Paul v. Nolen

166 So. 509, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 106
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 9, 1936
DocketNo. 15033.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 166 So. 509 (Paul v. Nolen) 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
Paul v. Nolen, 166 So. 509, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 106 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On September 13, 1933. Miss Willie D. Nolen purchased from Mrs. Viola Morse the premises bearing the municipal number 1722 Esplanade avenue in the city of New Orleans. At that time Mrs. Richard Gaudry was lessee of the building by virtue of a written lease which she had entered into with Mrs. Morse. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Register (plaintiffs) were the occupants of one of the apartments in the *510 building, having subleased that apartment from Mrs. Gaudry.

On September 14th, the day after Miss Nolen bought the property, Mr. and Mrs. Register received physical injuries when the front stairway of the building collapsed as they were descending from the front porch to the ground below. Seeking recovery from Miss Nolen, the owner of the premises, they found their action upon article 2322 of the Civil Code which makes “every owner of a building answerable in damages to any person who is injured — either while rightfully inside or while outside of the building — by an accident resulting either from the owner’s neglect to .repair the building or from a vice or defect in its original construction.” Klein v. Young, 163 La. 59, 111 So. 495, 497.

The defense, after the elimination of unimportant details and technicalities, is that Mrs. Gaudry, the lessee of the building, and the sublessor from whom plaintiffs had subleased their apartment, had, in the written contract of lease with the owner, agreed to undertake and be responsible for all necessary repairs, and had relieved the owner from all liability and responsibility resulting from any such defects, except “in case of positive neglect or failure to take action towards the remedying of such defects within reasonable time after having written notice from lessee of such defects, * * * ” and that Miss Nolen, who purchased the property on the day prior to the accident and to whom the said lease with Mrs. Gaudry was assigned', could avail herself of the protection of the said clause in the said lease.

This defense, defendant contends, is especially authorized by Act No. 174 of 1932, which provides that: “The owners of buildings or premises which have been leased under a contract whereby the tenant or occupant assumes responsibility for the condition of the premises shall not be liable in damages for injury caused by any vice or defect therein to any tenant or occupant, nor to anyone in the building or on the premises by license of the tenant or occupant, unless the owner knew of such vice or defect, or should within reason have known thereof, or had received notice of such vice or defect and failed to remedy same within a reasonable time thereafter.” Section 1.

Plaintiffs contend that for two reasons ■defendant may not avail herself of the protection of the said clause. They assert that the statute of 1932 is violative of article 1 (§ 2) of the Constitution of Louisiana and also of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution of the United States, in that, to quote from their brief, “it seeks to attempt to deprive plaintiffs of their property rights without due process of law by attempting to bar recovery to them under an alleged contract to which they were never parties.”

They also maintain that, even if the act of 1932 is not repugnant to the Constitution of this state or of the United States, and even if the said stipulation may have been availed of by Mrs. Morse had she not sold the property and had she been the owner at the time of the accident, because of the said sale, the written lease was abrogated and annulled and is no longer in force. In support of this latter contention, they point out the fact that the lease containing the said stipulation had never been registered in the conveyance records of the parish of Orleans; the result being, so they (plaintiffs) maintain, that it was completely canceled and terminated by the sale of the said property.

In the district court there was judgment for defendant upholding the constitutionality of the statute, maintaining the defense based on the stipulation in the lease, and dismissing plaintiffs’ suit. Plaintiffs have appealed.

Prior to the enactment of Act No. 174 of 1932, a stipulation such as that contained in the lease in question would have been effective to the extent of barring any claim which the tenant himself might have attempted to assert (Pecararo v. Grover, 5 La.App. 676), but it could not have been effective as a bar to an action by any one else. It could not have affected the rights of subtenants. Klein v. Young, supra. Nor could the rights of a guest of a tenant be cut off by such a stipulation. Even the wife of a tenant would not have been deprived, by the said stipulation, of the right to look to the owner for redress. Hero v. Hankins (C.C.A.) 247 F. 664. Therefore, if the act of 1932 is violative of, or repugnant to, either the Federal or to the State Constitution, such a provision could have no more effect as against a subtenant or a third person, now than it could have had prior to the enactment of the statute.

It is said that the fundamental objection to the statute is that it permits parties to a lease to deprive third persons of *511 their property rights without due process of law. Our attention almost instinctively focuses itself upon the word “rights,” and we recollect that it is well established that there is no vested or property right in a potential and not yet existent claim for damages. We bear in mind that at the time the lease contract is entered into no claim against the lessor nor against any one else has as yet come into existence. It is to that time that we must look in order to determine whether the law has permitted the parties to that contract to deprive others of their vested or property rights. When this lease was entered into, Mr. and Mrs. Register had not been injured. They had no right to a claim against any one.

Until the passage of Act No. 174 of 1932, the state of Louisiana, differently, we are advised, from all other states, had provided by law that in all cases of damage resulting from defective premises the responsibility should be placed upon the owner, and the courts had interpreted this to mean that, so far as third persons were concerned, this obligation could not, by contract, be shifted to the shoulders of the lessee. That was and remained the policy of the state until 1932. In that year the legislators, and they are vested with authority to declare what shall be the policy of the state, decided that there should be afforded to owners the right, under certain conditions, by contract, t'o transfer this liability to their lessees.

We see no fundamental reason which should prevent the Legislature from doing this. There is nothing basically wrong in permitting owners to make such contracts. There is nothing fundamentally wrong in permitting lessees to undertake the upkeep of the property at their risk, because, if so, then all of the other states of the Union have adopted a policy which is fundamentally and basically wrong.

It is for the lawmakers to determine whether it is best to permit recovery from the owner in the one case or from the tep-ant in the other.

No person has any vested right to sue either the one or the other. The right has been given by statute. What the law gives the law may take away. But in this case it has not taken it away; it ha6 left the right and has merely permitted transfer of the obligation from one person to another.

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 509, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-v-nolen-lactapp-1936.