Tiernan v. Martin

2 Rob. 523
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2 Rob. 523 (Tiernan v. Martin) 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.

Bluebook
Tiernan v. Martin, 2 Rob. 523 (La. 1842).

Opinion

SimoN, J.

The object of this suit is the recovery of the sum of $5,200, which, it is alleged, the defendants assumed to pay to the plaintiffs, under the following circumstances. Moses Hall, being largely indebted to both parties, the defendants agreed with him, on the 17th of September, 1836, that, if he would execute to them a deed of trust on fifteen negroes, and convey to them a tract of land which was then encumbered with a deed of trust in favor of the plaintiffs, for which land a release from the trust was to be made by the plaintiffs, they would assume to pay to Tiernan, Cuddy & Co., the sum of $5,200, on account of the debt due to them by Moses Hall. It was further agreed between Hall and the defendants, and this is one of the stipulations contained in their written agreement, that the defendants were to allow Moses Hall, for the tract of land to be conveyed by him, suck •price as ii should he valued at by persons mutually chosen by them, and that on the plaintiffs releasing their deed of trust on the land, the defendants were to settle with them the said sum of $5,200. The plaintiffs were not parties to this agreement.

The evidence further shows, that, on the 23d of February, 1837, [524]*524W. M. Rives, who held the land in trust for the plaintiffs, executed a release of the deed of trust on the land ; that the same was sent to the plaintiffs for their approval and signature, but that the document was never signed by them. It appears, also, that Hall made a conveyance of the land to the defendants, which was duly recorded, but in that conveyance the price is left blank, as the property never was appraised according to the agreement, although the defendants had appointed their appraisers, and the conveyance never was accepted by Martin, Pleasants & Co. In the mean time, Moses Hall died utterly insolvent, and judgments having been ¡obtained against him in his life time, since the year'1836, those judgments, by the laws of Mississippi, operated as a lien on the tract of land intended to be conveyed. It is further shown by the testimony of Rives, that, in contemplation of the full execution of the stipulations contained'in the written agreement entered into between Hall and the defendants, Hall was credited or released by Tiernan, Cuddy & Co. for the sum of $5,200, and was charged by the defendants for the same amount; that in subsequent conversations with the witness Rives, who, in this transaction, had acted as the plaintiffs’ agent, Martin, one of the defendants, often admitted the liability of his firm to the plaintiffs for the sum; and that, on the 14th January, 1837, Hall delivered to Rives an order on the defendants for $5,200, to be applied to the credit of htall in his account with the plaintiffs ; which order or draft, not having been accepted by the defendants, is annexed to the plaintiffs’ petition, and forms the basis of the present action.

With these facts before him, the inferior judge was of opinion that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover, and gave judgment in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiffs have appealed.

The plaintiffs’ claim is resisted on two grounds : First, That the release from the deed of trust, alluded to in the written agreement between Hall and the defendants, never was executed and tendered, as contemplated by the agreement, and that this was a condition precedent.

■Second, That the price of the tract of land to be conveyed by Hall to the defendants, never was fixed in .the manner agreed upon between the parties.

Before examining the merits and effect of these two grounds of [525]*525defence, it is proper to transcribe the clause of the agreement relied upon by the defendants. It is in these words: “ Marlin, Pleasants & Co. are to allow the said Moses Hall for the tract of land above mentioned such price as it shall be valued at by persons mutually chosen by them, and on Tiernan, Cuddy & Co.’s releasing their deed of trust on the said land, the said Martin, Peasants & Co. are to settle with them the sum of $5,200, part of the claim against the said Hall.”

I. It is true that the release was not executed by the plaintiffs as contemplated by the written agreement, and that Rives, who acted as their agent, was, perhaps, without authority to give it. It is also true that the plaintiffs cannot recover without showing that this condition has been complied with, and that, accordingly, an effectual release from the trust has been made. But this would not be a bar to their ultimate recovery, as the plaintiffs, if non-suited, would still be at liberty to execute a full and complete release of the trust title, so far as it affected the land which Hall was to convey to the defendants ; and we agree with the judge a quo that, if, in other respects, the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, the judgment might be made conditional in this particular, on the plaintiffs supporting the costs of the suit incurred until the execution of the release.

II. The stipulation contained in the agreement under consideration is' not properly a stipulation pour autrui, for it is for the exclusive benefit of Hall that the sum of money therein mentioned is assumed by the defendants to be paid to the plaintiffs. The object of the assumption is to pay Hall’s debt, and it makes a part of the consideration, or price of the property, which he was to convey to the defendants. On this subject, Pothier, Obligations, No 57, says : “ Ce n’est pas stipuler pour un autre, que de dire que la chose, ou la somme que je stipule, sera délivrée ou payee a un tiers designé par la convention. Par exemple, si, par le con-trat, je vous vends un tel heritage pour la somme de mille livres, que vous payerez d Pierre, je ne stipule point pour un autre; c’est pour moi, et non pour Pierre, que je stipule cette somme de mille livres. Pierre n’est dans la convention que comme une personne á quije donne pouvoir de la recevoir pour moi et en mon nom.” The plaintiffs, therefore, cannot pretend to have acquired greater [526]*526rights than Hall himself had; and it is clear that the payment which was to be made to them in discharge of Hall’s debt, was to depend on his strictly executing his obligation according to the terms of the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Rob. 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiernan-v-martin-la-1842.