DAIGLE & ASSOCIATES, INC. v. Sylvia S. COLEMAN et al.
No. 13239.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
March 31, 1980.
Rehearing Denied June 9, 1980.
Before EDWARDS, LEAR and WATKINS, JJ.
Robert L. Kleinpeter, Baton Rouge, of counsel, for defendants-appellants R. E. Coleman and Sylvia S. Coleman.
Chapman L. Sanford, Baton Rouge, of counsel, for defendants-appellants/appellees Bernard Watson, Jr. and Rowena Dingman Watson.
Robert E. Tillery, in pro. per.
WATKINS, Judge.
This is a concursus proceeding convoked by a real estate broker, Daigle & Associates, Inc., Baton Rouge, to determine who is entitled to $5,000.00, which it deposited in the registry of court. The impleaded claimants are Bernard Watson, Jr. and Rowena Dingman Watson, husband and wife, Robert E. Coleman and Sylvia S. Coleman, husband and wife, and Robert E. Tillery. The trial court awarded the $5,000.00 to the Watsons. The Colemans and Tillery appealed. We reverse.
Mrs. Coleman hired Robert E. Tillery, a lawyer, to obtain a separation from bed and board from her husband. She paid Tillery the sum of $18,761.17, as an advance payment of fees and expenses, which he deposited in his client account. She needed a place for herself and her son to live, and after living at the Sheraton Hotel for a short time, she looked at apartments, and contacted plaintiff firm about purchasing a house. She agreed to buy the house that the Watsons owned and in which the Watsons had lived for a short time. However, the community had not been partitioned, or the judgment of separation obtained, for that matter. Mrs. Coleman agreed to enter into an agreement to purchase, which was
The judgment of separation was subsequently obtained. Later, Mr. and Mrs. Coleman became reconciled, and Mrs. Coleman stopped paying rent, and moved out of the house. She said she would not buy the house. The Watsons never had an act of sale prepared and never demanded that Mrs. Coleman, or Mr. and Mrs. Coleman, appear before a notary to execute an act of sale. Three days before the closing date, which was to be July 10, 1978, Daigle & Associates filed the present concursus proceeding, depositing $5000.00 in the registry of the court. On the same date, Daigle & Associates entered into a written settlement with the Watsons under which Daigle & Associates paid the Watsons $2,500.00 and the Watsons released Daigle & Associates from “... any and all liability...“.
As the agreement to purchase was signed by Tillery as attorney in fact for Mrs. Coleman, and as Tillery did not have express authority to enter into purchases of immovable property or agreements to purchase immovable property, the contract was voidable. See
As Tillery has repeatedly promised to deliver the $5,000.00 to the Colemans if that sum is awarded to him (his having obtained a judgment against the Colemans for the amount of the purported deposit as well as attorney‘s fees), the question of whether the $5,000.00 should be awarded to the Colemans or Tillery is moot.
We reverse the holding of the trial court, and render judgment awarding the $5,000.00 to Robert E. Coleman and Sylvia S. Coleman, all costs to be paid from the fund on deposit in the registry of the court.
REVERSED AND RENDERED.
