Williams v. James

178 So. 384, 188 La. 884, 1938 La. LEXIS 1135
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 10, 1938
DocketNo. 34445.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 178 So. 384 (Williams v. James) 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
Williams v. James, 178 So. 384, 188 La. 884, 1938 La. LEXIS 1135 (La. 1938).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This is a suit to compel the defendant to carry out a written contract by which he leased to the plaintiff a town lot in Ruston, La. The lease included also the improvements on the lot, especially two large underground gasoline tanks and two pumps. The lease was made on the 20th day of May, 1935, for the term of five years, from August 1, 1935, to August 1, 1940, at $40 a month, with the privilege of renewal for another term of five years, at $50 a month, at the option of the lessee. He was a wholesale agent for one of the major oil companies. The products of another of the major oil companies were being sold on the premises at the time when the lease was made and up to the time when this suit was tried. The lessor refused to deliver possession of the premises to the new lessee, Louis G. Williams, on the ground that the description given in the instrument purporting to be a lease was not sufficient to describe or identify any lot in Ruston, and in fact that there was no such lot in Ruston as the lot described in the instrument purporting to be a contract of lease. The question in the case, therefore, is *887 whether the lot on which the plaintiff claims a lease can he identified by the description given in the contract The plaintiff claims that the defendant’s refusal to deliver possession of the leased premises was and is arbitrary, and hence that the stipulated term of the lease should begin on the date on which the plaintiff will be permitted by the decree in this suit to take possession of the leased premises. The defendant first filed an exception of no clause or right of action,, and, when the exception was overruled, he answered the suit, with full reservation of the exception. The case was submitted on a stipulation of facts, admitted by the attorneys for the parties to the suit. The attorney for the defendant, in making the admissions, reserved his exception of no cause or right of action, and reserved the objection to the admissibility of parol evidence to change or amplify the description in the written instrument. The judge of the district court gave judgment for the plaintiff, enforcing the lease for the term of five years from the date stipulated in the contract, but rejected the plaintiff’s demand to have the five years begin on the date on which the plaintiff will be permitted, by the court’s decree, to take possession of the leased premises. The defendant took a suspensive appeal, which, we assume, has prevented the plaintiff from taking possession of the leased premises. The plaintiff, answering the appeal, asks for an amendment of the judgment, so that the five years’ primary term of the lease shall not begin until he is allowed to take possession of the leased premises.

Two errors were made in describing the lot in the contract of lease, but the errors-are not important, because in other respects the description is so plain and accurate that there cannot be any doubt about the true-location of the lot that was intended to be described. The lot is described in the contract as a square lot, measuring 100 feet on each of its sides, and having its northeast corner at the intersection of College street and the Dixie-Overland highway; College street bearing north and south and the Dixie-Overland highway bearing east and' west. The Dixie-Overland highway is also, called Simsboro road. The property leased is described in the contract thus:

“Land and improvements located in the Town of Ruston, Louisiana, of legal description as follows:

“Lot Two (2), Block Four Hundred Ten (410) of the Stubbs Addition, beginning at the northeast corner of College Street and the Dixie-Overland Highway, then [thence] running South one hundred (100) feet on College Street, thence West one hundred (100) feet, thence North one hundred (100) feet, and thence East one hundred (100) feet to [the] point of beginning, with improvements thereon, together with two (2) five hundred fifty (550) gallon underground tanks and two pumps.”

There are two errors in this description. In the first place, the leased lot is in lot 2 of block 102, not block 410. There is no block numbered 410 on the-map of the Stubbs addition to the town of Ruston. The block having the highest number is *889 block 112. Block 102 is the block that is bounded on its east side by College street and on its north side by the Dixie-Overland highway, also called Simsboro road. The second error in the description in the contract is in the statement: “Beginning at the northeast corner of College Street and the Dixie-Overland Highway,” etc. It would have been more accurate to say: “Beginning at the northeast corner of the lot or block at the intersection of College Street and the Dixie-Overland Highway,” etc. It is not possible for more than one lot or block to have its northeast corner at any given street intersection. Ordinarily, “the northeast corner of College Street and the Dixie-Overland Highway,” would mean the northeast corner of the intersection of the street and the highway; but, in this instance, it could not have meant the northeast corner of the intersection, because, if the survey of the lot should begin at the northeast corner of that intersection, the line running “thence south 100 feet” would extend across the continuation of the Dixie-Overland highway, and the line running, “thence west 100 feet” would extend across College street, somewhere south of the intersection, and the line running “thence north 100 feet” would extend across the Dixie-Overland highway, somewhere west of the intersection, and the line running “thence east 100 feet to the point of beginning” would extend across College street, at the intersection; and the lot so described would embrace all of the street intersection, besides a part of College street south of the intersection, and a part of the Dixie-Overland highway west of the intersection. Considering the courses and distances given in the description in this contract, it is plain that the statement, “beginning at the northeast corner of College Street and the Dixie-Overland Highway,” does not mean “beginning at the northeast corner of the intersection” of these thoroughfares, but means “beginning at the northeast corner of the block which has its northeast corner at this intersection.” A person reading the description would not be apt to pay attention to the lot number or the block number, because it would mean nothing without reference to a map; and the reader, without paying attention to the lot number or the block number, and without reference to a map, would visualize the lot and its location, exactly as it was intended to be described, and as it is in fact located. Besides all of this, the reference to the service station equipment, of pumps connected with large underground tanks, showed what corner lot was intended to be leased. It is admitted that the defendant, James, who resides in Texas, owns the lot on which the plaintiff claims the lease, and it is not contended that James owns any other lot in Ruston, or in the Stubbs addition to Ruston.

This case is governed by the rule stated in Smith v. Chappell, 177 La. 311, 324, 148 So. 242, 246, thus:

“Where, as in this case, there are conflicting calls in the deed, and where the first call is followed by a general description which manifestly was intended to be a summing up of the intention of the parties as to the premises conveyed, such general description controls all prior words or phrases used, if sufficient to identify with certainty the premises conveyed.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 So. 384, 188 La. 884, 1938 La. LEXIS 1135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-james-la-1938.