Smith ex rel. Exchange Bank v. Toler

137 So. 620, 19 La. App. 791, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 399
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1931
DocketNo. 4163
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 137 So. 620 (Smith ex rel. Exchange Bank v. Toler) 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
Smith ex rel. Exchange Bank v. Toler, 137 So. 620, 19 La. App. 791, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 399 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

STEPHENS, J.

This is a foreclosure proceeding, via or-dinaria, instituted by G. P. Smith, for and on behalf of the Exchange Bank of Natchi-toches, against T. B. Toler, wherein plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $1,000, with interest and attorney’s fees, alleging such amount to be due on a note given in representation of a portion of the purchase price of certain property purchased by the defendant from plaintiff. The plaintiff’s petition with reference to said note reads as follows:

“The second note for the purchase price, to-wit: Fifteen Hundred ($1500) Dollars, was due and payable on January 1, 1928, with interest at eight per cent from its maturity until paid and ten per cent attorney’s fees, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. To secure the payment of the said note due January 1, 1928, a vendor’s lien and privilege and special mortgage was retained by petitioner and granted by the vendee on the property sold and said note is paraphed ‘Ne Varietur’ by the Notary for identification with the act of sale.
“It was further agreed in such sale that there was a pending suit between the heirs of Dwyer and petitioner, that should the plaintiffs in that suit be successful, then the sum of Five Hundred ($500) Dollars was to be deducted from the note and said note for $1500 was so endorsed. It appears that the decision in the Dwyer suit was against your petitioner and thus, under the terms of the deed and the endorsement on the note, the same should be credited with $500, leaving a balance due Toler on the note, of One Thousand ($1000) Dollars.”

It is then alleged in the petition that prior to the maturity of the note it was pledged by Smith to the Exchange Bank.

The defendant, in his answer, admitted the purchase of the property by him, and alleged that the consideration was the sum of $6400 of which $600 was paid in cash; a mortgage held by the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans for the sum of $2700 was assumed by the vendee; and for the balance of the purchase price he executed two promissory notes, one for the sum of $1600, due and payable January 1,1927, and one for the sum of $1500 due and payable January 1, 1928, both conditioned to bear § per cent, per annum interest from maturity. He alleged payment of the first note in full. He further alleged an agreement that the last-mentioned note should be reduced by the sum of $500 in the event his vendor lost a suit then in contest with one John Dwyer, and that the balance [621]*621thereof might be paid on its due date by sufficient timber, if still on the land sold.

Defendant further answered, alleging that a short time after the execution of the deed he advised his vendor, G. 3?. Smith, plaintiff herein, that he desired that the note for $1500 be extinguished and paid by the timber on the land, none of which had been cut by defendant, in accordance with the agreement contained in the deed; and that the said Smith accepted said timber and cut and hauled, or caused to be cut and hauied, from said land, a certain portion thereof, which was so taken and received in compliance with the agreement contained in the deed above referred to. Defendant further alleged .that the timber situated on the land belonged to G. P. Smith, who had exercised ownership thereof, and that said Smith had the right of ingress and egress at all times to cut and remove the same, and that such right was extended to the Exchange Bank if it were, the holder or the pledgee of the note.

Defendant prayed in reeonvention that the note sued on, having been extinguished, should be canceled, and that any evidence thereof should be erased from the mortgage record of Natchitoches parish.

A trial of the case resulted in a judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demands and ordering the mortgage given to secure the payment of the note sued on canceled and erased. Prom the judgment so rendered, the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

On October 23, 1926, G. P. Smith sold to T. B. Toler certain property, real and personal, for the recited consideration of $6,400, payable as follows: $600 cash; the assumption by the vendee of a $2,700 mortgage held by the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans; and two notes, one for the sum of $1,600 due January 1, 1927, and one for the sum of $1,500 due January 1, 1928.

It is conceded that the defendant has discharged his obligations arising from the transaction promptly as they matured, with the exception of the payment of the $1,000, representing the balance due on the $1,500 note; and his position as to that amount, as set up in his answer, is that it has been extinguished by the transfer by him and the acceptance by the plaintiff of the timber on the land sold.

Pertinent facts developed during the trial of the case are as follows: A few weeks after the sale was made, the defendant, Toler, advised the plaintiff, Smith, that he would expect him to take the timber on the land in payment of the note of $1,500; that repeát-edly thereafter, both before and after the maturity of the. note on January 1, 1928, he requested the plaintiff to cut and remove the timber from the property. That this was the position of the defendant with reference- to the exercise of his option to pay in timber or money was admitted by the plaintiff in his testimony: “He told me he wanted me to take the timber and I told him I couldn’t take it.” That, notwithstanding this attitude, as indicated by his attorney, the plaintiff, in recognition of defendant’s rights under the agreement, treated the timber as his own. He sold more than 12,000 feet of the timber to Mr. Breedlove at $3 per thousand, and made some effort to sell more of it to another person. .The defendant has never cut any of the timber, but has maintained consistently that the timber belonged to plaintiff, and should be cut and removed by him in order that he, the defendant, -might “clear” the land. On June 20, 1929, the defendant registered a letter to the plaintiff in which he demanded the surrender of the note herein sued on. This suit was instituted on the note more than eighteen months thereafter.

The case must turn upon the construction and legal effect of the stipulation in the deed with reference to the payment of the note .sued on, to wit: “This note may be paid on its due date by sufficient timber returned to vendor if still on the land and not cut off, if- cut must be paid in cash.”

The counsel for the plaintiff contends that the stipulation is vague and ambiguous; that it contains a potestative condition, in that it imposes no obligation on the vendor, and that its binding effect is optional as to the vendee; and that, if it grants an option to the vendee, that option was not timely exercised.

It seems to us that the stipulation conveys a very definite meaning, and is free from ambiguity, and'does not contain, a potesta-tive condition. The deed conveyed the land and timber thereon. The stipulation granted the vendee the right to pay a portion of the purchase price, which was represented by a note, by retransferring all of the timber on the land to the vendor, or to pay the noté in cash at his option. The stipulation, which is clearly an integral part of the contract of sale, obligates the vendor to re'céive all of the timber, if not cut,' in payment of the note, or cash at the option of the .vendee. The question as to what is meant by “sufficient timbef” does not arise, as all of the timber is •yet on the land except that cut by the vendor pursuant to his agreement to receive it in payment of the note. Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sewell v. Neilsen, Monroe, Inc.
706 P.2d 81 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 1985)
Smith ex rel. Exchange Bank of Natchitoches v. Toler
141 So. 429 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 So. 620, 19 La. App. 791, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-ex-rel-exchange-bank-v-toler-lactapp-1931.