Overby v. Beach

55 So. 2d 873, 220 La. 78
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 28, 1951
DocketNo. 39550
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 55 So. 2d 873 (Overby v. Beach) 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
Overby v. Beach, 55 So. 2d 873, 220 La. 78 (La. 1951).

Opinions

HAMITER, Justice.

Mrs. Eunice Overby Beary, wife of Allan R. Beary, Jr., and a resident of Orleans Parish, instituted this rescission action to obtain the annulment of several instruments by and through which she acquired by purchase certain real property in the City of New Orleans bearing Municipal Nos. 4810-12-14-16 Pitt Street and consisting of five separate apartments under the same roof.

To plaintiff’s petition the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Babin and the French Market Homestead Association, tendered exceptions of no right and no cause of action. The district court sustained the exceptions and dismissed the suit of plaintiff. She is appealing.

According to the allegations contained in the petition of plaintiff, on which the exceptions are determinable, she became interested in acquiring for investment purposes the above property which had been listed for sale with a certain New Orleans real estate agency by the owners, Mr. and Mrs. Babin. In the written contract of listing, dated July 7, 1948, the Babins had designated the legally collectible rental which they were receiving for each of the five apartments. While negotiating for the purchase of the property plaintiff required the Babins “to warrant to her in writing what the legally collectible rents for each of the said five apartments in the property on Pitt Street were”, and they gave to her the “written warranty”.

On August 3, 1948, plaintiff further alleges, she executed with the Babins a written agreement to purchase the property for the total price of $23,400 upon the following terms: Paying to the Babins $5400 in cash, and giving them a second mortgage [84]*84note of $6000; and delivering to the French Market Homestead Association a vendor’s lien and first mortgage note of $12,000, it having agreed to lend that sum for payment to the Babins.

On September 8, 1948, in consummating the purchase agreement, authentic acts were passed before the same notary whereby the Babins conveyed to the Homestead Association, it reconveyed to plaintiff (retaining the vendor’s lien and special mortgage), and the latter granted to the Babins the second mortgage.

On January 31, 1949, plaintiff was informed that the rental charged for one of the apartments was in excess of the maximum permitted by the Office of Price Administration. Thereupon she consulted the New Orleans branch of that Federal agency and “discovered that the registered O. P. A. ceiling rentals for each and every one of the five apartments contained within the property at issue in .these proceedings were at variance with thé sums which had been represented to the petitioner by the defendants in these proceedings as being legally collectible under their warranty in writing.” The variance as to all of the five apartments totaled $98 per month, $277 being the O. P. A. ceiling and $375 being the “warranted legally collectible” rental.

Other pertinent allegations contained in plaintiff’s petition are the following:

“Petitioner alleges that the principal cause of her entering into the agreement to purchase the property and later actually purchase the said property, and the principal motive which she had in making the investment was the result of the warranty in writing by the defendants in these proceedings, the Babins, that the rents shown in said warranty and shown in the listing agreement heretofore described and referred to were legally collectible and would remain legally collectible by the purchaser, the plaintiff in these proceedings, from and after the act of sale by the parties, plaintiff and defendants, was passed.

* ■ * * * * *

“ * * * Petitioner alleges that had she had the least cause to believe or know that the rentals represented to her as being collectible were not legally collectible, she would never have entered into the contract of purchase or effectuated the same.

“Petitioner now alleges in the alternative that there occurred either error of fact as a result of the said written warranty of the defendants by which there was no meeting of the minds and no consent between the parties, the seller and purchaser, to-wit: your petitioner and the Babins, or that the Babins deliberately misrepresented the legally collectible rentals to the petitioner with the intent and purpose to defraud the petitioner by obtaining her consent to pay the asked purchase price, and that they deliberately misrepresented the legally collectible rents for that reason and for that purpose.

“Petitioner alleges that, under the circumstances, she is entitled to a rescission [86]*86of the whole agreement as having been induced by either error of fact, or in the alternative, by fraud practiced upon the petitioner by the defendants, and that there was no meeting of the minds and no contract between the parties. Petitioner alleges that she is entitled to have this Honorable 'Court rescind the agreement to purchase and the agreement of sale, and that she is entitled to be restored to the position she occupied prior to her signature of the agreement to purchase and her signature to the act of sale and various acts of mortgages.”

Annexed to and made a part of plaintiff’s petition are certified copies of the several documents alleged on and mentioned above.

At the outset, in considering defendants’ exceptions of no cause of action directed to the petition, and which were sustained by the district court, it is to be noted that plaintiff’s demand is predicated entirely on alleged misrepresentations of the Babins, as to legally collectible rentals, contained in the written real estate listing and also in the document termed by plaintiff “the warranty in writing.” The Homestead Association is not charged at all with misrepresenting the revenue; nor is there any provision respecting such rentals in the executed contract to purchase or in the notarial acts of conveyance, reconveyance and mortgage. It becomes necessary, therefore, to examine the two documents relied on by plaintiff for the success of her action, certified copies of which are annexed to the petition and control the allegations thereof.

The written real estate listing consists of a small card, on one side of which, above the signature of the' Babins, are stipulations (both printed and typewritten) with reference to the employment of the realtor, for a period of three months, to sell the property at a specified price. The reverse side of the card originally blank, contains typewritten information concerning the five apartments, including the monthly revenue produced- by each. This information was evidently typed thereon by the realtor after obtaining it from the Babins; however, the signatures of the latter do not appear along with it.

The other document, or the alleged “warranty in writing,” is typewritten (with a few interlined corrections made with peri and ink) on two pages, one of which bears the signatures of the Babins and plaintiff’s husband. It is titled “Furniture inventory of- 4810-12-14 — 16 Pitt Street.” Then follows a listing of each apartment by its address, along with a monthly monetary figure set opposite, such as: “4810 Lower Front Apt. $100. mo.”; and under the listings are detailed descriptions of the furniture contained in the respective apartments. The document contains no other information or language. It does not recite, and certainly it is not as plaintiff alleges, a warranty of legally collectible rentals. In fact, there is nothing to indicate exactly what was intended by the stipulated month[88]*88ly amount set opposite each listed apartment.

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Overby v. Beach
55 So. 2d 873 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
55 So. 2d 873, 220 La. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overby-v-beach-la-1951.