Blunson v. Knighton

140 So. 302
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 1932
DocketNo. 4276
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 140 So. 302 (Blunson v. Knighton) 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
Blunson v. Knighton, 140 So. 302 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PALMER, J.

This is a suit for a partition of a lot of ground situated in the city of Shreveport. Plaintiff alleges that the property in question was acquired by defendant, Abe Knigh-ton, during the existence of the community of acquets and gains between him and plain-, tiff’s mother, Eliza Knighton; that her mother subsequently died, leaving plaintiff as her sole heir; that, she and defendant own said property in the proportion of one half to each; that she has been placed in possession of her undivided one-half interest by judgment of the court; that said property is worth approximately $3,000, and is not susceptible of a partition in kind; that she is unwilling to remain any longer as owner in indivisión and desires a partition by licitation. She prays for a judgment in conformity to her demands.

The . defendant Abe Knighton answered plaintiff’s demands, denying each of her material allegations. He then alleges that he acquired this property in 1911 as husband of Eliza Williams Knighton and that she obtained a judgment of final divorce from him on October 29, 1913, and that she did not, within thirty days thereafter, or at any subsequent time, accept the community that had existed between them, and that her failure to do so operates as a renunciation of her community rights, thereby barring her and her heirs from asserting the rights claimed by plaintiff in this suit.

In the alternative, he alleges, in effect, that after the said judgment of divorce was signed (just five days afterwards), he executed before a notary public who had represented, as attorney, the wife of defendant in said divorce suit, a mortgage upon the whole of said property and' that S. J. Harman of Caddo parish became the owner of the mortgage note, in good faith, believing it to be secured by mortgage on the whole lot; that Harman later foreclosed said mortgage and purchased said property at the sale; that Harman, after holding title to said property Tor nearly five years, resold the property to defendant Abe Knighton, and that Har-man, during his period of ownership, had possession of it; that since he acquired 'said title from Harmon he has held possession thereof continuously. He alleges that neither he nor Harman had any knowledge of any outstanding claims of any one to any portion of said property, so on these facts he pleads the prescription of ten years. He prays for a rejection of plaintiff’s demands and in the alternative that his plea of ten years’ prescription be sustained and plaintiff’s demands rejected.

In the meantime, the defendant Abe Knigh-ton died, so on May 13,1931, Mary B. Hatcher appeared in the case by supplemental answer, alleging the death of Abe Knighton and that she is his sole heir, setting out her relationship to him. She makes substantially the same allegations which were made by the original defendant, but supplemented them in part with more detailed averments. She adds, in the alternative, the defense of estop-pel based upon the ground that plaintiff and her deceased mother stood by in 1915 when Harman bought the property at foreclosure sale without offering any protest. She further pleads in the alternative that Abe Knigh-ton made a full settlement with his wife, Eliza Williams Knighton, on her community claims. She then pleads in the alternative prescriptions of “one, two, three, five, ten and fifteen years.”

She further supplements the defenses urged on behalf of the original defendant with the further plea of estoppel, alleging as a basis that plaintiff, acting through another party, undertook to foreclose a mortgage which Abe Knighton had executed on the whole of said properties, using her attorney in this case, ■thereby admitting that these properties belonged to Abe Knighton while he lived and to her since his death. She then alleges that she is entitled to call S. J. Harman in warranty in the case and he was accordingly made a party to the suit.

S. J. Harman answers to the effeet that he bought the property in good faith at a foreclosure sale and took actual possession thereof and had no knowledge that Abe Knighton had ever been married; that he believed Abe Knighton was the sole owner of said property because the records of Caddo parish disclosed nothing to the contrary. He pleads that if plaintiff or her mother had any claims against this property, he was without any knowledge thereof and that they stood by and permitted the property to be sold at foreclosure sale, at which time he purchased it, without assert•ing any claims thereto, and hence, in the alternative, he pleads estoppel, and further pleads prescription of five and ten years. He avers that the foundation of his title was a mortgage executed on said property by Abe Knighton and that defendant Mary B. Hatcher, heir of Abe Knighton, is estopped [304]*304to call him in warranty, she having accepted the succession of Abe Knighton. He prays that plaintiff’s demands be rejected. In the alternative he prays that the pleas of estoppel and prescription urged against plaintiff be sustained and her demands rejected.

Harman further prays that his plea of estoppel against Mary B. Hatcher be sustained and that her call in warranty be rejected.

S. J. Harman, later and in a separate appearance, pleads prescription of thirty days under articles 2419 and 2420 of the Civil Code, basing that plea upon the allegations that Eliza Williams Knighton, through whom plaintiff is claiming, obtained an absolute divorce from Abe Knighton and did not accept, nor claim any part of, the community property, if there was any. He further pleads in this same appearance the prescription of five years under article 3543 of the Civil Code. He prays that these pleas be sustained and plaintiff’s suit dismissed.

After the case was tried, but before it was submitted, the substituted defendant, Mary B. Hatcher, filed a motion to reopen the case, alleging that plaintiff had testified on the trial that her mother and father were married and divorced in Red River parish; that after the trial her'attorney, assisted by the clorlr of court, had examined the records of Red River parish with the result that no such divorce could be fpund and that “the search by the Clerk and by mover’s attorney clearly shows that there was no such divorce.” The district judge denied this motion and counsel for defendant reserved a formal bill of exception to the ruling of the court.

The judgment of the lower court overruled the pleas of estoppel filed by the defendant and by the warrantor and decreed plaintiff and defendant each to be the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property in question, and that the property is not divisible in kind and ordering a partition by licitation, the cost to be borne by the mass. The judgment is silent as to the demands of S. J. Har-man on the call in warranty, but there was filed in . this court, on the day the case was submitted, a stipulation, signed by the attorneys of all the parties in interest, declaring that the- trial court did “sustain the war-rantor’s plea of estoppel against the defendant and rejected the defendant’s claims against warrantor.” We shall therefore •recognize the judgment of the district court as including this stipulation. From that judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The Facts.

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blunson-v-knighton-lactapp-1932.