Weatherly v. Baker

25 La. Ann. 229
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1873
DocketNo. 4570
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 La. Ann. 229 (Weatherly v. Baker) 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
Weatherly v. Baker, 25 La. Ann. 229 (La. 1873).

Opinion

Howell, J.

The plaintiff brought suit on alease and caused certain property on the premises to be provisionally seized. One G. Johnson, as a sublessee of the defendant, intervened, claiming to be the owner of a portion of the property seized, and from a judgment in his favor the plaintiff has appealed.

He complains that the sublease was a verbal one, unknown to him, and the terms thereof so fixed as to enable the principal tenant to shield the price of the sublease from the pursuit of the principal lessor; and he asks that the court will expound the law on this subject for the benefit of owners of plantations who may wish to rent their lands.

Article 2625, R. C. C., declares that': The lessee has the right to underlease, or even to cede his lease to another person, unless this power has been expressly interdicted. The indiction may be for the whole, or for a part; and this clause is always construed strictly.”

[230]*230Articles 2705 and 2706, give to the lessor the right of pledge on all the movable effects of the lessee found on the premises (except certain articles exempted), and also those of the under tenant, so far as the latter is indebted to the principal, at the time when the proprietor chooses to (¡zeroise his right. A payment made in anticipation, by the under tenant to his principal, does not release him from the owner’s claim.

Prom these provisions of the law, it is clear that, as there was no interdiction, the defendant had the right to sublease, as he did, and on such terms as might be agreed on. And as it is abundantly shown that the intervenor did not make a payment in anticipation of the terms of his contract, he was not liable to the plaintiff for more than lie owed to the principal lessee. This he admitted and did not claim the property to that extent. We are referred to no law which requires such leases to be in writing.

We think the judge a quo has done justice.

Judgment affirmed.

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Related

Tulane Improvement Co. v. W. B. Green Photo Supply Co.
50 So. 601 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 La. Ann. 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weatherly-v-baker-la-1873.