Piper v. Gray

2 La. App. 313, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 450
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1925
DocketNo. 2208
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 La. App. 313 (Piper 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.

Bluebook
Piper v. Gray, 2 La. App. 313, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 450 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CARVER, J.

Mrs, Eliza Gray, as the representative of Philip F. Gray, deceased, having sued out executory process for the enforcement of a mortgage and vendor’s lien on certain land sold with warranty on September 11, 1918, by said Philip F. Gray to Henry Piper and Frank Piper, this suit was brought by Henry Piper and the legal representatives of Frank Piper, then deceased, to retain further proceedings under said process.

The grounds alleged in the petition are:

[314]*3141. That one John - Forrest, in the latter part of 1919, took posession of part of the land included in the sale, built a fence around same, notified plaintiffs that he was the owner thereof, ran them off and told them never to enter same again.

2. That on the occurrence of said interruption* of their possession, they demanded of Gray that their title to all of the land be perfected by him before they completed payment; that Gray immediately took steps to have them quieted and clear up the title “agreeing either to perfect their title or to refund the amount of money which they had paid, or, if they so desired, to permit them to retain a portion of the land of which they still had possession and give them back the three outstanding notes on which executory process has now been issued.”

3. That the consideration for which the notes were given has failed by reason of their eviction from part of the property and the notes are therefore extinguished.

4. That Gray consented to an' extension of the time for the payment of the notes until he could perfect the title to the land sold by him with warranty.

They also allege that Gray died in July, 1921, before he had time to join them in a suit for the recovery of the land from which they had been evicted.

They further allege that they had offered to pay Mrs. Gray the amount of the three notes, provided she would clear up the title to the land and that she refused to do so.

The prayer of the petition is that an injunction issue that on trial same be perpetuated; and for judgment annulling and cancelling the notes foreclosed on.

There is no alternative prayer for the rescission of the entire sale either because of the eviction or because of Gray’s alleged agreement to refund the price and take back the land.

Neither is there any prayer for the enforcement of Gray’s alleged consent to extend the notes until perfection of the title.

There is, however, a prayer for general relief.

The District Judge rejected the demands of plaintiff who thereupon took an appeal.

The proof, while showing that Forrest took possession of some land of which plaintiffs were in possession, yet it falls far short of showing that the land Forrest took was included in Gray’s sale, to the Pipers. The proof rather shows it was not so included, although it is not conclusive one way or the other.

It that land were part or the land sold by Gray, though the eviction against which a vendor warrants is not one based merely on force or intimidation, such as is here alleged, but one based on right.

Civil Code, 2500, says:

“Eviction is the loss suffered by the buyer of the totality of the thing sold, or of a part thereof occasioned by the right or claims of a third person.”

Generally this eviction must be shown by legal process.

In Morris vs. Kenton, 2 La. Ann. 722, a buyer sued in warranty to recover the price paid and showed a judgment of eviction to the suit in which it was rendered, though, neither he nor his vendor has been made a party. The court rejected his demand, stating that the judgment' was not binding on him or his vendor. The Syllabus reads, “To make a vendor liable under his warranty the purchaser must be evicted by some lawful authority. Per curiam. The letter must maintain and vindicate his possession against intrusion, or any force but that of the law itself.”

In Minor vs. Robinson, 6 Rob. 166 being a suit for the balance due on property sold, defendant’s demand for diminution [315]*315of the price on account of partial eviction, was rejected because the proof showed that though placed in possession by his vendor he had voluntarily yielded this posession to an adverse claimant. The Syllabus reads thus:

“A vendor will not be responsible, where the purchaser has voluntarily surrendered the possession of the thing sold, without any action having been brought against him.”

There are cases holding that where the sale is an absolute nullity because the property belongs to some one else than the vendor, actual eviction need not he shown; but the doctrine of these eases applies only where the proof is clear that there is an outstanding title to which that given by the vendor must yield. Here no such title is even alleged.

The case of Bonvillain vs. Bodenheimer, 117 La. 794, 42 South. 273, exhaustively considers the law on this question.

Plaintiff did not offer to prove any title in Forrest and such title if it had been offered would have been inadmissible because not alleged.

This consideration disposes of plaintiffs’ complaint that their possession was disturbed and also their complaint that the consideration of the notes had failed by reason of the alleged eviction.

Plaintiffs offered parol evidence to show that Gray had agreed or at least expressed ' willingness either to take back all the land and refund the price or to let them keep what they still had and surrender the notes remaining unpaid or to • extend payment of these notes until he could clear up the title.

The District Judge excluded this testimony so far as concerned any agreement to • give back the price and take back all the land or surrender the notes and let plaintiffs keep the land they still had in possession.

We think this ruling correct.

It was virtually an attempt to prove the rescission either in whole or in part of a sale of real estate, which, under Civil Code 2275 could not be done.

In Emmerling vs. Beebe, 15 La. 251, it was held that an offer of parol testimony, made in that case, was, in substance, an effort to prove that a sale of a slave had been rescinded and that parol testimony was not admissible for that purpose.

This consideration disposes of two of the alleged agreements of Gray, namely: That he was willing to undo the sale entirely or undo it partially by giving the unpaid notes back and letting plaintiff keep the land of which they still retained possession.

There being no prayer for the enforcement of the alleged agreement to extend the notes, we might terminate the' case here. If, however, the prayer for general relief can warrant the court in considering this question, we think plaintiffs’ contention on this score without merit.

The only evidence actually found in the record on this question is the testimony of Henry Piper, page 12, as follows:

“Is it not a fact that Gray told you that he did not want you to finish paying for that land until he could quiet your title to it?”

Objection was made but overruled, and the witness answered:

“Yes, sir.”

Alice Taylor, the widow of Frank Piper, was asked, page 17.

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Related

Frey v. Turner
138 So. 195 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 313, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piper-v-gray-lactapp-1925.