Robertson v. Buoni
This text of 504 So. 2d 860 (Robertson v. Buoni) 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.
Opinion
Elouise Neilson ROBERTSON
v.
Geraldine Buoni, Wife of/and Joseph BUONI.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
Jamie F. Veverica, Gretna, for applicant.
Philip J. Boudousque, Gretna, for respondents.
DIXON, Chief Justice.
This is a suit to dissolve a sale of immovable property. By act of sale and assumption dated April 7, 1982, Elouise N. Robertson sold Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Buoni a piece of real property identified as Lot 20, Section D, Elmwood Subdivision, now known as Northbrook Subdivision, in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. At trial, Ms. Robertson testified that the Buonis agreed to assume the balance of the existing mortgage held by Jefferson Savings & Loan, pay an $8,000 deposit and execute a promissory note in Ms. Robertson's favor for $40,000 representing the balance of the purchase price. The note provided for the payment of $7,000 on or before July 7, 1982 and $6,000 each year thereafter payable on April 7th. Ms. Robertson did not receive any payment after the initial $8,000, and when she attempted to collect, she learned the Buonis had left the area. The property *861 at issue was no longer in her name on the public records, and the Buonis appeared as the record owners with only plaintiff's mortgage to Jefferson Savings & Loan Association encumbering the property. In an effort to avoid foreclosure because she had no funds with which to bid on the property, Ms. Robertson continued to make the mortgage payments. At the time judgment was rendered in the trial court, Ms. Robertson had paid taxes and mortgage installments for approximately three and one-half years after the sale.
Ms. Robertson sued, and an attorney was appointed as curator ad hoc for the absentee defendants. Attempts to locate the defendants were unsuccessful, and the matter proceeded to trial with Ms. Robertson as the lone witness. The promissory note, but not the act of sale, was introduced and admitted into evidence. The trial court declined to dissolve the sale, quoting at length from Waseco Chemical & Supply Co. v. Bayou State Oil Corp., 371 So.2d 305 (La.App. 2d Cir.1979), cert. denied 374 So.2d 656 (La.1979), a case concerning dissolution of a mineral lease, and concluding that Ms. Robertson failed to meet her burden of proof in not providing the court with sufficient information to determine whether dissolution was warranted under Waseco. The court of appeal affirmed with one dissent, 494 So.2d 563 (La. App. 5th Cir.1986), citing the devastating financial effect such a dissolution could have on an innocent third party purchaser. The dissenter objected to the court's speculation about the existence of a third party purchaser. He opined that Ms. Robertson should be entitled to relief under C.C. 2561 and C.C. 2562 which read as follows:
"If the buyer does not pay the price the seller may sue for the dissolution of the sale. This right of dissolution shall be an accessory of the credit representing the price, and if it be held by more than one person all must join in the demand for dissolution; but if any refuse, the others by paying the amount due the parties who refuse shall become subrogated to their rights." C.C. 2561.
"The dissolution of the sale of immovables is summarily awarded, when there is danger that the seller may lose the price and the thing itself.
If that danger does not exist, the judge may grant to the buyer a longer or shorter time, according to circumstances, provided such term exceed not six months.
This term being expired, without the buyer's yet having paid, the judge shall cancel the sale." C.C. 2562.
The Louisiana Civil Code provides several remedies for a vendor who has not received payment of the purchase price. Under C.C. 3249 and C.C. 3271, the vendor has a privilege on things sold for payment:
"Creditors who have a privilege on immovables, are:
1. The vendor on the estate by him sold, for the payment of the price or so much of it as is unpaid, whether it was sold on or without a credit.
2. Architects, undertakers, bricklayers, painters, master builders, contractors, subcontractors, journeymen, laborers, cartmen and other workmen employed in constructing, rebuilding or repairing houses, buildings, or making other works.
3. Those who have supplied the owner or other person employed by the owner, his agent or subcontractor, with materials of any kind for the construction or repair of an edifice or other work, when such materials have been used in the erection or repair of such houses or other works.
The above named parties shall have a lien and privilege upon the building, improvement or other work erected, and upon the lot of ground not exceeding one acre, upon which the building, improvement or other work shall be erected; provided, that such lot of ground belongs to the person having such building, improvement or other work erected; and if such building, improvement or other work is caused to be erected by a lessee of the lot of ground, in that case the privilege shall exist only against the lease and shall not affect the owner.
4. Those who have worked by the job in the manner directed by the law, or by the *862 regulations of the police, in making or repairing the levees, bridges, ditches and roads of a proprietor, on the land over which levees, bridges and roads have been made or repaired." C.C. 3249.
"The vendor of an immovable only preserves his privilege on the object, when he has caused to be duly recorded at the office for recording mortgages, his act of sale, in the manner directed hereafter, whatever may be the amount due to him on the sale." C.C. 3271.
Additionally, under C.C. 2561 and 2562, the unpaid vendor has the right to demand dissolution of sales by judicial process. This vendor's privilege and the right of dissolution are clearly distinguishable from and independent of each other. Sliman v. McBee, 311 So.2d 248 (La.1975); Stevenson v. Brown, 32 La.Ann. 461 (1880); United States v. Maniscalco, 523 F.Supp. 1338 (E.D.La.1981); Toler v. Toler, 337 So.2d 666 (La.App. 3d Cir.1976). Enforcement of the vendor's privilege is "an affirmation of the contract" whereas the exercise of the right of dissolution places "matters in the same state as though the obligation had not existed." Yiannopoulos, "Real Rights in Louisiana and Comparative Law: Part I," 23 La.L.Rev. 161, 230 quoting Heirs of Castle v. Floyd, 38 La.Ann. 583, 587 (1886) and Louis Werner Saw Mill Co. v. White, 205 La. 242, 252, 17 So.2d 264, 268 (1944). In the sale of immovables, the resolutory action of dissolution exists against the original purchaser and also third persons acquiring real rights or title to the property. 23 La.L.Rev. 161 at 232, fn. 334. See also United States v. Maniscalco, supra.
In Litvinoff, 7 Louisiana Civil Law Treatise, Book 2 at 508 (1975), the author cautions against casual dissolution of contracts, and states that the remedy of contract dissolution is not to be regarded as a convenient way for a party to unburden himself of the contract. The dissolution of the contract must be pronounced by the court, which must determine whether the rendering of only partial performance by the obligor, plus the delay attending a possible completion, or the failure to perform an accessory obligation, warrants dissolution. Litvinoff suggests several factors to be considered that were adopted by the Waseco court.
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