Oatis v. Delcuze

77 So. 2d 28, 226 La. 751, 1954 La. LEXIS 1380
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 13, 1954
Docket41480
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 77 So. 2d 28 (Oatis v. Delcuze) 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
Oatis v. Delcuze, 77 So. 2d 28, 226 La. 751, 1954 La. LEXIS 1380 (La. 1954).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

On February 6, 1952, plaintiff, George !E. Oatis, entered into an agreement with Delcuze Real Estate Company, selling •agent, to purchase the property listed as •863 Roosevelt Place in New Orleans, owned by Mrs. Allie Gehlbach Blache, for $23,000 ■cash. The agreement provided for a de•posit of 10% of the purchase price and the •seller obligated herself to deliver to the ■purchaser a merchantable title. The offer was to remain binding, and irrevocable •through February 7, 1952.

At the time the agreement was executed •there was constructed on the property, and it is still located thereon, a house containing Three apartments.

The deposit of $2,300 was made according to the terms of the agreement but when the time came to execute the deed, the purchaser agreed to accept title only upon the vendor furnishing a bond to secure him against disturbance in possession because of certain alleged zoning regulations with which the building failed to comply. The vendor refused to furnish such bond and this suit, for the recovery of the deposit, plus certain costs and expenses and also attorney’s fees, resulted.

The suit is directed against the vendor, Mrs. Allie Gehlbach, divorced wife of Maurice Blache, and C. J. Delcuze, the real estate agent who represented her in the agreement to purchase.

Plaintiff alleged that under a zoning-ordinance of the Commission Council of the City of New Orleans, certified copy of which is annexed to his petition, certain properties are classified as “A” Residential, and the erection or maintenance of any except one or two family residences therein is prohibited. He further averred that the property he agreed to buy from the defendant, Mrs. Allie Gehlbach Blache, comes under that classification and because the construction erected on it is a frame residence containing three separate and distinct apartments, this constitutes an existing violation of the ordinance referred to and makes the title one that is suggestive of litigation.

Plaintiff made other allegations to the effect that the building also fails to meet *755 other requirements of the ordinance relating to its location and with respect to the quantity of space that has to be left on the property for rear and side yards.

The demand is for the return of the deposit of $2,300 and in addition, the sum of $292.50 for costs and expenses incurred in connection with the agreement to purchase, and also the sum of $700 for attorney’s fees. These items, amounting to the sum of $3,292.50, he alleged he is entitled to recover under a clause in the agreement which obliges either party who fails to comply with its terms to pay all fees and costs incurred in enforcing collection and damages. Judgment is prayed for against both defendants, in solido.

Defendants, filed exceptions of no right and no caitse'of. action and upon their being overruled, -they filed a joint answer in which they 'admit- the execution of the agreement to purchase- but generally deny all the other allegations of plaintiff’s petition. Defendant -Mrs. Blache, further answering, alleged'that these apartments were in existence on the "property -prior to the adoption of" the zoning ordinance referred to in plaintiff’s petition, and that on the day fixed for passing the act of sale she advised plaintiff that she could furnish affidavits to that effect but he refused to accept such evidence. Further alleging that plaintiff had breached his contract and that under its terms his deposit should be forfeited, she so demands, as plaintiff in reconvention, and further'asks for $700 to pay the fees of counsel she was forced to employ.

Defendant C. J. Delcuze also assumed' the position of a plaintiff in reconvention and averred that he was entitled to his agent’s commission under the terms of the-purchase agreement. He asks for judgment against the plaintiff in the sum of $1,020 for the commission he claims and the further sum of $350 as attorney’s fees.

After trial in the lower court there was. judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against both defendants, in solido, in the-sum of $2,942.50 and both demands in re-convention were rejected. On rehearing the district judge amended the judgment,, casting both defendants, in solido, in the-full sum of $2,300 and casting the defendant, Mrs. Allie Gehlbach, divorced wife of Maurice Blache, in the additional sum of $292.50. The" judgment is not itemized,, but assuredly the $2,300 for which both defendants were cast, in solido, represents-the deposit that had been made by the-plaintiff in the purchase agreement. Apparently the $292.50 includes costs, and expenses, incurred by the plaintiff with the exception of the attorney’s fees which evidently had been previously allowed. Defendant appealed and plaintiff has " answered pra'ying for an amendment so as-to be awarded $700 for the attorney’s fees, demanded.

The ordinance with which we are concerned in the case is Ordinance No. 11,302, Commission Council Series, as. *757 .amended, of the City of -New Orleans, adopted June 1, 1929 and approved June 6, 1929. Concededly the building on the prop•erty involved in this case consists of three .separate and distinct apartments and does not conform to the provisions of the zoning •ordinance. However, as admitted by counsel for plaintiff, the mere existence of the zoning regulations under the ordinance does not of itself create an encumbrance ■on the title to the property. It is the violation of the restrictions imposed by the ordinance that affects the merchantability of the title. Obviously if the non-conforming building was erected on the property, or some non-conforming feature was added to it, prior to the effective date of the zoning ordinance, its provisions do not apply. That is made plain by the terms of the ordinance itself Sec. 10(b) of which reads as follows:

“The lawful use of a building, or portion thereof, existing at the time of the passage of this ordinance may be •continued except as hereinafter provided in paragraphs (c) and (d), although such lawful existing use of said building or portion thereof does not conform to the provisions hereof, provided, that the lawfully existing non-conforming use shall not be expanded so as to encroach into any other portion of the building, and provided further, that no structural alterations •except those required by law or ordinance shall be made in the non-conforming building or non-conforming part of a building.” 1

The question to be resolved then, in cases of this kind is one that relates to the time when the non-conforming building was constructed. If it, or its non-conforming features existed prior to the date of the ordinance, the purchaser acquiring from the owner obtains a title that is free of the encumbrances which may result and is protected against the penalties therein provided. On the other hand, if the non-conforming building was erected after the passage of the ordinance, there resulted a violation of its terms which materially affects the title to the property and the policy of the law, as announced by the courts, is not to compel a person to purchase under an agreement for the sale of real property where there is a substantial doubt as to the title or where the title is in such condition as to expose the purchaser to litigation. See Moyer v. DeVincentis Const. Co., 107 Pa.Super. 588, 164 A.

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 2d 28, 226 La. 751, 1954 La. LEXIS 1380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oatis-v-delcuze-la-1954.