Sandi v. Palmer

713 So. 2d 822, 1998 WL 265062
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1998
Docket98-CA-34
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 713 So. 2d 822 (Sandi v. Palmer) 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
Sandi v. Palmer, 713 So. 2d 822, 1998 WL 265062 (La. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

713 So.2d 822 (1998)

H.P. SANDI, Jr.
v.
Mary G. PALMER and Jerry F. Palmer.

No. 98-CA-34.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

May 27, 1998.

*823 Joel Levy, Marrero, for Appellant H.P. Sandi, Jr.

Jerry F. Palmer, New Orleans, for Appellees Mary G. Palmer and Jerry F. Palmer.

Before WICKER, CANNELLA and DALEY, JJ.

CANNELLA, Judge.

Plaintiff, H.P. Sandi, Jr., appeals from a judgment dismissing his suit for specific performance or dissolution of a contract. We affirm.

Plaintiff and Mary G. Palmer (Mrs. Palmer) were married in 1970, had two children, Natalie and Meredith, and were divorced in 1981. In the partition of property, Mrs. Palmer received the community home. As *824 part of the agreement, she executed a non-interest bearing promissory note for $20,000 in favor of plaintiff and, to secure the debt, granted an inferior mortgage on the community house located on Beverly Garden Drive in Metairie, Louisiana. It was to be due and payable when, and if, the house were sold or rented. Mrs. Palmer subsequently married Jerry Palmer (hereinafter Mrs. Palmer and Jerry Palmer are referred to as the Palmers).

In 1987, the Palmers attempted to refinance the Beverly Garden Drive house in order to perform renovations. The financial institution they contacted required a re-subordination of plaintiff's mortgage, but plaintiff refused. In order to settle the dispute, plaintiff and the Palmers confected two agreements on August 11, 1987. In one, plaintiff agreed to cancel the note and mortgage for the $20,000 debt owed by Mrs. Palmer and agreed to lend the Palmers $60,000, secured by another inferior mortgage on the house. In return, the parties agreed to set up a trust for Natalie and Meredith, to be funded with $20,000 each from plaintiff and the Palmers. Thus, each daughter would be the beneficiary of $20,000. In addition, in order to insure that the trust was prepared within a reasonable time, the agreement provided that the parties would execute two promissory notes for $20,000 each, payable to Mrs. Palmer, as Tutrix for the children. If the trust were not established, the notes were to become due and payable 180 days from the date of the agreement. The notes were to be paid in five equal annual installments, with 10% interest if not paid when due. If the trust instrument were executed before 180 days, when the note payments became due, the notes were to be returned to the parties and destroyed. If the trust was executed and delivered to the co-trustees after the payment of the notes, Mrs. Palmer was to "... return the payments made under each such note to the individuals who made them." Any payments made under the notes to the Tutrix were to be held for the children for the same primary purpose as the Trust. The Palmers and plaintiff each executed a $20,000 promissory note on August 11, 1987, payable to Mary G. Palmer, Tutrix of Natalie and Meredith Sandi (hereinafter referred to as Default Notes). In addition, plaintiff complied with the other agreement by canceling Mrs. Palmer's $20,000 promissory note and mortgage and by executing the $60,000 loan and mortgage to the Palmers. In February of 1988, Jerry Palmer drew up a trust document and sent it to plaintiff for review. Plaintiff failed to respond. The trust was never established.

After the children reached the age of majority, Mrs. Palmer delivered the promissory notes to them. In 1993, plaintiff, though counsel, sent the Palmers a letter demanding that they comply with the 1987 agreement.[1]

In March of 1997, the Palmers entered into a "Compromise and Settlement" with Natalie and Meredith, canceling the notes and relieving the Palmers of the obligation to confect the trust and pay the notes according to the 1987 agreement. In return, the Palmers executed two new promissory notes, one each to Natalie and Meredith. The new note in favor of Natalie was $5,761, instead of $10,000, in consideration of previous advances made by the Palmers to her. The principal amount of Meredith's note was $10,000. In addition, Mrs. Palmer executed an inferior mortgage on the Beverly Garden Drive house, in favor of her two daughters, to secure the notes. The notes were due and payable at the time of the sale of the house or the death of Mrs. Palmer, whichever came first.

On August 18, 1995, prior to the 1997 Compromise and Settlement between the Palmers and Natalie and Meredith, plaintiff filed suit against the Palmers. In his petition, plaintiff sought dissolution of the 1987 trust agreement on the basis that the Palmers had not established the trust and breached the agreement. He demanded that he and Mrs. Palmer be placed in the positions they held prior to the agreement and that the $20,000 note, owed by Mrs. Palmer under the community property agreement, be reinstated. *825 He also asked that the Palmers be ordered to return the remaining principal balance of the $60,000 loan. Alternatively, he asked for specific performance of the 1987 trust agreement. Subsequently, the Palmers paid back the $60,000 loaned to them by plaintiff.

A judge trial was held on September 4, 1997 relative to the trust only. The trial judge rendered a judgment on September 23, 1997 denying plaintiff relief and dismissing his suit with prejudice.

On appeal, plaintiff asserts that the trial judge erred in dismissing his suit. He contends that he gave up the $20,000 promissory note and mortgage in consideration of the trust agreement that was never confected. Plaintiff argues that the trial judge should have restored the parties to the positions they held prior to the 1987 agreement, citing La. C.C. art.2013, 2018 and C.C.P. art. 1980. He further contends that the trial judge erred in admitting into evidence on the basis of hearsay and irrelevancy the Compromise and Settlement between the Palmers and Natalie and Meredith.

The Palmers respond that the 1987 agreement was a novation of the community property agreement and that it substituted new obligations for the old with different parties, citing La. C.C. art. 1879, Litvinoff, The Law of Obligations, Section 17.34 and La. C.C. art. 1881, comment (c) La. They contend that the 1987 agreement was a stipulation pour autrui and that it was confected for the benefit of Natalie and Meredith. When the two daughters reached majority, they relieved the Palmers of their obligations under the 1987 agreement. Thus, they contend that plaintiff no longer has standing to complain that the trust was not established.

The Palmers point out that the agreement to establish the trust contains alternative obligations. The first obligation was that the parties would establish the trust and fund it with $20,000 from plaintiff and $20,000 from the Palmers. The alternative was to pay the promissory notes (Default Notes) in equal annual installments for five years. The Palmers cite C.C. arts. 1808 and 1809, C.C. art. 1978. They argue that, when plaintiff refused to execute the trust document when it was sent to him in 1988, plaintiff's refusal was an election to perform the alternative obligation, i.e. to pay the Default Notes. Since the Default Notes were payable to Natalie and Meredith, once they reached majority and accepted the stipulation in their favor, only they can assert a cause of action against the Palmers for payment of the Default Notes. The Palmers also argue that the agreement contemplated that one trust, not separate trusts, would be formed and that it would be funded by $40,000. As a result, plaintiff also had the obligation to execute and fund the trust, which he failed to do.

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Bluebook (online)
713 So. 2d 822, 1998 WL 265062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandi-v-palmer-lactapp-1998.