Bissell v. Erwin's Heirs

Rost, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was already once before this court, and the facts are fully stated in the report of the decision, 10 Louisiana Reports, 524. In that decision, the court held, that the contract under which the plaintiffs claimed, bearing date the 13th May, 1827, was a sale, and that the agreement subsequently signed by Wright, was not repugnant to, or inconsistent with it. The court then being of opinion that justice had not been done between the parties, according to the evidence, remanded the case for a new trial. It was tried in the District Court, and judgment having been rendered in favor of the plaintiffs for only a small part of their claim, they have appealed.

Our attention is first drawn to three bills of exception taken during the trial.

1st. To the admission of the amended answer of the defendants, on the ground that it changed the nature of his defence.

2nd. To the refusal to permit the plaintiffs to amend their petition, and to allege and prove a title from Erwin to Wright, similar in form to that of 1827, but bearing date in 1824.

3rd. To the refusal to receive evidence of the increased value of the property at the time of the eviction.

I. The amended answer of the defendants was properly admitted : they had proceeded in the former trial, under the belief that the contract of 1827 was a lease, and not a sale : . this court decided that they were in error, and the district judge violated no law in suffering them to shape their defence in accordance with the principles settled by that decision. *148As long as the defendants believed the contract to be a lease, they could not claim the payment of the price.

The plaintiff may amend his petition, so as to embrace an act of sale anterior in date to the one sued on; provided it does not change the title, but only furnishes additional evidence of it.

II. The act of sale of 1824, together with that of 1827, and Wright’s memorandum in 1828, appear to us to be evidence of one and the same contract, modified in its execution by each of these acts, but, from the beginning, a sale to Wright of the property from which the plaintiffs have been evicted. That act does not change the nature of the plaintiffs’ title ; it furnishes additional evidence of it, if it was not superseded by that of 1827, and we think it ought to have been admitted by the District Court.

III. The District Court erred in rejecting the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, to prove the increase in value of the property at the time of the eviction. In doing so, it assumed that no part of that increase could be taken into consideration, in assessing damages on a warranty. This is an error into which many members of the bar have fallen, and it arises from some inaccuracies in the printing of the opinion of this court, in the case of Morris vs. Abat et al., 9 Louisiana Reports, 522.* The court there held that a bona fide vendor *149is not bound to indemnify his vendee for profits not made, and that to make him answerable for profits not made, and for the augmentation of the value of the thing sold, at the time of the eviction, beyond the price of the original sale, would be to restore and carry into effect the entire provisions of that article of the code of 1808, which the legislature intended to suppress and repeal. But the court never had a doubt that the damages intended by the law, in cases of eviction, are something over and above the original price, nor did it mean to say that such increase in the value as the parties could reasonably have anticipated at the time of the contract, was a profit not made, when the eviction took place. It is, on the contrary, a, profit made by the buyer, propter rem ipsam, and ought in all cases to form a part of the damages. The article of the old code referred to in the former decision, provided, that the increase of value was in all cases to be paid to the person evicted; and it was generally believed, justly or not we do not pretend to say, that there was no exception to that rule, however enormous the increase might be, and from whatever causes it arose. Such is the inter*150pretation given by Toullier to a similar provision in the French code. Toullier on Obligations.

A iona j¡de v.erul°1'',0.11 evic_ dee, since the Loiíi si an a °C ode1, Is ,not to latter for profits stot™ absolutely in0°feathe thing sold, above oilgmaTsaie. But in cases of eviction, such increased value of the thing sold, above the price of the original sale, as the parties might have reasonably anticipated at the time of contract should be considered as profits made by the buyer, and ought in all cases to form a part of the damages, for ■which the'vendor is liable on his warranty.

The jurisconsults who prepared the code of 1825 have adopted Toullier’s opinion, and the article was suppressed at their recommendation, on account of the ruinous consequences to which it might lead.

