Richardson v. Charles Kirsch & Co.

189 So. 146, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 238
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1939
DocketNo. 16900.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 189 So. 146 (Richardson v. Charles Kirsch & Co.) 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
Richardson v. Charles Kirsch & Co., 189 So. 146, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 238 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Mrs. Victoria K. Richardson, having agreed in writing to buy certain real estate which the owner had listed for sale with Charles F. Kirsch, a real estate agent conducting his business as Charles Kirsch & Company, and having made the required deposit, being unable to obtain title to the said property within the time limit fixed in the contract, brings this suit against Kirsch, and Mrs. Goldie Carson Giuffria Murphy, alleged to be the owner on whose behalf plaintiff's offer had been accepted, and prays for solidary judgment against Kirsch and Mrs. Murphy, for the return of the deposit and for an additional sum equal in amount to the deposit required by the contract. Plaintiff also prays for a reasonable attorney’s fee and for such expenses as she has sustained in connection with title examination.

The defendants filed what they term pleas of “misjoinder” and also exceptions of no cause of action. These pleas were overruled and defendants filed answers in which they averred, in effect, that the owner of the property was at all times ready and willing to make valid title thereto, but that plaintiff had not called upon her to do so and had not notified her of the time and place for the passing of the act of sale and had not formally tendered the purchase price, nor offered to comply with the provisions and terms of the contract. In addition, Kirsch averred that he had earned his commission of $320 and that, therefore, since plaintiff had failed to comply with her contract to purchase, he should be permitted to retain out of the deposit the amount of the said commission.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff solidarily against Kirsch and Mrs. Murphy ordering the return of the deposit and there was further judgment against Mrs. Murphy for $800, which is the amount of the' deposit which was required by the contract, and also for $200 as an attorney’s fee and for $58.50, representing expenses incurred by plaintiff in connection' with title examination. Kirsch and Mrs. Murphy have appealed.

In this court counsel for defendants urges us to maintain the plea, which he terms one of “misjoinder”, but which, in reality, is one of non-joinder, and he also argues that, in any event, we should dismiss the suit on the exception of no cause of action. The first-mentioned plea is based on the fact that, though plaintiff alleges that when the owner (Mrs. Murphy) purchased the property in question she was the wife of Joseph D. Giuffria, who was still alive, she, plaintiff, failed to make the said Giuffria a party-defendant in this proceeding, although she had alleged in her petition that one of the requirements of her attorneys, who examined the title to the property, was that any possible interest of the said Joseph D. Giuf-fria should be divested. It is argued that, if the then husband, Giuffria, had any interest in the property in question by reason of the fact that it was purchased by his wife during the existence of the matrimonial community, he was a necessary party to this suit.

But plaintiff has not alleged, nor is it a necessary inference from any of her allegations, that Giuffria has, or had any interest in the property. The title examiners made a demand that any possible interest which he might have should be divested in order to make it impossible that he or his heirs later contend that the purchase, though made by the wife, had been made' otherwise than with her separate funds. That requirement in no way constituted a *149 concession of actual interest in Giuffria. On the contrary, plaintiff concedes, as do defendants themselves, that Giuffria, in truth, had no interest in the property. All that plaintiff desired was that it be made impossible that later Giuffria or his heirs contend that he had any interest and that that interest had not been divested.

In support of the contention that the suit should be dismissed on exception of no cause of action, counsel for defendant presents three separate and distinct arguments. First he says that the agreement, which was attached to the petition, contained a potestative condition in that the offer, although it stipulated for a payment of only a part of the purchase price in cash, did not fix the rate of interest to be paid on the credit portion and did not set forth the particular homestead association through which the credit portion should be financed. Exceptors point to Titus v. Cunningham, 7 La.App. 37, and to the following authorities as supporting the view that sucb offer is potestative: Mathews Brothers v. Schoenberger, 11 La.App. 155, 123 So. 133; East Bank Land Company v. Hoffstetter, 13 La.App. 564, 125 So. 160; Luderbach v. Cristina & Lauricella, 12 La. App. 28, 125 So. 161; Gruntz v. Frank Jordano, Inc., 12 La.App. 172, 125 So. 167; Kaplan v. Whitworth, 116 La. 337, 40 So. 723; Young v. Cistac, 157 La. 771, 103 So. 100.

There appear to be two answers to this argument. First, even though the condition on which the contract depended may have been potestative when the contract was made, it lost that character when the obli-gor, though possibly not necessarily required to act, did so and thus fulfilled the condition which, until then, may have been unenforceable. Conceding that the contract, as written, did not bind plaintiff to apply to any particular homestead for a loan and did not stipulate the interest rate which plaintiff should pay, -and conceding that, to that extent, it contained a potesta-tive condition, still, when she applied for and obtained the loan from a homestead as a result of which the vendor would obtain full payment in cash, no longer could it be said that the fulfillment of the contract depended solely upon her will. Board of Commissioners, etc., v. Concordia Abstract & Realty Company et al., 181 La. 373, 159 So. 588.

Plaintiff alleged that she had applied for and had obtained the approval of the necessary loan, subject only to title examination, 'and, having made this allegation, no longer may the contract be pointed to in connection with an exception of no cause of action, as containing a potesta-tive condition.

For still another reason defendants cannot be heard, in support of their exception of no cause of action, nor on the merits of the controversy, to rely upon the charge that the contract was potestative and, therefore, null ab initio, and that is that they did not rely on that point in support of the exception in the court below, and later, when they filed their answer, contended not only that the contract was valid and binding, but that, by its breach, plaintiff had made herself liable to them. Surely, defendants cannot be heard to claim that, by failure to comply with the terms of the contract, plaintiff has incurred liability for its breach, and, in the same breath, to argue that the said contract was void ab initio.

Kirsch presents the additional contention that the petition sets forth no cause of action against him for the reason that it seeks judgment against him, as well as against the owner of the property, for the return of double the amount of the deposit, although obviously, he, as the real estate agent, cannot be held liable for more than the amount of the deposit left with him. It is quite true that he in no event can be liable for more than the return of the deposit, but that fact does not warrant the maintenance of the exception even as to him. Since the petition does show a cause of action against him for the return of the deposit, the exception cannot be maintained.

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Bluebook (online)
189 So. 146, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-charles-kirsch-co-lactapp-1939.