117 So. 441 | La. | 1928
Plaintiff sues to be declared the owner of thirteen certain mules herein sequestered. The defense is that defendant acquired them from one Matney, and that said Matney had purchased them from plaintiff. Plaintiff's contention is that he only leased, but did not sell, said mules to Matney.
The facts are practically undisputed, but not the conclusions to be drawn therefrom. Matney says he bought the mules; plaintiff says he only leased them to Matney. And the circumstances were these, that plaintiff delivered the mules to Matney, and Matney gave plaintiff six notes aggregating $4,750, the full value of the mules, payable from month to month, one for $1,000 and five for $750 each. When Matney would have paid all the notes, he was to have the privilege of buying the mules for no other consideration than the amount of the notes so paid. Matney paid only the first four notes, aggregating $3,250, but did not pay the last two notes, aggregating $1,500. All notes bore interest at 8 per cent. from date.
In State ex rel. Bulkley v. Whited Wheless,
*404"Where all the essential elements and conditions for an absolute sale are present, in a contract between parties, the effects flowing legally from that particular contract follow, whether the parties foresaw and intended them or not, and though they may refer to the contract as an agreement to sell, or as a conditional sale."
In Barber Asphalt Co. v. St. Louis Cypress Co.,
"A so-called conditional sale, or sale by which the vendee is to become at once unconditionally bound for the price, and the vendor is to continue to be owner of the property until the price is paid, is not possible under the laws of this state. A petition wherein the vendor under such a contract claims the ownership of the property sold shows no cause of action."
Now it is clear that a so-called contract of lease by which the lessee binds himself at once and irrevocably for a rental equal to the full value of the thing leased, and is to become owner thereof when the so-called rental is paid in full, and without the payment of any further consideration, is nothing else than a conditional sale disguised under the form of a so-called lease; and the effect of such a contract is to vest title in the so-called lessee, i.e., purchaser. Grapico Bottling Works v. Liquid Carbonic Co.,
"Where parties enter into a contract, by authentic act, which they call a lease, in which they call themselves lessor and lessee, * * * the fact that it also contains an option to the lessee to buy the property, upon specified conditions, and certain stipulations, predicated upon the * * * right so conferred, is * * * insufficient * * * for the defense, set up by the lessee, in an action of ejectment, for nonpayment of rent, that the contract is one of sale, where it is admitted that none of the conditions required to convert it into a contract of sale have been complied with."
That case is readily distinguishable from the case at bar. Thus the very same case, upon some other phase thereof, came before the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans, and that court held, quite in consonance with ruling of this court, as follows:
1. A contract by which a party binds himself to pay in installments a certain sum for *405 the use of a thing, with the privilege of becoming the owner thereof upon paying a further sum, for which, however, he has not bound himself absolutely, is simply a lease with an option to purchase, and is not a sale. [But]
2. An alleged lease, in which at the end of the term the lessee is to become the owner of the thing leased, in consideration of the rent to be paid, is in fact a sale translative of the property from its very inception. Doullut et al. v. Ruch et al. (No. 7270) Tessier's Digest, p. 98. [Cf. Grapico Bottling Works v. Liquid Carbonic Co., supra.]
In Doullut v. Rush, the lessees had bound themselves only for 22 months at $500 per month, with the privilege of buying the property at any time during said period for $25,000, less a credit for any rent paid; so that there was at least $14,000 of the stipulated price for which they had never bound themselves at all, and might never bind themselves. On the other hand, in this case, Matney had bound himself at once for the full amount of the stipulated price. So that the Doullut v. Rush case falls clearly within the first category above, and the present case clearly within the second.
Page v. Loeffler,
But, since the sequestration was dissolved only because the merits of the case were with defendant, it follows that defendant is not entitled to attorney's fees for having had the writ dissolved on such grounds, "for to do so would be to allow the fees virtually for defending the suit on the merits, which is not permissible." Smith v. Keith Motors Co.,