Boyer v. Amet

41 La. Ann. 721
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1889
DocketNo. 1,345
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 La. Ann. 721 (Boyer v. Amet) 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
Boyer v. Amet, 41 La. Ann. 721 (La. 1889).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Poché, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment which condemned her to restore to plaintiff the sum of $3200 as the purchase price of a tract of land which she had sold to him in December, 1885, and from which he had been evicted under the effect of a judgment rendered by this court in the case entitled J. A. Boyer vs. L. A. Joffrion, sheriff et ah, reported in the Thirty-eighth Annual Reports, p. 657; and by which she was also condemned to refund to plaintiff the additional sum of $277 05 for costs and other expenses incurred hy him in said litigation, which involved the validity of the title transferred to him by defendant.

Tlie substantial facts of the case are as follows:

The property involved herein originally belonged to the succession of [723]*723defendant’s mother, Palmyre Boyer Amet, which was administered by tlie present plaintiff. At a succession sale thereof the property was adjudicated to a stranger who immediately thereafter sold it to A. L. Boyer, a brother of plaintiff, an uncle of defendant, and at that time the tutor of one of the minor children of the deceased.

Some time after she became of age, defendant brought suit against the two Boyers, involving plaintiff’s administration of her mother’s succession, and the acts of tutorship of both of the Boyers as co-tutors of herself and minor sister and brother.

By mutual consent their differences were • submitted to arbitration, and the litigation was thus terminated.

Now it appears that the validity of A. L. Boyer’s purchase of the tract of land in question had also been involved, and that as part of the adjustment of the differences then existing between the parties, Boyer acknowledged the nullity of his purchase, and agreed to retrocede the l>roperty thus acquired by him to the heirs of the succession.

To that effect the act of submission contained the following declaration or article:

“That A. L. Boyer returns to the said heirs the thirty-seven and a half acres of land bought by him in 1878, and that the'said sale to him is hereby annulled, reserving to said A. L. Boyer all rights he had or may have had at the time of the sale of said land.”

This occurred in November, 1881, and shortly thereafter, through the death of her brother and sister, defendant herein became the sole heir of her mother’s succession, and as such she went into the exclusive possession of said land.

In December, 1885, she sold it, with full warranty, to tlie present plaintiff, for $3200 cash. That sale was immediately recorded in the proper office, but no registry was made of the retocessión of A. L. Boyer to tlie heirs of Palmyre Boyer Amet, defendant’s mother.

In May, 1886, A. L. Boyer, in whose name the property yet apparently stood in the records, mortgaged it to a third party, who issued executory process" on his mortgage in 1888.

His proceedings were enjoined by Plaintiff J. A. Boyer, who called his vendor in warranty. But the call was dismissed on exceptions.

The result of the litigation was the enforcement of the mortgage granted by A. L. Boyer, and at the sheriff’s sale thereunder the property was adjudicated to J. A. Boyer, the present plaintiff, for the sum of $1800.

The defense presents for discussion three points which may be summarized as follows:

[724]*7241. That plaintiff who was, at the time of the retrocession from A. L. Boyer to the heirs of Mrs. Amet, the administrator of the succession, was made aware of the nature of defendant’s title, the only delect of which was the failure of registry, which it was his duty to have recorded, first as administrator, and next as purchaser.

2. That plaintiff’s title was anterior in date to the mortgage granted by A. L. Boyer, and that, therefore, he cannot recover his purchase price.

3. That in any event the evicted vendee cannot recover more than the amount paid to complete his title.

I.

The article in which A. L. Boyer acknowleged the nullity of his title was not a matter between himself and the succession or its administrator, but it grew out of an agreement between himself and the heirs directly, in a litigation instituted by the defendant herself, who was then of full age and acting in her own right. The retrocession, so far as it went, was not to the succession or its representative, but it was made for the benefit of, and directly to, the heirs themselves, who thereunder were placed in possession without the intervention or assistance of the administrator. The adjustment of the latter’s account of administration was the subject-matter of other and different stipulations in the act of submission, and was effected by the award of the arbitrator. Hence it was no part of the duty of the administrator to see to the registry of the retrocession, or to attend to its completion.

A decision of the question of the legal effect of A. L. Boyer’s declaration, hereinabove quoted, and relied on by defendant as a retrocession of the property, would not be free of difficulty, when considered in connection with the absence therefrom of the adjndicatee, who was Boyer’s vendor, in connection with die face that it contained no descripition of the lands which it purported to reconvey and with other defects of the forms required in an act to be translative of title. But fortunately the purposes of this cause do not require a solution of these difficulties.

Conceding,' therefore, that the declaration operated legally as a retro-cession of the property, and effected a mutation of title, the sole defect of which was the failure of a proper and timely inscription so as to give it effect as to third parties, the question now recurs whether the failure or neglect of plaintiff to secure an inscription of this act, after his purchase in 1885, can defeat his right to recover the purchase price as evicted vendee.

It must first be premised that, if die neglect of a vendee in this regard [725]*725can be treated as laches on his part, the defendant herself has much to account for, as it appears that she allowed her own title to linger without inscription from the time that she recovered the property, November, 1881, until she sold it to plaintiff, in December, 1885.

But, as applicable to the rights of an evicted vendee, the question has been settled by authority. It came up in the case of Clark vs. O’Neal, 13 Ann. 381, in which the court said : The mere fact that the vendee had neglected to record the act of sale did not release the plaintiff from her obligation to warrant the title.”

In point of fact, the sale to plaintiff by the defendant was properly inscribed, and hence he stands before the court as an evicted vendee unaffected by any laches in connection with the non-registry of his, or of his vendor’s, titles. And we can hut repeat in this connection that she alone is amenable to the censure which she addresses to her vendee.

The contention that plaintiff’s right to recover is defeated by the fact that he had full knowledge of the defect in his vendor’s title, finds no support either in law or in tho facts of the case.

According to defendant’s own theory, the only defect in the title whieh she transferred to plaintiff was tho lack of registry of A. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 La. Ann. 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyer-v-amet-la-1889.