Vazquez v. Davis

466 So. 2d 671
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 11, 1985
Docket84-CA-393
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 466 So. 2d 671 (Vazquez v. Davis) 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
Vazquez v. Davis, 466 So. 2d 671 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

466 So.2d 671 (1985)

Mario F. VAZQUEZ, and His Wife, Florinda Pezon Vazquez
v.
Etta Mae DAVIS, Ola Davis Hicks, Carrollton Homestead Association, John R. Casey & Joseph T. Casey.

No. 84-CA-393.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

March 11, 1985.
Writ Denied May 13, 1985.

*672 Agustin R. Guitart and Antonio L. Carbonell, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Joseph S. Casey, Casey, Babin & Casey, Greg S. Abramson and Douglas Draper, Dodge, Friend, Wilson & Spedale, Charles A. Boggs, Thomas W. Lewis, Boggs, Loehn & Rodrigue, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Before CHEHARDY, BOWES and GRISBAUM, JJ.

BOWES, Judge.

Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment of the trial court dismissing their suit for breach of contract and for damages in tort against defendants. In essence, the Vazquezes have alleged that defendants failed to deliver to them a merchantable title to their home, and that such failure resulted in certain damages to them, the plaintiffs.

The facts of the case are summarized as follows: plaintiffs-appellants are Cuban immigrants who neither speak nor write the English language. However, they had a daughter living with them who did and who would interpret for them. On February 25, 1973, plaintiffs signed an agreement to purchase property located at 903 Moisant Street, from Etta Davis and Ola Davis Hicks. Etta Davis, at that time, was the widow of Louis Miles Davis, and Ola Hicks his sole heir. The succession of Louis Davis had not yet been opened. On May 15, 1973, Davis and Hicks sold the property to *673 defendant Carrollton Homestead, which, on the same date, resold to the Vazquezes (Carrollton had provided the requisite financing for plaintiffs). This act of sale was executed by authentic act before defendant Joseph Casey and is signed by defendant John R. Casey, as president of Carrollton.

In the property description contained in the act of sale, it is clear that Etta and Louis Davis acquired the property jointly during Mr. Davis' lifetime. At the end of the description is the concluding paragraph:

And acquired by vendors as surviving spouse and sole heir respectively in the Succession of James Miles Davis, said proceedings to be filed in the 24th Judicial District Court of Jefferson Parish.

John Casey testified that Mr. Davis had paid previously to have the succession opened, but that due to the abbreviated period of time between the loan request and the loan closing, for the benefit of plaintiffs and at their insistence, the preliminary (succession) work had not been taken care of as of the date of sale. He also stated he had advised the plaintiffs, through their real estate agent, that he would be unable to complete the succession before closing, but they insisted the loan be closed anyway, apparently so that they would not lose the house they wanted. Plaintiffs deny this.

There the matter lay, until November, 1977, when the Vazquezes signed an agreement to sell the property for $25,500.00. Researching the title in connection with the proposed sale, Attorney F. Joseph Drolla discovered that the succession had never been completed, and, shortly thereafter, there is no doubt that the Vazquezes became aware of the title problem. Casey then began work on the succession.

At this point, plaintiffs' and defendants' account of what happened diverge. Plaintiffs claim to have contacted Mr. Casey, imploring him to complete the succession so that the proposed sale could be consummated. Casey stated, after he began locating Davis' heirs, that plaintiffs came to his office, with their daughter as an interpreter, and begged him not to go forward at that point, inasmuch as they now felt they had not made an advantageous deal and did not wish to be bound by their agreement to sell. Apparently, the incompleted succession could be used as a flaw in plaintiffs' title.

In any event, the agreement expired and the sale did not take place. Later, the Vazquezes returned and requested the title be cleared and Casey continued trying to locate heirs, with some delay because of a previously-scheduled trip to Europe. Plaintiffs filed suit in December, 1978, before the succession was completed in January, 1979. To clear title, the Davises were recognized as heirs and the Vazquezes recognized as transferees and owners of the property. As of the date of the trial then, the Vazquezes were in peaceful possession.

They sought damages alleging past and future loss of profits, including not only the loss from the 1977 sale, but "future loss of profits, calculated by the increased value of the property from the date the contract with the interested purchaser could not be executed to the date of filing of this petition, and to the date of correction of title; mental and physical anguish and distress, and past and future medical expenses resulting therefrom." Later, compensation was demanded because the "negligence and bad faith of defendants ruined plans of the petitioners to move to another city where plaintiff had better opportunity of employment ... and were planning to acquire a better residence."

The trial court ruled in favor of the defendants, finding that the plaintiffs failed to establish their allegations and additionally failed to establish monetary loss. In the judgment, the trial judge emphatically stated that he believed the testimony of John Casey and that it set out the true facts of the matter. We affirm as we cannot say these findings are manifestly erroneous.

Plaintiffs alleged fifteen assignments of error, which form basically two issues: Did the defendants negligently or otherwise *674 fail to render merchantable title to the Vazquezes in 1973, and, if so, did any compensable damages result?

It is elementary that ownership of property is acquired by succession, by the effect of obligations, and by operation of law. C.C. Art. 870. In the present case, the subject property was acquired in contract by Mr. and Mrs. Louis Davis. Upon Mr. Davis' death, his heir, Mrs. Hicks, did not become full owner of the property in question until the succession was completed and she was sent into possession. The right to possession is contingent on compliance with the applicable provisions of law, i.e., appropriate procedural requisites: C.C. 871 et seq. It follows, therefore, that Mrs. Hicks could not validly transfer ownership in property before succession proceedings were had. Mrs. Davis herself could transfer only her one-half community share of the property.

It is therefore incontrovertible that, in 1972, merchantable title was not passed between the Davises, Carrollton Homestead, and the Vazquezes. However, the trial judge concluded that the plaintiffs were made aware of this situation by Casey and that he advised them he would remedy same in due course. We agree.

A vendor must deliver title free of encumbrances and suggestion of future litigation and which is good and merchantable... Property has a merchantable title when it can be readily sold or mortgaged in the ordinary course of business by reasonable persons familiar with the facts and questions involved. Young v. Stevens, 209 So.2d 25 (La.1968).

Neither the Davises nor Carrollton Homestead delivered such merchantable title to the Vazquezes. It is entirely irrelevant in the particular circumstances whether or not the Vazquezes knew or did not know of the defective title at the date of sale. Merchantable title was warranted by both vendors (Davis and Carrollton) and this warranty was breached.

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466 So. 2d 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vazquez-v-davis-lactapp-1985.