Carrano v. Colombel

114 So. 637 | La. | 1927

Plaintiff instituted this suit to enforce specific performance of a contract to sell certain real estate situated in the city of New Orleans. Defendant set up that the contract was not binding upon her, because her signature thereto had been obtained by duress. The judgment was for plaintiff, and defendant appealed.

An examination of the record discloses the utter failure of defendant to make out her defense. She does not pretend that plaintiff exercised any duress whatever upon her. According to her answer, the duress of which she complains was that of the real estate agent to whom she had intrusted her property for sale. On the trial of the case, however, she testified that it was the son of the agent, and not the agent himself, by whom she was coerced to sign the contract. When called upon to specify of what the duress consisted, she was unable to show any act whatever of coercion brought to bear upon her. Apart from the denials by the agent and his son that any duress was exercised upon the defendant, we are convinced, by her own testimony, that she sought to recede from *741 the contract, after she had signed it and after she had given the agent a written order on the Union Homestead Association for her title in order that he might deliver it to the prospective purchaser for examination, only because the gossip of her relatives, friends, and neighbors induced her to believe that she was selling her property too cheap.

The appellee has filed an answer to the appeal, alleging that it is frivolous, and praying for damages. We are unable to grant his demand. Damages for a frivolous appeal are awarded only in cases where a money judgment is involved. Code Prac. art. 907; Arrowsmith v. Rappelge, 19 La. Ann. 328; Succession of Lavergne,129 La. 120, 55 So. 734; Ornelas v. Silvan Newburger Co.,139 La. 832, 72 So. 372.

For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.

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