The law now stands here as it did in France before the adoption of the code, and there the increased value of the property invariably formed part of the damages assessed on a warranty, but such increase only as the partiés could have in contemplation at the time of the contract, ought to be taken into account, and the vendor should not be made to pay the increase which results from unforeseen events, or from accidental or transient causes. Dumoulin, de eo quod, interest, No. 57 and following. Pothier on Obligations, No. 164. Ibid., Vente, No. 133. 6 Toullier on Obligations, 285. Troplong de la Vente, No. 506.

Under these circumstances, it is necessary to remand the case.

The defendant be Tlioweíi^to produce evidence of the increased value of the property at the time of eviction, above the original price at which he purchased .

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be avoided and annulled, and the case remanded for a new trial, with directions to the district judge to allow the plaintiffs to file their amended petition; to prove and give in evidence the document the property from which they have been evicted. annexed thereto, and to make proof of the increased value of

It is further ordered and adjudged, that the defendant and appellee pay the costs of this appeal.

A literal copy of the opinion of the court, by Judge Martin, in the important case of Morris vs. Abat et al., is here inserted, to correct some mistakes in the printing of it, in the 9th volume of these Reports. This copy is deciphered and carefully made out from the original autograph or hieroglyphic manuscript, on file in the clerk’s office. A hiatus or tivo, occiii-ring in. the original, has been supplied by words included between brackets. Repoutek.

MORRIS VS. ABAT ET AL.

Martin, J., delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a petitory action, in which the land was recovered, and the defendant had judgment against Millaudon, his warrantor, for three thousand dollars, and costs; this sum being that at which the land had been rated in an exchange between those parties.

Millaudon had j udgment against Macarty, his vendor, for one thousand five hundred dollars, the price the latter had received. Millaudon and Macarty appealed.

The counsel of the former has contended :

1. That the warrantor has to pay the price, and the damages the vendee has suffered. Civil Code, article 2482.

2. That damages consist of the loss sustained, and the profits not made. lb.

3. That a positive statutory provision, alone, can silence the general rule. Macarty resists the claim, on an allegation that Millaudon’s conveyance *149to the defendant is simulated, and was made after he had notice that the present suit was intended, with a view of claiming heavy damages.

The district judge was of opinion that a bona fide vendor is not bound to indemnify for profits not made.

He did not examine the allegation of simulation. We are, therefore, called upon to test the correctness of his decision on the legal extent of the vendor’s liability, on an eviction.

It is not denied that, under the code of 1808, this liability extended to an indemnification of the loss which resulted from the profits arising from the difference of value of the thing sold, by events to which the vendee had not contributed ; the article 57, page 354, providing, that if at the time of the eviction the thing sold has risen in value, even without the buyer’s having contributed thereto, the seller is bound to pay the amount of this augmentation of value, beyond the price of the sale.

The compilers of the new code recommended the suppression of this article, as containing a provision evidently dangerous, which might cause the ruin of a vendor in good faith, in a country in which the fluctuation of value [is great.]

This article was accordingly suppressed, and the vendor’s liability restricted by article 2482:

1. To the restitution of the price.

*1502. To that of the fruits or revenues, if the party has been obliged to return them.

3. That of costs of suit.

4. In fine, all the damages which the party has sulfered, besides the price which he has paid.

To say that the word damages, in the above article, includes, as “ a loss of profits,” the augmentation of the value of the thing sold, above Pie price of sale, would be to thwart, rather than carry into effect, the express intentions of the legislature.

It would be to reinstate the whole of the former code, suppressed on the recommendation of the compilers of the new [one,] and since formally repealed.

When an avowedly [implied] provision becomes an express or textual one, the repeal of the latter must carry with it that of the former, as an acknowledged principle of law; otherwise, the repeal of the other would be vain and idle.

The construction adopted by the district judge, appears to us perfectly correct. Under this impression, we conclude that neither of the appellants has any good ground of complaint against the decision of the District Court.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be afiirmed, with costs.