Pacholik v. Gray
This text of 187 So. 2d 480 (Pacholik v. Gray) 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.
Opinion
Joseph PACHOLIK (through Frank Hromadka, as agent), Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Mrs. Marguerite Labbous GRAY et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*481 Neblett & Fuhrer, by Robert B. Neblett, Jr., Alexandria, Alfred A. Mansour, Alexandria, for defendant-appellant-appellee.
Downs & Gremillion, by Richard E. Lee, Alexandria, for plaintiff-appellee-appellant.
Before TATE, HOOD, and CULPEPPER, JJ.
TATE, Judge.
This is a suit for the return of $500 paid on the purchase price pursuant to a contract to buy and sell a house and lot. The defense is that the purchaser breached the contract by refusing to buy. It is contended that therefore the sellers are entitled to retain the $500 as damages. From a judgment for the plaintiff purchaser, the defendant sellers appeal.
Certain testimony was offered to prove that the buyer's late attorney had stated to the sellers' attorney that the buyer did not intend to purchase even if by curative work the sellers did make timely tender of merchantable title. The primary issue of the appeal is whether this testimony is admissible. The trial court held it to be inadmissible as hearsay.
*482 The determination of this principal issue depends, as will be shown, upon whether the statements by the attorney were within the apparent scope of his authority to speak for his client: If not, they are inadmissible as hearsay; if so, they are admissible as the vicarious admissions of a party through his agent.
The agreement to buy and sell was executed on October 15, 1963. Pertinently, it provided that the buyer had thirty days within which to secure a legal opinion to discover title defects, and then the seller had an additional thirty days to perform curative work to remedy defects discovered by the buyer and to tender merchantable title.
The buyer's attorney timely discovered title defects concerning the succession property to be sold: lack of a judgment of possession, and a $2,667.85 lien. These defects were not cured until January 2, 1964, some 18 days after expiration of the 60-day period for the sellers to tender merchantable title.
The buyer contends that, therefore, under the contract the buyer is entitled to return of the $500 deposited by him, further contending that the sellers cannot complain of any breach of the contract by the buyer since the sellers did not place him in default at the time for his performance. LSA-Civil Code Article 1913.[1]
The defendant sellers counter, however, that no putting in default or timely performance was necessary. They contend that the buyer had previously breached the contract by informing them in late November or early December that he would not buy the property even if the defects were cured (as they easily could be by bonding the lien and having the judgment of possession signed). The sellers thus contend that, prior to the expiration of the sixty-day period, the buyer made the sellers' timely performance a vain and unnecessary act by stating he would not go through with the purchase even if the curative work were timely completed as tendered by the sellers' attorney. Comment, The Doctrine of Anticipatory Breach of Contract, 20 La.L.Rev. 119 (1959); Note, Putting in DefaultA Vain Act, 8 Tul.L.Rev. 284 (1934). See: Marek v. McHardy, 234 La. 841, 101 So.2d 689; Fox v. Doll, 221 La. 427, 59 So.2d 443.
There appears to be no dispute herein as to these legal principles; but the buyer contends that they are not applicable because no admissible evidence was introduced to prove that in fact the buyer Pacholik had so breached his agreement to buy.
To prove their factual contention that the buyer Pacholik had breached the contract, thus entitling them to retain the $500 as damages, the defendant sellers rely upon the testimony of their attorney in the agreement-to-buy-and-sell transaction and also of their realtor. Subject to the plaintiff's objection, both of these witnesses testified positively that the attorney for the buyer, Pacholik, had informed them in late November or early December that Pacholik did not intend to buy the property on December 15th even if, as tendered, the title defects were cured by that date.
The plaintiff buyer objected to the admissibility of such evidence. The trial court permitted it to be made part of the record for purposes of appellate review, LSA-C. C.P. Art. 1636; but it then sustained the plaintiff's objection to its admissibility. (There then being no admissible evidence to support the sellers' exculpatory defense[2], *483 accordingly judgment was then entered for the plaintiff.)
Preliminarily, we should observe that able counsel for the plaintiff is quite correct in his contention that declarations by a decedent are normally hearsay and admissible for only restricted purposes (none here relevant). See Miller v. Miller, 226 La. 273, 76 So.2d 3, rejecting as hearsay declarations of a decedent sought to be introduced by his heirs.
However, the hearsay-exclusion rule does not prevent an adverse party from introducing testimony as to statements made out of court by a party-opponent. 4 Wigmore on Evidence, Sections 1048, 1049 (3rd ed., 1940); McCormick on Evidence, Section 239 (1954). Likewise, representative or vicarious admissions by an agent acting for a principal are admissible when off erred by an opposing party in a suit against the principal. Wigmore, Section 1078; McCormick, Section 244. Therefore, admissions by a deceased party or his deceased agent are not excluded as hearsay, but are instead competent evidence when introduced by an opposing party; although they are a weak kind of evidence which must be scrutinized carefully, they do have probative force. LaRocca v. Ofrias, 231 La. 292, 91 So.2d 351; Abunza v. Olivier, 230 La. 445, 88 So.2d 815; cf., Micheli v. Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Co., La.App. 4 Cir., 174 So.2d 168 (holding written statement of a deceased agent not admissible when sought to be introduced by his principal, but also containing extensive citation of cases on question).
In the present instance, it is stipulated that the late J. B. Nachman, a highly respected attorney of Alexandria, was employed by the buyer Pacholik to represent him in the title-check and the agreement to buy and sell.
The extent of Mr. Nachman's actual or ostensible authority in his representation of the buyer is the decisive issue of the appeal. "The rule, characterized as `supported by practically universal authority,' is that an attorney may make admissions of fact which will affect his client, provided his authority is made affirmatively to appear by evidence other than the declaration of the attorney, and provided the statement is shown to have been made within the actual or ostensible scope of the authority delegated, during the continuance of his agency, and while engaged in a bona fide attempt to discharge the duties of his employment. * * *" 31A C.J.S. Evidence §361, pp. 869 et seq. (Italics ours.) See also Annotation, Extrajudicial admissions of fact by attorney as binding client, 97 A. L.R. 374.
In refusing as hearsay to admit the late Mr. Nachman's statements, the trial court concluded that there was no showing that Mr. Nachman was authorized by his client to decline to carry out agreement to buy if the curative work was timely performed.
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187 So. 2d 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacholik-v-gray-lactapp-1966.