Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1915

Southside Plantation Co. v. Fabacher

Southside Plantation Co. v. Fabacher
Louisiana Court of Appeal · Decided June 30, 1915 · Honor, John, Paul
12 Teiss. 418; 1915 La. App. LEXIS 88

Southside Plantation Co. v. Fabacher

Opinion of the Court

His Honor, JOHN ST. PAUL,

rendered the opinion and decree of the Court, ¡as follows:

This is a landlord’s .action to expel a tenant for failure to comply with the obligations of his lease.

It is brought under the provisions of Act 313 of 1908, p. 479.

The default of which the plaintiff complains is defendant’s neglect after repeated demands upon him to “erect, maintain and keep in repair” ia. certain barbed wire fence around the leased premises.

It is claimed that this is no “breach of the lease” within the meaning of the aforesaid act; but merely the breach of a stipulation which though contained in the lease is “no part of the contract of lease in a legal sense,” because (it is alleged) this stipulation was a part of the consideration of the lease.

The contention has no legal foundation. The Civil Code provides that: “Commutative contracts are those in which what is done, given or promised by one party, is considered as equivalent to, or a consideration for what is done, given or promised by the other,” C. C., 1768; and again, “A contract containing mutual covenants shall be presumed to be commutative, unless the contrary be expressed.” C. C., 1770.

.On the other hand, “independent contracts are those in which the mutual acts have no relation to each other either as equivalents, or as consideration.” C. C., 1769.

And the further effort is therefore made to class the stipulation herein under consideration, as an independent undertaking, upon the ground contemporaneously with, or just after, the execution of the contract, a clause was added providing that in consideration of a modification of its terms, to-wit, allowing three stands of wire, in*420stead of four, the tenant hound himself to .answer for the damage that might be caused by cattle breaking through the fence.

Opinion and decree, June 30th, 1915

Certainly the undertaking to pay such damages in consideration of the modification introduced into the lease might be considered an independent contract. But we do not see how this has any bearing upon the obligation to erect and maintain the fence in accordance with the main contract ias modified.

The defendant’s exceptions were therefore without merit and were properly overruled.

Opinion on the Merits

On The Merits.

The evidence is somewhat conflicting, but on the whole the fair preponderance thereof is, that after a first patching up of the old fence which stood there at the time the lease was made, it was neglected and allowed to fall into a condition of dilapidation such as permitted cattle to roam in and out .at will:

The- trial Judge so found; and we concur in his finding.

Judgment affirmed.

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