Noe v. Taylor

Carleton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 21st July, 1836, the parties in this cause stipulated in substance as follows: William Taylor agreed to sell to James Noe, a tract of land, thirty-five arpents by sixty deep, and the cypress swamp on the opposite side of the Mississippi, with sixty-nine slaves, horses, agricultural implements, &c., on the 1st day of January next thereafter, and to deliver the same on that day, provided said Noe shall strictly comply with his part of the agreement, viz; to pay the said Taylor one hundred and thirty thousand dollars: four thousand five hundred dollars in money, and one hundred and twenty-five thousand five hundred dollars, on said first of January, of which, twenty-five thousand dollars are to be paid in gold or silver, and the balance in four promissory notes, one payable on 1st January, 1838, one on 1st January, 1839, one on 1st January, 1840, and one on 1st January, 1841, payable and negotiable at the Union Bank of New-Orleans; each note endorsed by two responsible planters, worth at least two hundred thousand dollars, with an additional endorsement of a responsible commercial house in New-Orleans. The slaves not to be warranted such for life, nor the titles to be warranted otherwise than conformably to such decree as has been, or may be rendered by the Supreme Court of Louisiana, in regard to the will of Julien Poydras, in relation to said slaves. And Taylor further stipulated, “ to make said Noe a title in fee simple to said tract of land, on the first day of January, and at the same time, such title to said slaves as is above expressed, provided, said Noe shall faithfully comply with the agreements and covenants above and herein expressed. It is also hereby understood, agreed and declared, by and between said parties, that in the event of said James Noe not complying with his said engagements and covenants on said first of January next, he forfeits said sum of four thousand five hundred dollars, and that said Taylor may convert this sum to his own use, to indemnify himself for the chances of making a better sale of his-property.”

*555The plaintiff brings this action to recover back the four thousand five hundred dollars, paid at the date of the contract. He avers that he had made on his part, all necessary arrangements for the fulfilment of his obligations towards the defendant, but that the defendant was unable to make an unincumbered title to the property sold, because of the-existence of certain mortgages on the land, and because the decision of the Supreme Court had made it impossible he should comply with his contract in relation to the slaves. By a supplemental petition he claimed the further sum of four thousand five hundred dollars as damages.

The defendant answers, that Noe was bound before he received the titles to the property, to pay the twenty-five thousand dollars in money, or to make a tender or consignment thereof, as also of the four notes of twenty-five thousand dollars each, by the receipt of which, he would have been able to raise the mortgages and disincumber the titles; that the existence of the mortgages was known to the plaintiff at the date of the contract, as also the conditions and obligations affecting the slaves ; that the four thousand five hundred dollars are forfeited by the plaintiff, by reason of his inability to comply with his engagement, and are not sufficient to indemnify him for the loss he has sustained in being deprived of the chance of effecting another sale, and in the diminution of the value of the property.

The cause was tried by a jury, and their verdict being for the defendant, the judgment of the court was rendered accordingly, and the plaintiff appealed.

Our attention is first drawn to the judges charge to the jury, to which plaintiff’s counsel took a bill of exceptions ; the charge is as follows :

1st. “ The plaintiff' was bound to make a tender of the specie and endorsed notes, before he could exact a sale from defendant.

2d. “ This tender must be made by himself, or by an agent having a written power of attorney to accept the sale for plaintiff, and to make the payment as stipulated.

If the seller is not bound, in a contract of sale, to make the transfer of the property to the vendee, before the price is paid or tendered, or that the transfer and payment be simultaneous; still he isbound, previously, to exhibit a valid and unincumbered title, before he can call on the vendee for performance of his part of the contract. So, \vhei*e A sells to B a tract of land, and stipulates to make a title in fee simple on a particular day, and that R forfeits a sum i'e'faHs m'com-pjWith Ms part e., pay the ft" was ?he’duty of A> íh;sf Io show that his titles were good, cumbrance,mbe- ^ BcojU payment, or for signme^oHhé ™°n®yj>nc'nnotj“ contract.

*556Sd. “ If the plaintiff bad made this tender, and then the defendant had not passed him a title free of mortgages or other incumbrances; or if the defendant could not then have passed a good and valid title, the plaintiff would have been entitled to recover back the money paid when the contract was entered into.

4. “ Before the plaintiff could exact of the defendant the performance of his part of the obligation, it was necessary he should have put the defendant in delay, by tendering to perform his part of the obligation, and requiring defendant to perform his part in writing, or in presence of two witnesses.

5. “ The Supreme Court have decided the case read from the reports on the will of Julien Poydras; and if you are satisfied that the slaves contracted to be sold, were only a part of those slaves, and that from that decision the defendant could not have complied with his part of the contract, and that the plaintiff had made the tender above mentioned, at the time and place mentioned in the contract, by himself, or a duly authorized agent as above mentioned; then, in such case, the plaintiff is entitled to recover.

6. “ If the defendant, at the time and place agreed on, had refused to perform his contract, then it would have been useless to tender the money and notes; but otherwise, if the defendant did not so refuse, but on the contrary, offered fa perform it.”

We think the court erred. It appears to us that when a sale is in question, the attention of the parties is first directed towards the thing to be sold. The seller sets out its qualities and his title, and the buyer examines into their verity. These preliminaries are usually settled, and the price propounded by the seller, before the mode of payment is fixed. If the qualities of the thing be unacceptable to the buyer, the titles defective or incumbered, he usually withdraws, and the negociation ceases. This is the course, which we think every man’s experience teaches him, the bargain takes as it advances towards completion.

If, however, it be said that the seller is not bound to make the transfer before the price is tendered, or that payment *557..should be simultaneous with the transfer; still, in both cases the seller would be equally bound, previously to exhibit a valid and unincumbered title. This is the first and most important step to be taken, and lies at the foundation of the contract of sale. „

In this view of the subject, we think it was the duty °f Taylor, first to have shown that his titles were good and free from incumbrances, before lie could call upon Noe for a tender or consignment of the money or notes set out in the contract.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the verdict of the jury be set aside, and the judgment of the District Court be avoided and reversed ; that the cause be remanded for a new trial, with instructions to the judge to abstain from charging the jury contrary to the opinion herein expressed; and that the appellee pay costs in both courts.