6 La. Ann. 377 | La. | 1851
The judgment of the court was pronounced by
On the 19th of March, 1847, the defendants, by a written contract, leased to the plaintiff, a resident of Monroe’in the parish of Ouachita* certain premises, which are described in the lease as “ the buildings which are on our plantation on the Ouachita river, known as the Bry plantation, together with sixty acres of the front land,” for the sum of $120, payable on the 1st of January, 1848. It was stipulated in the lease, that if the lessee should use more land than the sixty acres, he should pay for the same at the rate of two
The district judge considered the fact as sufficiently proved, that the letter of Ledoux 4* Co. reached the plaintiff, and we concur in that conclusion. It may also be inferred from the evidence, that he received it a few days after his unsuccessful attempt to get possession under the lease.
The letter was as follows: “Dr. Porter, Monroe, Ouachita. Dear Sir, We leased you our Bry plantation with the condition, as you will recollect, that it was not already leased by Mr. Grammont Filhiol, when we had requested to rent the said property for us. We had prepared the lease for you to sign, ns also a writing providing for the above conditions; when you • ame to the counting-house, our Mr. Ledoux, who had made the agreement with you, was absent, and the lease was handed to you, but not the proviso. We hear that the property had been rented previously by Mr. Filhiol. We are sorry to say that the contract we had made with you becomes null and void. Your’s respectfully, A. Ledoux & Co.
There is no evidence that the plaintiff ever answered this letter. His silence was considered by the district judge as proving that the declaration contained in the letter was true; and on this ground judgment was rendered for the defendants. The parties had signed a written agreement which contains no such condition as is asserted in the letter; and certainly the evidence, which, by interpolating an important condition, is so materially to qualify a written contract, absolute in its terms, ought to be very cogent and conclusive. The maxim gwi facet consentiré videtur, is one Which, in questions of evidence, ought to be
It is true, that when parties who have had dealings together meet face to face, and one asserts a claim, the natural impulse in the mind of the other would be to deny it, if he believed it unfounded. In most cases, the denial would be distinct and immediate; and so a reasonable inference of its truth might be drawn from the party’s silence. But even where the declaration is so made, and tho person addressed has the opportunity of replying at once and on the spot, it would be dangerous to permit parol proof of his silence, when a right in derogation of a written contract is verbally asserted to destroy or qualify his apparent rights under such contract. If caution be necessary in inferring acquiescence from silence, in the case of declarations made by one interested party to another, face to face, it is still more so where the declaration is made by letter.
There is a class of cases where it is a man’s clear duty to reply, — as where the matter is in re agenda, or where the previous relations of the parties have been such that the interest of the person writing may suffer detriment, or his future conduct be influenced by the other’s silence. But where, as in this case, the plaintiff had a written contract, which had been defeated by the act of the defendants, when they in their letter declared the matter closed and the agreement null, and did not even ask a reply, it seems to us to be going too far to say that the plaintiff, by not answering this letter, is to be considered as admitting the truth of their declarations, and that his lease, absolute on its .face, was intended to be conditional.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial; defendants paying costs of appeal.