2 Rob. 357 | La. | 1842
The defendant is sued for a balance of $15,000, on a note of $18,000, the last instalment of the price of a plantation sold to him by the plaintiff on the 27th of January, 1829, After admitting the sale and the execution of the note, the defendant avers, that the plantation was warranted to contain seventeen arpens front, and to run back to lake Pontchartrain, agreeably to title papers which the plaintiff represented he had in his possession. That the plaintiff had no title at all to one arpent front with the depth so conveyed, and that selling it agreeably to title papers which he had not, he was guilty of fraud towards him. That for the portions to which the plaintiff had titles running to the lake, there are other and better titles covering the same land, so as to prevent him (the defendant) from getting much the greater part of the land thus sold. The defendant further avers, that he agreed to pay for the plantation and the slaves employed on it $130,000, which sum he has paid, except the amount yet due on the note sued upon ; ■ but that for the reasons and frauds aforesaid, he is entitled to a reduction of fifty thousand dollars upon the price paid, which he pleads in compensation and reconvention. The case was laid before a jury. The plaintiff having obtained a verdict and judgment, the defendant, moved for a new trial, failing to obtain which he has appealed.
The act.of sale, after reciting the various titles by which the vendor had acquired the several tracts forming the whole plantation, proceeds as follows : “ Ce qui compose bien Fhabitation men-tionnée auxpresentes de dix sept arpens deface au jleuve, sur une profondeur qui sera déterminée par les titres, ce qui agree a Fac-quéreur, bornée dans sa partie supérieure par Fhabitation Dieu-donné et Similien LaBranche,et dans sa partie inférieurepar celle de Mde. Vve. Delhommer.” From these expressions used by the vendor, we take the sale to be one per aversionem, under the repeated adjudications of this, court. When a sale is made with reference to known and definite boundaries, nothing more' is intended to be conveyed than what is contained between the given boundaries, and a deficiency in quantity does not entitle the purchaser to demand either a rescission of the sale, or a diminution
Judgment affirmed.