Bennett v. Markley

138 So. 2d 169, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1627
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 1962
DocketNo. 5255
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 138 So. 2d 169 (Bennett v. Markley) 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
Bennett v. Markley, 138 So. 2d 169, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1627 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinions

REID, Presiding Judge.

This suit was instituted by Mrs. Mary S. Bennett against her former husband, Thomas G. Markley, for an accounting of certain funds allegedly held by Mr. Markley. These funds were alleged to have accrued to plaintiff’s account as a result of production from oil lands upon which plaintiff held a substantial interest, as a result of oil, gas and mineral lease affecting that tract. Plaintiff alleged that the defendant had received certain funds due her. However, the defendant allegedly failed to account to plaintiff for her interest, “despite the fiduciary relationship existing between plaintiff and defendant.”

The defendant filed an answer in which he alleged that the plaintiff owed him $12,500.00, as a result of a loan which he had made to her on or about June 28, 1946. He admits that he did owe plaintiff $9,209.96, but specifically pleads that the “two debts were reciprocally extinguished as soon as they existed simultaneously to the extent of $9,209.96, which set off and compensation was specially plead.” Thus defendant claimed that plaintiff owed a balance of $3,290.04 to him. In the alternative the defendant asked for a judgment in reconvention for the full sum of $12,500.00 based upon the same facts.

The trial was had on the merits and judgment was rendered for the defendant. From this judgment the plaintiff perfected a sus-pensive appeal to the Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana. As a result of the recent revision of appellate jurisdiction in this state, this suit was transferred to the Court of Appeal, First Circuit.

It is felt that the concise and accurate findings of fact by the District Court after the trial on' the merits, should be adopted as our own, to-wit:

“In 1943 plaintiff and defendant were divorced. However, according to the testimony of both parties, they remained on good terms and retained a mutual interest in the child born of that marriage whose custody was placed in the plaintiff.
Subsequent to the divorce from defendant, plaintiff married a man named [171]*171Garcia and moved to Mexico City. This marriage proved to be unsatisfactory and on an occasion when defendant was visiting his child at the home of plaintiff while she was married and residing in Mexico City, upon representation to defendant of her unhappiness with her second marriage, defendant assisted plaintiff in procuring an attorney who obtained a divorce for plaintiff, and in addition, the evidence shows that defendant accompanied plaintiff to the State of California and assisted in obtaining a home for plaintiff in the State of California, though, at that time defendant had, himself, remarried. A home far the plaintiff was purchased for the sum of $52,500.00, of which $25,000.00 was paid by plaintiff, $12,500.00 was advanced by defendant and a note for the sum of $15,000.00 secured by a mortgage on the property, was given for the balance.
In answer to the petition of plaintiff in this suit, defendant asserts that the $12,500.00 advanced by him on the purchase of the home in California, above referred to, was a loan which he made to her and that he was entitled to set off the $12,000.00 against the funds due by him to her amounting to the sum of $9914.45, leaving a balance of $2585.55 due and owing defendant by plaintiff, for which he seeks judgment in reconvention.”

Going further the District Court made the following findings concerning the issue in the case at bar:

‘‘The decision of this case therefore rests on a determination of whether or not defendant made a gift of the $12,500.00 to plaintiff or whether or not the advance of $12,500.00 by defendant on the purchase price of the home constituted a loan for which defendant is entitled, upon his assertion to recover.”

In the District Court, the judgment for the defendant was based upon the following findings of fact and interpretations of the applicable law:

1. Plaintiff had the burden of proving that the $12,500.00 advanced by the defendant on the purchase of the California home was a donation and not a loan.

2. The payment, or advance, of the $12,500.00 made by defendant was not made to plaintiff in as much as the payment was made by defendant directly to the escrow agent, the bank, which acted in a transfer of the property.

3. That the audit of defendant’s books show an entry under accounts receivable on December 31, 1946, for $12,500.00 due by Mrs. M. S. Markley. (Mrs. M. S. Markley referred to in the audit has remarried and is now Mrs. Mary S. Bennett, the plaintiff in this suit.)

4. That the defendant did not pay gift tax on the $12,500.00, nor claim that it was a gift in his tax returns, although he was a wealthy oil man and had to employ accountants and tax experts to attend to his business affairs and to advise him.

The District Court’s reasons for judgment should be examined in relation to the applicable Louisiana Statutes and jurisprudence. The main issue in this case is whether the funds advanced by the defendant on the purchase of plaintiff’s home in California were advanced as a donation or a loan.

As stated supra, the trial court found that the burden of proof on this point rested upon the plaintiff. This suit was instituted by the plaintiff in order to obtain an accounting and disbursement of funds belonging to plaintiff which were held in trust by defendant. No mention was made of any other issue in the petition filed by plaintiff. The defendant himself raised the issue of the funds he had advanced on the purchase of the home in California, contending that he merely made a loan to plaintiff.

Under this set of facts and procedural circumstances, it appears that the defendant [172]*172pleading the affirmative defense of set off and compensation would bear the burden of proving that affirmative defense. Alternatively, this is also true regarding the burden placed upon the plaintiff-in-reconvention as regards the facts relied upon in the recon-ventional demand.

The defendant injected a new issue into this suit. There has been no special rule of evidence cited to us, nor have we been able to find such a rule, which would shift the burden of proving set off and compensation from the defendant who relies upon these defenses to the plaintiff who did not even mention the amount in question in her original petition. Nor were any citations afforded us regarding the shifting of the burden of proof in the reconventional demand made herein.

However, the counsel for defendant did cite the following cases and codal articles in support of his contention that “the burden of proof rests upon the one claiming the donation.” Succession of Zacharie, 119 La. 150, 43 So. 988; Succession of Housknecht, 135 La. 818, 66 So. 233, L.R.A.1915B, 396; Succession of Rageur, 155 La. 97, 98 So. 853; Succession of McBurney, 162 La. 758, 111 So. 86; Faison v. Patout, 212 La. 37, 31 So.2d 416; Funderburk v. Funderburk, 214 La. 717, 38 So.2d 502.

These authorities have been carefully examined and have been found inapposite to the case at bar. In each of the cases cited a succession was involved and there was a question of whether or not decedent had actually donated the item in dispute. The party relying upon the donation in those cases was held to have the burden of proof. Since in each instance the donor was dead, then the donee had a strong burden of proof in order to retain the item which he contended had been donated to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 So. 2d 169, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-markley-lactapp-1962.