19 La. 18 | La. | 1841
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs seek to recover the difference between the-price at which three hundred shares of the Gas Light Bank Stock were adjudicated to defendants; and that which they brought on a re-sale at public auction, on- their refusal to carry into effect the first adjudication.
The record shows, that at a meeting of the creditors of the succession of Wm. Nott, and of the firm of Wm. Nott & Co.,, it was agreed between them, that this stock, together with divers stocks of other institutions, should be sold at a credit of six months, or payment to be made in debts due by the succession or the firm. The sale was accordingly ordered by the-Court of Probates, and advertised agreeably to the deliberation of the creditors. On the day of sale, hand bills were distributed around the stand of the auctioneer, containing the same conditions in relation to the mode of payment. It appears, that when about proceeding to the sale, the Register of Wills received from some one, whom he supposed authorized to- act for the estate, an. additional condition, not mentioned in the newspaper advertisements, or in the handbills, but which, he says, he proclaimed from his- stand in a loud and audible voice. This condition was, that the purchasers should assume their respective portions of a stock note of fifteen dollars per share. The defendants refused to assume any part of the stock note for which the three hundred shares purchased by them were
It is said, that under article 2590 of the Louisiana Code, the first purchaser cannot he allowed to hid at a second crying, either directly, or through the intervention of another person ; and that defendants, by purchasing at the second sale, have ratified the first.
To this, it has been satisfactorily answered, that if defendants were not hound to execute the first adjudication under the circumstances attending it, the re-sale was not for their risk and on their account 5 and that moreover the conditions of the second sale being different and more onerous than those of the first, the defendants cannot he made liable for any difference in the price obtained; and had an equal right to purchase with any other person.
The judgment of the commercial court is therefore affirmed with costs.