Blake v. Hackney

1 La. App. 558, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 76
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1925
DocketNo. 2165
StatusPublished

This text of 1 La. App. 558 (Blake v. Hackney) 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
Blake v. Hackney, 1 La. App. 558, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 76 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

OPINION.

ODOM, J.

On January 26, 1923, the plaintiffs, Doctors Blake and Zeagler, obtained judgment against the defendant, O. F. Hackney, in the sum of $250.00.

On April 12, 1923, the plaintiffs procured the issuance of a writ of fi. fa., which writ was placed in the hands of the sheriff for execution. Under this writ the sheriff seized fifty acres of land situated in the parish of Rapides, which land was seized as the property of the defendant, O. F. Hackney. He Was about to sell this property under the writ in satisfaction of said judgment when he was met with an injunction by Mrs. Annie L. Dupuy Hackney who sets up in her . petition that [559]*559she is-the wife of O'. F. Hackney and she is the owner of the property seized under the writ. She alleges that the property is her separate paraphernal property, the same having • been acquired from L. J. Hakenyos on October 15, 1917, with her separate paraphernal funds; that said property is hot the property of O. F. Hackney- but that it belongs to her and that; should the sheriff sell it such sale will result in injury and damage to herself. She attaches to her petition the deed from L. J. Hakenyos to herself.

The plaintiffs in the original suit, defendants in injunction, filed an exception of no cause of action, which was properly overruled by the lower court, and then filed an answer in which it was denied that the property seized belonged to the' plaintiff in injunction and especially denied that it was purchased with her separate paraphernal funds.

It is especially alleged in the answer that the plaintiff in injunction had never possessed any separate and paraphernal funds, that she owned nothing when she was married to O. F. Hackney, and that in truth and in fact the property which had been seized, while standing in the name of the plaintiff in injunction, belonged to the community which existed between her and her husband, O. F. Hackney, and was therefore subject to the community debts.

The case was tried and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff - in injunction perpetuating the writ, declaring that' the property seized belonged to the plaintiff in injunction and was not subject to the -community debts and ordering the same released and awarding $50.00 as damages for attorney’s fees.

■ From this- judgment the plaintiffs in the original suit and defendants in injunction, have appealed.

OPINION;

We find in the record this agreement as to attorney’s fees:

, “It is agreed by and between counsel for ‘plaintiffs and defendant that $50.00 for attorney’s fees is allowed either on the dissolution or the sustaining of the writ of injunction in this case, with right to sue for additional attorney’s fees.”

Upder this agreement the court below properly awarded judgment in favor of plaintiff in injunction for the sum of $50.00 as attorney’s fees.

The deed from L. J. Hakenyos to Mrs. Annie L. Dupuy Hackney which is dated October 15, 1917, contains the following stipulation:

“The vendee declares that this property is purchased with her own paraphernal and separate funds and is to remain her separate property.”

The deed is signed by her . and her husband who makes himself a party thereto for the purpose of authorizing his wife to purchase.

The plaintiff. testifies that she was married to O. F. Hackney in the year 1907, some ten years previous to the acquisition of the property in controversy in this suit. She testifies that she made the cash payment of $225.00 with money which she acquired from the sale of personal property which was donated by her father previous to her marriage. She says, in substance, that .her father gave her a mare and colt and two cows and calves. She does not state the exact date on which her father gave her the property. She says that about one year after her father gave . her the property she sold the mare and colt back to him for the sum of $150.00 in cash and that subsequently she sold a cow for $50.00 and a yearling for $10.00 and • at other times sold the increase - from these cattle, so that within a few years. [560]*560she accumulated more than enough money to make the first payment on her land. She testified that she kept the identical money which she had received from the sale of her livestock until the date on which she purchased the land; that she had kept this money in an armoir; that 'she did not let her husband get possession of it, as she feared if she did he would spend it.

Her testimony on the point of her ownership of the livestock is corroborated by that of her sister, her' husband, her stepson, a man by the name of Lackney, á colored man by the name of Hinson, and a blacksmith by the name of Reed, who says that he made a branding iron for Mrs. Hackney. All these parties say that when Mrs. Hackney .was married to O. F. Hackney she carried the livestock with her to the place of her husband.

Mrs. Lackney testifies that she bought a cow and calf from Mrs. Hackney and paid her .$50.00 for the same.

There were some witnesses introduced by the defendants, to-wit: J. A. Baker, W. M. Hathorn, C. S. Dupuy, and one or two others, who testified that they had known Mrs. Hackney and her father for many years and some of them spoke positively that she carried no livestock with her when she was married, and that if she ever Owned any they knew nothing of it. Others state that they had known her for a great many years and that she may have owned livestock but if she did they knew nothing of it. There is also testimony in the record that Mrs. Hackney’s father owned no real estate and but little personal property. However, it is conceded by all who testified on that point that he did own some livestock, and one of the witnesses testified that when he knew him he owned a mare and colt and two cows and calves.

After examining all of the testimony carefully we are thoroughly convinced that Mrs. Hackney, the plaintiff in injunction, did own at the time of her marriage some livestock. and that she later disposed of a portion of them and of the increase, and that in this manner she had acquired enough money to make the cash payment on the property in 1917. The witnesses who testified for the plaintiff are positive to the effect that she did own the property and those who testified in favor of the defendants, with one or two exceptions, are not so positive. Their testimony, as a rule, is of a negative character.

So that we hold that the cash payment on the property made by plaintiff in injunction was made with her separate and paraphernal funds, and therefore that the property became her separate property.

There was a deferred payment of $300.00 represented by a note. The plaintiff says that she leased her property for the year 1918 to her stepson and that she received as rental that year one-fourth of the crops produced, which netted her an amount more than sufficient to pay this note. Her husband, O. F. Hackney, and her stepson, who cultivated the land during that year, corroborated her on this point. Her stepson says that he cultivated the land and that he made $1700 or $1800 worth of cotton, onefourtli of which amount he paid to her.

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Bluebook (online)
1 La. App. 558, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-hackney-lactapp-1925.