Civil Code provides that “every obligation is null, that has been contracted, on a potestative condition, on the part of him who binds himself.” Article 2035 provides that “the last preceding article is limited to potestative conditions, which make the obligation depend solely on the exercise of the obligor’s will; but if the condition be, that the obligor shall do or not do a certain act, although the doing or not doing of the act depends on the will of the obligor, yet the obligation depending on such condition, is not void.”

It is urged by defendant that the contract is null under the provisions of these articles, because Nabors or his assignee could at any time terminate the contract, even on the day-following its execution, and this though defendant might object to its termination.

While Nabors or his assignee might have so terminated the contract, yet neither could have done so without forfeiting the unearned portion of the $3,000, stated to be the consideration for the contract, which, under the circumstances, would be equivalent to paying that much for the privilege of terminating it.

In Blanchard v. Haber, 166 La. 1014, 118 So. 117, 119, in discussing article 2035 of the Civil Code, this court said: “That article was not taken from the French Code, and its meaning is not quite plain, or easy to reconcile with articles 2024 and 2034. It has been decided, however, that article 2035 means simply this, that, where a conditional obligation to pay a certain price depends upon how the obligor may exercise an option to do or not to do a certain thing, the contract is not null if *64 a serious consideration has been given or reciprocal obligations are incurred.” ■

In Houssiere Latreille Oil Co. v. Jennings-Heywood Oil Syndicate, 115 La. 107, 129, 38 So. 932, 940, where the contention was made that a mineral lease was null, because it contained a potestative condition, in that it reserved to the lessee the right to cancel the lease, at any time, on paying the lessor $100, and therefore left it to the will of the lessee as to whether the lease should continue, this court said: “One is not said to do at will that which he can do only upon giving an equivalent for the privilege of doing. In this instance the defendant can cancel the contract only upon paying $100, and, if such a condition could be called potestative, it falls within the rule of Civ. Code, art.

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Related

Bullock v. Louisiana Industries
370 So. 2d 148 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Oliver v. Home Service Ice Co.
161 So. 766 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1935)
Nabors Oil Corporation v. Samuels
143 So. 330 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
127 So. 363, 170 La. 57, 1930 La. LEXIS 1668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nabors-oil-corporation-v-samuels-la-1930.