Brian v. Bonvillain

52 La. Ann. 1794
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,488
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 1794 (Brian v. Bonvillain) 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
Brian v. Bonvillain, 52 La. Ann. 1794 (La. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, C. J.

The plaintiff alleges himself to be the owner of an undivided one-ninth interest in certain real estate in the Parish of St. Mary, described in his petition, which he avers he acquired in August, 1898, through an exchange of property which he made with J. O. Sigur, the owner thereof. That J. O. Sigur acquired same by inheritance from his grandmother, Mrs. Gracieuse Comen, wife of Edward Sigur, who survived her husband; but who died in the year 1894, she dying intestate and being an owner of an undivided one-third interest in the said above described property at her death, and said succession being accepted by her heirs; the said heirs being Mrs. Gracieuse Sigur, wife of Charles E. Noveret; J. O. Sigur, inheriting the interest that would have gone to his father, Hermogene Sigur, deceased, a son of the said Mrs. Gracieuse Comen, and the heirs of Mrs. Gallery, her daughter.

[1795]*1795That the said Mrs. Graeieuse Sigur, nee Oornen, acquired an undivided one-half interest in the said above described property by being the wife of Edward Sigur, who acquired said property during the married life of himself and his said wife, and which was, at his death in 1884, community property between him and his wife, she accepting at his death the community of acquets aSnd gains existing then, she after-wards disposing of a portion of said property, leaving her an undivided one-third interest therein.

That Arthur A. Bonvillam, a resident of the Parish of St. Mary, is in possession of the whole of said above described property, including the interest of petitioner.

That when he acquired said interest in said property, he also acquired the rents and revenues due thereon; that the rental value of the entire property is well worth the sum of four thousand, five hundred dollars per annum, and petitioner is entitled to one-ninth thereof, being five hundred dollars. That Bonvillain has been in possession of and has derived a revenue from said property since the year 1895, and there is due petitioner the sum of five hundred dollars for the use of said property for each of the years, 1895, 1896 and 1899, and the same amount for each additional year until the final termination of this suit, with five per cent, interest thereon from judicial demand.

The prayer of the petition was to be decreed the owner of the property of which plaintiff alleged himself to be the owner, and for judgment for the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars additional for each year until the final termination of the suit, with legal interest from judicial demand.

Defendant, after pleading the general issue, further answered that he denied that the plaintiff ever acquired any right, title or interest in the property described in his petition by reason of the transfer set up in his petition; that the act was a simulation resorted to for the purpose of presenting pretensions in the name of a third person, which the transferer could not advance legally in his own. He denied that at the time of the act of transfer to plaintiff, his transferor had any right, title or interest in the property.

He averred that he, respondent, was the owner of an undivided half of the “Home Plantation,” described in plaintiff’s petition; that he acquired the same for the price (which he had paid) of nineteen [1796]*1796thousand dollars, from Mrs. Gracieuse Noveret, wife of C. E. Noveret, by notarial act of May 14th, 1894.

That on the same day, by notarial act before the same notary, his vendor (Mrs. Noveret), in consideration of the sum of twelve thousand, eight hundred and twelve 50-100 dollars, cash, paid by her at that time, acquired from L. E. Gallery, Jos. E. Gallery, Ohas. H. Gallery, Jos. A. Gallery and Mrs. Bertha R. Minvielle, wife of Dr. George P. Minvielle, all these being the children of Mrs. Olara Sigur, wife of Gustave Gallery, also an heir of Edouard Sigur and of his widow, the undivided third of the said property.

That on the same day, by authentic act passed before said notary, his vendor, Mrs. Gracieuse Noveret, who is the mother of his first wife, Mrs. Elmire Noveret, donated], by authentic act to defendant’s said first wife, the undivided half of said property; that said donation was made entirely subject to collation; that said donee has since died, leaving tjhree minor children, issue of her marriage with defendant; that the value of said donated property was, in said act of donation, fixed at the sum of nineteen thousand dollars, and the obligation to collate was likewise fixed at that sum; that said donor, Mrs'. Gracieuse Noveret, had another child, Ooralie, these two daughters being the sole issue of her marriage with Charles E. Noveret, (who authorized her in the making of said sale, and said donation, but who has since died), and that said Coralie Noveret is now the second wife of defendant.

And he averred that said purchase of said one-third of said plantation, by Mrs. Gracieuse Noveret, on May 14th, 1894, from her aforesaid vendors and có-heirs, was for the sole and express purpose of acquiring so much of the title thereto as she might not then already have had, and for the express purpose of enabling her to make the aforesaid sale and donation to defendant and his first wife, Elmire Noveret.

And defendant averred that said J. Oscar Sigur signed, as a witness, the authentic act by which Mrs. Gracieuse Noveret acquired the said undivided one-third of the said plantation.

He averred that on the same day, by authentic act passed before the same notary, defendant’s first wife, Mrs. Elmire Bonvillain, for six thousand, five hundred dollars ($6,500,00) cash, paid her, then sold to Mrs. Gracieuse Noveret, her mother, a tract of land containing 82 18-100 acres, in the Oypremort prairie; that this sale was made by [1797]*1797the said vendor in order that the said sum arising therefrom might be used, as it was used, by defendant to aid him in purchasing the aforesaid half of the said “Home Plantation,” described in plaintiff’s petition, for which sum defendant became and is now indebted unto the separate estate of his first wife.

He averred that there were three heirs of Edouard Sigur and of his wife, Mrs. Gracieuse Oornen, viz: The said Mrs. Gracieuse Noveret, wife and widow of Charles E. Noveret; Iiermogene Sigur, who died long since and whose sole heir and representative was and is the said J. Oscar Sigur; and Clara Sigur, wife of Gustave Gallery, who died and whose legal representatives were the said L. E. Gallery, Jos. E. Gallery, Charles H. Gallery, John A. Callery and Mrs. Bertha Gallery, wife of Dr. George P. Minvielle.

He averred that on said May 14th, 1894, when the said notarial acts were passed, they being so passed by the said notary at the residence of Oharles E. Noveret, in the Parish of St. Mary, all the parties herein named, as heirs of Edouard Sigur, and of his wife, Mrs. Gracieuse Comen, as well as this defendant, then and there met, and were present and there remained until all said acts, as well as the further authentic act hereinafter mentioned, were passed and signed, and that all of them, especially the said J. Oscar Sigur, took cognizance of all that is alleged as happening on that day at that place.

He averred that it was then and there stated and declared in the presence of the said J. Oscar Sigur, and of defendant, and was then and there accepted as a fact, and so acted upon by all parties mentioned, especially by defendant, that said J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 1794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-v-bonvillain-la-1900.