Williams v. Delacroix Corporation

160 So. 444, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 236
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1935
DocketNo. 15010.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 160 So. 444 (Williams v. Delacroix Corporation) 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
Williams v. Delacroix Corporation, 160 So. 444, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 236 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

• This is a suit to recover a portion of the amounts paid to defendant, or to its predecessor in title, by plaintiffs, under an uncompleted contract which plaintiffs contend was an agreement having as its object the sale of real estate, but which defendant maintains contemplated the leasing of the said land for trapping purposes.

On March 17, 1927, Acme Land & Fur Company was the owner of certain salt marsh land in the parish of St. Bernard, which said land was valuable mainly because of the presence thereon of numerous fur-bearing animals known as muskrats. On that day the said company entered into a contract with the three plaintiffs in the suit at bar, Aleide Williams, Andrew Rhodes, and Sam Sanchez, under which, as defendants interpret it, two lots of the said land known as lots “O” and “Q” of the Swift tract were leased for trapping purposes to the said three plaintiffs for a period terminating on February 5, 1931, for the sum of $3,500 for the full term. Of the said sum, *445 $422.45 was paid either in cash, or by the delivery of furs valued at that amount, and for the balance four notes were given, one for $770 payable on December 10, 1927, one for $770 payable on December 10, 1928, one for $770 payable on December 10, 1929, and one for $767.55 payable on December 10, 1930. These notes bore interest at 8 per cent, from date.

Upon the execution of the contract the three parties named were granted permission to trap upon the said land during the term of the contract. The agreement also contained a provision that, in the event of revocation of the contract for any cause, “including nonpayment of any note, or interest, whatever amount of money has been paid on account of said permit shall be retained by the company as liquidated damages for breach of this contract, and as consideration for the permit rights accorded to the trapper between the date of the issuance of this permit and the date of the revocation thereof.” Still another provision of the contract was that should the three parties named make all payments, when due, the owner of the land would transfer to them title to the said land. A final provision read as follows: “It is expressly understood and assented to by the trapper that the foregoing clause of this contract agreeing to transfer title of said land to him, is an additional concession on the part of the Company, contingent entirely upon the complete performance of this contract by the trapper and creates no vested right in said trapper ■prior to the time of his complete fulfillment of all obligations; and that in the event of any violation of this contract by the trapper, either by nonpayment of his notes, interest or charges, or by his conduct on said land and toward the wild life thereon, he shall nevertheless be peremptorily liable, at the option of the Company, to a cancellation of this permit, and thereafter shall be purely a trespasser as regards.any attempt on his part to enter on said land.”

Shortly after the contract was entered into ■the Mississippi river, which flowed nearby, rose to such an extent that, because of the grave danger to more thickly settled communities, it was deemed necessary by the state officials to create an artificial crevasse to relieve this condition, and a point known as Caernarvon was chosen for that purpose. As a result of this artificial crevasse, the lots O and Q, together with a large portion of the surrounding country, were inundated, and no trapping could be indulged in during the following trapping season; that is, during the winter of 1927-1928. The board known as the Reparations Commission, having been created for the settlement of such losses as had been caused by the artificial crevasse, it was agreed between the owners and the three plaintiffs that the claim for trapping losses for that year should be settled for the sum of $1,239.45 and that, of that amount, $617 would be devoted to the retirement of the first note for $770 with interest, and that the balance, $422.-45, would be delivered to the three plaintiffs. It will be noted that the amount delivered back to the plaintiffs, $422.45, was the identical amount which they had paid as the first installment provided for under the contract of March 17, 1927.

The Delacroix Corporation, the present defendant, having, on October 6, 1930, acquired all of the rights of the original owner, the Acme Land & Fur Company, then entered into a new contract with the three plaintiffs which contained all of the stipulations of the original contract, but which provided for the payment of the then due balance on a new and extended plan. It was also agreed that, because of the apparent necessity for permitting the rats to replenish themselves by natural process, it was deemed advisable to abandon trapping activities during the season 1928-1929. An agreement was entered into by which that trapping year was eliminated from the contract and the maturity of the obligations were to that extent extended. In other words, the new contract took into consideration the fact that for two years there had been no trapping activities on the land in question and it extended the term of the contract by that period of time. It also took into consideration the payments which had been made on the original contract, gave credit therefor, and provided for payment of the balance due over a new period of four years.

The three plaintiffs failed to comply with their obligations to'make payments and the present owners of the land, the Delacroix Cor- - poration, notified them of intention to cancel the contract and retain as liquidated damages and as rental charges the amounts already paid. This suit resulted.

The controversy divides itself into two parts: First, was the contract, through which plaintiffs came into possession of the lands, one of lease, or was ic one looking to the purchase of the lands? and, second, if, as contended for by plaintiffs, it was one looking to the purchase of the lands, could the vendor cancel it because of default in the payment of a part of the purchase price and at the same time retain all that had up to the time of can *446 cellation been paid on account of the purchase ?

Plaintiffs contend that the contract had as its principal object the transfer of title from the then owners to plaintiffs and that the provisions under which they were permitted to trap on the lands during the period within which they were required to pay the price were merely incidental to the principal object of the contract, and did not change its nature from one of sale to one of lease. Thus, they concede that although the owners may, because of default in the payment of a part of the purchase price, cancel the contract, they maintain that the owners may not retain out of what has already been paid more than a sum equal to the fair rental value of the property during the period of occupancy by the prospective purchasers. They cite Heeb v. Codifer & Bonnabel, Inc., 162 La. 139, 110 So. 178, in which it was held that a contract looking to the sale of real estate was arbitrary and unreasonable because it provided for the forfeiture, in the event of default, of all that had been paid on account of the purchase price up to the time of the forfeiture. They concede, however, that it is well settled that out of the amount already paid on account of the purchase price there may be retained as rental an amount equal to the fair rental value of the property during the term of actual occupancy. In this connection they cite Pruyn v. Gay, 159 La. 981, 106 So.

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

Related

Baker v. Wright
60 So. 2d 825 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1952)
Mississippi Export R. Co. v. Summers
11 So. 2d 429 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 So. 444, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-delacroix-corporation-lactapp-1935.