Ackerman v. Larner

40 So. 581, 116 La. 101, 1906 La. LEXIS 474
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1906
DocketNo. 15,727
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 40 So. 581 (Ackerman v. Larner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ackerman v. Larner, 40 So. 581, 116 La. 101, 1906 La. LEXIS 474 (La. 1906).

Opinions

Statement

MONROE, J.

Plaintiff alleges that on or about October 10, 1891, she made a manual gift of $11,500 to Mrs. Catherine Larner, then wife of Wm. H. Peters, in consideration of Mrs. Peters undertaking to give her a home, maintain her during her life, and bury her when dead, and that said gift was so made with the knowledge and consent of said Wm. I-I. Peters; that the donee subsequently turned the money given to her over to her two daughters, Clara Margaret, now wife of Wm. D. Gardiner, and Catherine Larner Peters, without consideration, and that her said daughters invested the same in their own names, in certain real estate (which is described); that sometime later, and in anticipation of her marriage, Clara Margaret Peters, without consideration, conveyed said real estate, or her apparent interest therein, to her sister, Catherine Larner Peters, in whose name the title now stands. Plaintiff further alleges that, in making said donation, she devested herself of all her property and reversed nothing for her own subsistence, to the knowledge of the parties named and in violation of the prohibition contained in article 1497, Civ. Code, and that the same was, and is, null and of no effect; that thereafter she went to live with Mrs. Peters and her family and continued to live with them until May 19, 1903, when, because of the ill treatment to which she was subjected, she was compelled to go elsewhere, and she believes, and so charges, that Mrs. Peters is without means to reimburse the amount donated to her, and that she turned the same over to her daughters, who so received it with the fraudulent purpose of placing it beyond plaintiff’s reach, thereby committing a breach of trust; and that plaintiff is entitled to have said donation annulled and to follow the fund which was the subject thereof and charge the property in which it was invested with a resulting trust in her favor. She therefore prays for citation to, and for judgment against, the parties named as defendants, in solido, in the sum of $11,500 with interest from October 10, 1891, until paid, and with recognition of an equitable lien and privilege on the property described in the petition, and she further prays that said property be sold to satisfy her said claim, and that she be paid from the proceeds.

The defendants, after pleading, by way of exception, that plaintiff’s petition discloses no legal ground and no cause of action (which exceptions were overruled), answered, separately, as follows:

Mrs. Peters denies that plaintiff ever made any donation to her, personally, but admits that she paid to her (defendant’s) husband, through defendant, the sum of $11,300, as a payment under a commutative contract, entered into by parol, between plaintiff on the one part, and W. H. Peters, defendant’s said husband, represented by' defendant, of the other part, whereby said Peters agreed, in consideration thereof, to admit plaintiff to. their home, to maintain her during life, and at her death to bear the expense of her funeral. Defendant denies that said sum was all that plaintiff possessed and alleges that, pursuant to the contract so made, plaintiff was-[106]*106maintained, at an expense of $6,624, from Oct. 10, 1S90, until about May 20, 1903, when, without previous notice, she removed from the home which had been thus provided for her, and has not since resided there. Further answering, defendant alleges that, having acquiesced in the execution of gaid contract and having enjoyed its benefits for more than 12 years, plaintiff cannot now be heard to assail its validity, and that she has no standing in court to bring this suit until she has restored, or offered to restore, said benefit, or the equivalent thereof, and she further pleads the prescription of 1, 3, 5, and 10 years, and prays for judgment in her favor.

Mrs. Gardiner and Miss Catherine Larner Peters deny, generally and specially, the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, and also plead prescription.

By an amended answer, the defendants plead estoppel and res judicata upon the basis of certain alleged judicial admissions of the plaintiff and a certain judgment, and the plaintiff, thereafter, filed like pleas upon a like basis. In support of the pleas of estoppel and res judicata, filed in their behalf, defendants’ counsel, upon the trial of the case, objected to the introduction in evidence of certain answers given by Mrs. Peters to interrogatories propounded to her as garnishee in a certain suit of Hoffman v. Peters, and to all other evidence which might thereafter be introduced in support of the plaintiff’s demands; the grounds of objection being:

(1) That the alleged donation, if any exist, is onerous in character, and can be established only by authentic act.

(2) That plaintiff is estopped to prove a donation of any kind by her judicial averments and testimony to the contrary, made and given in the suit of said plaintiff against Miss Catherine L. Peters et al., and by the judgment therein rendered, as also by her testimony in the suits of Hoffman v. Ackerman (Mrs. Catherine L. Peters et al., Garnishees) and Hoffman v. Ackerman et al., and the counsel further offered the record and testimony in the suit of Ackerman v. Peters and the testimony given by Miss Ackerman in the suits of Hoffman v. Ackerman (Mrs. Catherine E. Peters et al., Garnishees), and Hoffman v. Ackerman et al. To the offer so made, the counsel for the plaintiff objected, on the grounds “that parties are not bound by allegations unsuccessfully pleaded or by evidence given by them in support of said allegations ; that the defendants are estopped by their admissions contained in their testimony and answers to interrogatories, now tendered and offered in evidence by the plaintiff, because they successfully pleaded and established by their testimony the defenses urged by them in said previous cases; that the defendants cannot object to the admission of their declarations under oath, made in other suits, and cannot be heard to object to their own sworn explanations of their own transactions, long since past.” These objections were overruled by the court, as going to the effect, and the evidence was admitted. Thereafter, however, the court overruled the defendants’ pleas of estoppel and res judicata, and counsel for plaintiff offered the testimony given by Mrs. Peters, Miss Catherine L. Peters, Miss Mary L. Peters, and Mrs. Gardiner in the cases mentioned, to which counsel for defendants made further objections, which were also overruled.

At a subsequent stage in the proceedings, counsel for plaintiff having in the meanwhile filed their plea to that effect, objected, upon the ground that the defendants were es-topped, to the evidence offered in their behalf, and the court, overruling a motion to strike out, maintained said plea in so far as to exclude “all evidence, offered in behalf of the defendants, tending to contradict, vary, explain, or alter their previous judicial declarations or admissions,” which ruling was applied to certain offers on behalf of defend[108]*108ants of testimony explanatory of that previously given by them tending to show that Mrs. Ackerman had turned over all of her property to Mrs. Peters, and to offers of testimony, previously given by Miss Ackerman in support of a theory, as to her relations with Blrs.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 581, 116 La. 101, 1906 La. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ackerman-v-larner-la-1906.