This is a suit for the return of $320 deposited with a real estate agent in connection with an offer to purchase property in
Wise-Miller answered and, after setting up the clause of the agreement of sale in which, under certain conditions, plaintiff had agreed to pay their commission and attorney’s fees, asked that plaintiff’s suit be dismissed and that they be allowed $128 as commission, together with $35 as attorney’s fees. Mrs. Newman answered averring that the failure of the transaction was due entirely to the fault of plaintiff.
There was judgment below in plaintiff’s favor against Mrs. Catherine Newman and against Wise-Miller, ordering the return to her of the sum of $320, and in reconvention in favor of Wise-Miller against plaintiff in the sum of $128 and the further sum of $35 as attorney’s fees. Plaintiff alone has appealed.
Without discussing the items of damages claimed from the standpoint of their being too remote and speculative, we observe that, under Rev. Civ. Code, arts. 1910, 1911, 1912, 1913, and 1914, putting in default is a “prerequisite to the recovery of damages” for the passive breach of a commutative contract. Bussey v. Wise-Miller, 172 La. 198, 133 So. 443.
In so far as the thirty-day clause in the contract is concerned, the penalty for default is fixed at 8 per cent, interest upon the purchase price. Neither party seems to have insisted upon this clause, and both, we consider, have waived it.
The various objections to the title, which plaintiff’s counsel urged, such as his insistence upon taking title from Mrs. Newman, instead of the record owner, the payment, of the taxes, the release of the homestead loan, etc., should have been the subject of a demand upon Mrs. Newman’s counsel for compliance within a - reasonable time, and not of a personal undertaking by plaintiff’s counsel, or of a lengthy correspondence with Wise-Miller, the real estate agents, who had negotiated the sale, particularly since counsel had been previously informed that the vendor was represented by counsel. However, we find that Wise^Miller. wrote plain-, tiff’s' counsel under date of March 7, 1929, a little less than one month before this suit was filed, as follows: “If you will fix a-definite date for the passing of the act of sale, giving us a reasonable length of time to arrange all details to your satisfaction, we are sure that we could accomplish same to the best interests of all concerned.”
This offer was ignored, the letter unanswered, and no further effort made to. consummate the sale. Under the circumstances, we believe that plaintiff is responsible for the failure of the transaction. It follows that plaintiff is liable for the .commission due Wise-Miller and the attorney’s fee agreed upon.
For the reasons assigned the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.