On the Merits.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Todd, J.The plaintiff leased to the defendant his plantation in the Parish of Madison, known as the “ Coleman Place,” for the year 1874. The consideration of the lease was five hundred dollars, and in addition thereto, the lessee obligated himself “ to keep tbe place, fences, houses, ginhouse, etc., in good repair,” and to return them in the same condition in which they then were.
*291The right was reserved to the lessee to keep the place on the same terms and conditions for five years.
Of this last stipulation the defendant availed himself, and occupied and cultivated the place up to and including the year 1878. The rent was payable on the 1st of November of each year.
On the 6th of November, 1878, the plaintiff instituted suit. He claimed the five hundred dollars, the moneyed consideration of the lease, and further alleged that the defendant had failed to make the repairs stipulated, and in addition to the five hundred dollars prayed for judgment for seven hundred dollars, the estimated cost or value of the said repairs, and that the lessor’s privilege he recognized and enforced for the sums claimed.
Under the usual averments the plaintiff also obtained a writ of provisional seizure, and caused to be seized thirty bales of cotton, which were subsequently released on bond.
The defendant, after pleading the general issue, averred that, when the suit was brought, he had on the plantation cotton sufficient to pay the five hundred dollars, the stipulated moneyed consideration for the rent, which was tendered to the plaintiff and refused, the money being demanded. That arrangements were made to pay the amount through his local merchants, hut owing to the prevalence of the yellow fever, could not be at once completed. It was further averred that the property was in as good repair as when the lease commenced, except the ordinary wear and decay, for which he, the lessee, was not hound.
The affidavit on which the provisional seizure issued was alleged to be untrue, and it was prayed that the writ be dissolved, with two hundred and fifty dollars damages.
There was judgment for the plaintiff for five hundred and eighty dollars, and dissolving the writ of provisional seizure j and from this judgment the plaintiff appeals.
The evidence shows, that about the time the rent of 1878 became due, the plaintiff went to the plantation leased and found the defendant absent. The wife of the defendant offered to deliver cotton then under the ginhouse, or give a draft, in payment of the moneyed rent, $500. This the plaintiff declined to accept and demanded the cash.
It is ¡ilso shown that, when on the same day he informed a neighbor of the defendant of the offer made by Mrs. Clarke, the defendant’s wife, and his declining to accept it, this neighbor offered, if he would go and get an order on him for the rent from Mrs. Clarke, that he would pay it just as he had paid him the rent the year before. This the plaintiff refused to do.
It is likewise in evidence that, in the month of October, before the rent was due, the local merchant who furnished the plantation, when *292about leaving the parish for a time, handed his blank draft signed to his clerk, and requested him to ascertain the amount of the rent owing the plaintiff, and fill up the draft and deliver it, to him when the rent became due. So that ample provision seems to have been made for the settlement of this debt and no disposition whatever manifested to evade or delay its payment. Under these circumstances we find no Toom for the grave apprehensions sworn to by plaintiff of losing his moneyed rent by the removal of the cotton from the plantation, which was tlrn ground for resorting to the writ.
It is, however, urged, that the’ defendant was indebted for the repairs he had failed to make on the place, and that the plaintiff was not bound to accept part of the debt, and unless the whole of it was tendered, that he had the right to seize for the entire dobt.. This part of plaintiff’s claim was unliquidated, and it is not pretended that he made any demand for a specific amount on account of it before bringing his suit. Besides, we find in the contract of lease a clause substantially to this effect: That the $000 mentioned was to be paid out of the first cotton picked and ginned, and that the lessee was not to ship or dispose of more cotton than sufficient to pay this debt until the same was paid; that when this amount was paid the lessee was at liberty to dispose of the residue of his. entire crop, and that a failure to comply with this stipulation would afford cause for seizure by legal process.
Under this state of facts we think the writ of j>rovisional seizure was properly dissolved.
The evidence satisfies us, however, that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff in a larger amount for his failure to make the required repairs than that found by the Judge a quo. It is made reasonably certain that the fences wore not rebuilt or repaired in the entire five years, and that but trifling repairs were made on the ginbouse., That it would require from eight to ten thousand rails put upon the fences to restore them to the condition they were in when the lease began, and considerable work on the ginbouse to restore it to its then condition. The District Judge allowed only eighty dollars on this account; we think he should have allowed, at least, three hundred dollars, and the judgment should be amended accordingly.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the lower court be amended by increasing the amount therein awarded to eight hundred dollars, with interest at the rate and from the time therein stipulated ; and as thus amended that it be affirmed, the costs of the lower court to be paid by the defendant, and of this appeal by the plaintiff.