King v. Tomb
King v. Tomb
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff ba daíandant for -tho ana of f BOO.00 loa un mortgage nóte?, with 8jí por annum lataraat aa $300. OQ fren duly Z, 1914; Oft iLuam inter»»* om iJPD. 00 fraa September 8, 1914; and tjí lataraat on tha ana of $200.00 Trees Wivnsahai g 1914, until paid; together with 6% oa Mid amount as attornaja* too», and with raoognition of plaintiff a apodal aortgaga to aoeoro aald aaouat on tha proparty daaorlhad in tho petition,and xaaordad la tho Clark's «filos of tha Parish of Plaquemines an April IB, 1914, In Uortgaga Offloa Book Ho. 6, Pollo 4£9; and that Mid proparty ahould ba sold to pay said amount, and for ooats.
Ha dselaras that ha «as tha last holdsr of tha ahora das* oribad notaa nada by tho dsfandant, and that said notas wars giran to him as rsprssantlng tha unpaid purehasa prloa of a esrtaln lot of morablaa and moring piotura show sltuatad at tha oomar of Hagadns and Savanth Straats In this oity, known as tho "SSsjestio Theatre"; that'dsfandant mortgagod and specially hypothecated to your petitioner, or any futuro holdar of said notaa, tha prop-arty daaorlbsd In tha patltlon and agreed, In tha arant that tha hotaa wera not paid punctually at maturity, tha proparty ooald ha Sold and salzad undsr jttdlelal procesa Issusd by a competout court. Ha aliagas that said mortgage was proparly reoordad In \ha, Clark 'a Office of tha Parish of Plaquemines, and demand for payment - being mads was refused, and he prays for judgment aa hereinbefore sat forth In hia petition.
There was. first filed a plea of want of jurisdiction, a peremptory exception, which was overruled - properly so, by the Judge a- £uo, and subsequently, on tha 8th of March, 1916, defendant filed substantially the following answer: He denies that plaintiff is the owner in good faith and for a valuable contid*
Answering further, In reconvention, he says that plaintiff' , felled and neglected to comply with the terms of th* contract sale, whloh, amongst other things, provided that th* leas*
i’inOly, ha prays for lodgment in re convention, cancellation of his notes, return oí the $1000.00, and all costs, and for
Much testigoay v.-is token, ana a era at ¿oal ol time «as consumed by the- court je quo in cue trial of the ouse, and doubtless the judge beir.ro •■.’ion It was triad, the lato Judge- T. 0. .'.'.bilis, one of the most careful and painstaking memcors oí the bench for many meny years prior to his- death, in the city of Hen Orleans, carefully weighed the testimony in olio oa-30 and considered it, doubtless, from every angle, admitting much testimony going to f’o offset, ev the judge ruled, which, in our opinion, has encumbered this record beyond mensure, but which he - in order, in his opinion, to do eostlulo justicecetwecn the parties - did admit, and which wo, too, h;-ve carefully considered in ee'uncetion with this, ci U3e, and we love core to lie absolute conclusion that, insofar us misrepresentation iu concerned, the contract entered into la bay snd to sell tie picture .-hew in question, made on the 2nd day of April, IF] 4, substantially gave to the defendant, in detail, the riTht of occupancy and all the fictnres in said theatre, ncming them, including the electric wiring, and every little detail tha'-’ it was possible to enumerate was there-stated, and beyond the fact- that- there was eteted that there should be a transfer to the purchaser of the lease, with the consent of the landlord, which was not done, the tenant, however, remaining without objection until he failed to pay the rent - thus doubtless with the consent of the loudlord - and alleging that plaintiff was not to go for five years ir.tc- the Game business within e distance or radius of one-half mile of the hejesti* Iheatre, — beyond that, the contract in no wise, in our opinion, had at all affected the sale.
The testimony ir reference to the illness cf the wife as one of the main causes, if not the main reason, fer the sale of this property, as stated by the defendant, whether .true or false, was outside of and beyond the contract; anc if it was to have been included in it the able counsel of the purchaser, who was present
Article 1819 R.C.C. provides:
"Facts Vitiating Consent. Consent being the concur-re nee of intentionin two or more persons, with regard tc a mettcr anderstood by all, reciprocally cornmii-catcd, and resulting in each party from a free and de-libérete exercise of the will, it follows that there is no consent, not only where the intent has not been mutually comriunicatod or implied, a.-: is provided in the preceding paragraph, hut also where it has been produced by -
Error;
Fraud;
Violence;
Threats."
Article 1824 reads:
"The.Reality of the Cause is a kind of precedent condition to the contract, without which the consent would not have been given, because the motive being that which determines the will, if there he no such cause where one was supposed to exist, or if it he falsely represented, there can he no valid consent."
In the notes under the samp article, we find:
"She plea of error of law and fraud and want of consideration will not avail to aefeat the enforcement of a written end honorable obligation unless clearly ahown.” (Citing numerous authorities).
Again:
"An allegation that one signed a contract without reading will net avail." (Authorities).
Article 1825 provides:
"Error Must Relate to Principal Cause, or Motive. She error in the cause of a contract io have the effeot of invalidating it, must be on the principal cause, when there are several; this principal cause 1b called the motive, and means that const dorar, ion without whioh the oontrect would not have been made." (And authorities there cited).
The oontract Is unambiguous. She defendant was la the cigar trasloase ea a manufacturer, in tha City of law Orleans. Ha concluded - evidently hatlaving that tha ploture show bnalnaas would raj hatter, and possibly for othar raasona known to Massif, - to buy th* plotura show In question, under a written contract heretofore alluded to, and ha did buy. He paid #1000.00 in cash, when the contrast was signed by both parties; he gave the notes without amour; and after failing In a business which ha knew nothing about, and which ha freely undertook to engage In, he fell a viotim to his own folly. His Honor, the late judge of whom we have already spoken, and whom we all highly regarded and respected, after many days devotedly and wholly given to the trial of this cause, hearing the testimony and seeing the witnesses, became convinced that there was nothing In the re£onventlonal demand worthy of attention, dismissed it,end gave judgment for what was claimed by plaintiff In this petition. And we absolutely oononr In his opinion.
Hew Orleans, _
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.