Barnes v. McCartney

3 La. App. 145, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 567
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1925
DocketNo. 2401
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 La. App. 145 (Barnes v. McCartney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. McCartney, 3 La. App. 145, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 567 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff is a married woman, the wife of J. L. Barnes, who joins her in this suit to authorize her. She is one of the six children of J. R. Chapman, deceased, and his wife, Mrs. Alice Chapman, now living.

At the time of the death of J. R. Chapman, plaintiff’s father, he owned in community with his said wife the South half of Southwest quarter of Section 34, Township 16 North, Range 9 East, containing eighty acres.

As one of the six children of said J. R. Chapman, plaintiff inherited an undivided one-sixth of his undivided half of said land.

On May 8, 1920, plaintiff sold to defendant by notarial act—•

“All of her rights, titles and interest, that she acquired in and to the S% of the SWM of Section 34, Township 16 North, Range 9 East, in Franklin parish, Louisiana, and all future rights that she may acquire in the future by inheritance from her mother Alice M. Chapman in the above described property.”

The consideration being stipulated as follows:

“This sale is made for and in consideration of the sum of five hundred and no/100 dollars, cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged.”

On September 3, "1924, she filed this suit to set aside said sale and to have said deed declared null and void and of no effect as to her and to be decreed to be the owner of an undivided one-sixth interest in the land described therein; and set up as ground for the voidance of said sale that it was made without consideration

“ * * * that no consideration ever passed from the said Wylie J. McCartney to your petitioner;”

that the alleged consideration in said act was never passed; .and that she was induced to make said sale through the mar[146]*146ital coercion and persuasion of her husband, J. M. Barnes, and that the real consideration of said act of sale was a debt due by her said husband rto the purchaser, W. J. McCartney; and, further, that the sale of the portion of land which belonged to her mother, then living, was void because made in contravention of a prohibitory law.

Defendant, in answer, denied that plaintiff was induced to make the sale by marital coercion, denied that the real consideration was a debt due by plaintiff's husband, but, in section 21 of his answer set out the real facts and conditions to be as follow's:

“At some time during the fall of the year of 1919, the said J. L. Barnes, husband of the plaintiff herein, bargained, sold and delivered unto your respondent, one certain Chevrolet automobile for the price and sum of eight hundred and twenty-five and 00-100 dollars ($825.00) which said sum was by agreement and mutual consent of the parties to said sale, paid by the transfer and delivery from respondent unto the said J. L. Barnes of two horses, one wagon, one set of harness, and a certain crop of cotton and corn, then in the field, there being approximately two bales of cotton and a quantity of corn, the exact amount of which is unknown to your respondent; that your respondent accepted the delivery of the automobile and the said J. L. Barnes accepted the hereinabove described property in lieu of the price agreed upon; that during the late spring of 1920, it developed and came to the knowledge of your respondent during the month of May, 1920, that the original purchase price of said automobile had never been fully paid by said J. L. Barnes; that on or about the day before the execution of the sale of the land from the plaintiff to respondent, the plaintiff together with her said husband came to the home of respondent and the plaintiff, without in any way or manner being unduly influenced, proposed freely, voluntarily, and at her own instance and suggestion to purchase the said automobile from your respondent and to execute a good and valid deed to her present and future anticipated interest in the property belonging to the estate J. R. and Mrs. Alice M. Chapman, unto your respondent as a consideration for the sale to her of said automobile * *

There was judgment in the district court in favor of plaintiff, decreeing the act of sale “absolutely void ab initio” and decreeing her to be the owner of the interest in the land described in the deed.

Prom this judgment defendant has appealed.

OPINION.

Plaintiff especially alleged that the sale made by her to defendant is null and void because there was no consideration therefor; and if that allegation be true the sale must be set aside.

Article 1893 of the Civil Code provides:

“An obligation without a cause, or with a false unlawful cause, can have no effect.”

The “cause” of a contract is the consideration or motive for making it. C. C. 1896:

“The contract of sale is an agreement by which one gives a thing for a price in money, and the other gives the price in order to have the thing itself.
“Three circumstances concur to the perfection of the contract, to-wit: the thing sold, the price and the consent.” C. C. 2439.
“The price of the sale must be certain, that is to say, fixed and determined by the parties.” C. C. 2464.

The deed which plaintiff signed recites the the consideration for the sale was the sum of $500.00 paid in cash; but testimony, which was admitted without objection, and, indeed the answer of the defendant, shows that the recital to that effect is fiction pure and simple. The testimony also shows that there was never any price fixed and agreed upon by the parties; and it shows, further, that there was never a dollar in current money paid by the purchaser and never intended that any should be paid.

; This being true, the sale must necessarily Tall unless the vendee can show the exist[147]*147ence of a true and sufficient consideration therefor.

Article 1900 of the Civil Code reads as f ollows:

“If the cause expressed in the consideration should be one that does not exist, yet the contract cannot be invalidated, if the party can show the existence of a true and sufficient consideration.”

In the case of Brown, administrator vs. Brown, 30 La. Ann. 966, the court said:

“When a contract, therefore, is attacked on the ground that the expressed consideration does not exist, or that there was no consideration for it, the party may show other consideration than that expressed in the contract.”

See also, to the same effect:

Landry vs. Landry, 40 La. Ann. 229, 3 South. 728.

Sere vs. Darby, 118 La. 619, 43 South. 255.

Defendant does not attempt to sustain the sale to him on the ground that the consideration recited in the deed was ever agreed upon or paid, but he alleges in answer and testifies that the real consideration which he gave for the plaintiff’s interest in the land described in the deed was one Chevrolet automobile the value of which at the time of the sale not being fixed by him or any one else.

When a sale of property is attacked by the vendor on the ground that the purported consideration was not paid and the vendee attempts to sustain it on the ground that there existed a true and sufficient consideration therefor, the burden is upon him to show that. Unless he discharges that burden, the sale must fall.

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Related

Nunez v. Nunez
396 So. 2d 415 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1981)
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199 So. 597 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 145, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-mccartney-lactapp-1925.