Office Center, Inc. v. Tanenbaum

225 So. 2d 740, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5935
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 31, 1969
DocketNo. 3622
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 So. 2d 740 (Office Center, Inc. v. Tanenbaum) 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
Office Center, Inc. v. Tanenbaum, 225 So. 2d 740, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5935 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

BARNETTE, Judge.

This is a suit by The Office Center, Inc., against Edwin Tanenbaum and Dr. Edgar C. Cohen for $4,500 arising out of an alleged contract for the sale and purchase of certain real property in Jefferson Parish. The plaintiff charges the defendants with default in refusing acceptance of the proffered deed in accordance with the terms of the contract. The sum of $4,500, representing 10 percent of the contract price which defendants had deposited with plaintiff’s agent, Medallion Realty, Inc., was declared [742]*742forfeited upon defendants’ refusal to accept the deed of conveyance tendered by plaintiff. The $4,500 which plaintiff seeks to recover in this suit represents the realtor’s commission which plaintiff alleges is due and owing by defendants over and above the $4,500 forfeited, under the terms of the contract.

The defendants answered denying their indebtedness to plaintiff and alleged that plaintiff did not own the property it had agreed to sell and that the contract was null and void for failure of a meeting of the minds as to the identical land to be conveyed. Defendants alleged certain discrepancies in the measurements of the property and that the contract of sale and purchase contained a potestative condition They also denied that the contract provided for the payment of a real estate commission.

Defendants assumed the position of third-party plaintiffs and named Medallion Realty, Inc., third-party defendant from whom they seek return of the $4,500 they deposited with Medallion upon execution of the contract.

The trial court granted judgment in favor of plaintiff against the defendants in solido in the sum of $4,500 “ * * * now on deposit with Medallion Realty, Inc. * * * ” which was in effect a confirmation of the forfeiture of the deposit. The judgment further provided for judgment in favor of Medallion Realty, Inc., third-party defendant, rejecting the third-party demands of Tanenbaum and Cohen.

The plaintiff perfected a devolutive appeal insofar as the judgment in effect denies plaintiff’s demand for the additional sum of $4,500 for realtor’s commission. The defendants answered the appeal in this court seeking reversal of the judgment in plaintiff’s favor against them and also seeking reversal of the judgment denying their third-party demands against Medallion Realty, Inc.

The defendants were desirous of purchasing a commercial site for investment purposes. They contacted Paul F. Das-tugue, representative of Medallion Realty, Inc., and after looking at several pieces of property expressed interest in certain vacant and unimproved lots bounded on two sides by Sanford Street and the right-of-way of Interstate Highway 10-Clearview Parkway interchange. At the point in question Sanford Street connects with but does not intersect the lateral service road of the Interstate-Clearview Parkway interchange, thus forming a corner. It is approximately in this corner that the lots in question are located. Dastugue explained to Tanenbaum and Cohen that these were three separate lots or portions thereof which his firm was working on to consolidate into one parcel or commercial plot, whereupon defendants told him if the assembly of the parcels into one plot could be worked out they would be interested in buying. Dastugue said he would refer the matter to Tony Lopez, Medallion’s commercial manager. A week or ten days later, on Saturday, April 16, 1966, the defendants met Tony Lopez, vice president of Medallion Realty, Inc., in charge of its land department, at the site of the lots in question for an inspection with a view of making an offer to purchase.

Sanford Street and the lateral service road of Clearview Parkway-Interstate 10 interchange are both paved with a continuous curb clearly marking the streets. At the point in question the highway right-of-way line cuts across lots described as 15, 14, and 13 of Square No. 31. According to the undisputed testimony of John E. Walker, Civil Engineer, and the survey map prepared by him June 8, 1966, and filed in evidence, a triangular portion of Lot 15 measuring 9.25 feet on Sanford Street, 24.-01 feet on the service road right-of-way and 24.88 feet on the inside adj acent to Lot 14, lies immediately in the corner of Sanford Street and the service road. The service road and highway right-of-way continues as an angle across Lots 14 and 13 but does not touch Lot 12. The plot in question is all of Lot 12 and portions of [743]*743Lots 13 and 14 not taken for the highway right-of-way. We reproduce here a copy of Walker’s survey for clarification of this opinion.

[744]*744According to Walker’s survey, the lots were laid out in the subdivision with a frontage of 50 feet each on Sanford Street with the lateral boundaries running back at an angle a distance of 156.16 feet, thus each being a parallelogram in shape. Therefore the plot in question is irregular in shape measuring 150 feet on Sanford Street, 24.88 feet' along the triangular parcel of Lot 15, then 132.43 feet along the highway right-of-way cutting off portions of Lots 14 and 13, thence 25.05 feet across the rear of Lot 13 continuing 50 feet across the rear of Lot 12, thence 156.16 feet to Sanford Street. The principal frontage of the plot is now on the service road, and because it follows the contour of the right-of-way, it is not a perfectly straight line.

Except for the clearly defined street boundaries, there were no markers, stakes, fences, or other indications of the lot boundaries. Lopez had the approximate lineal boundary measurements, one of which was “about” 165 feet on the Clear-view Parkway service road side. In order to get a visual indication of the size of the plot and the line on the Clearview side, Lopez stationed Tanenbaum at the corner of Sanford Street and the service road and from that point stepped off an estimated distance of 165 feet along the service road curbing. Dr. Cohen walked along with Lopez.

The parties then went to Medallion’s office where they were joined by Dastugue. The property was represented to Tanen-baum and Cohen as being Lots 14, 13, and 12 “ * * * measuring about 165 x 150 x 74 x 155.55 or as per title.” No maps were displayed. Relying on this description and the visual inspection of the property pointed out to them by Lopez, defendants made an offer to purchase for $45,000. A contract was prepared and signed by defendants subject to acceptance by plaintiff. The pertinent part of the contract entitled “Agreement to Purchase or Sell” is as follows:

“We offer and agree to purchase Lots 14, 13, 12, Square 31 Unit 2 Sec. A Pontchartrain Gardens Jefferson Parish, La. Property zoned C-2 Commercial. On grounds measuring about 165 x 150 x 74 x 155.55 or as per title.
Property sold and purchased subject to all title and zoning restrictions on record, or by laws or ordinances for. the sum of Forty-Five Thousand Dollars ($45,000.-00) on the terms of all cash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 So. 2d 740, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/office-center-inc-v-tanenbaum-lactapp-1969.