Brown v. Siracusa

152 So. 95
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1934
DocketNo. 1286.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 So. 95 (Brown v. Siracusa) 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
Brown v. Siracusa, 152 So. 95 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

This suit is to correct an alleged error in a deed of sale and to have it reformed according to the contract which plaintiff avers was entered into between the parties thereto.

Fraud and error are alleged by plaintiffs. These allegations are sufficient. The exception of no cause of action filed by defendant was properly overruled.

Merits.

In 1880, Delphine Radler Stevenson bought from Robert Lawrence a lot of ground containing 2⅝ acres situated in the village of Greenwood, St. Mary parish, La.

In 1891, she sold a portion of this tract of land to the Pilgrim Grove Church with a right of way 16 feet wide facing the railroad tract.

In 1910, she sold to Welman Brown, husband of her daughter, Savannah Brown, plaintiff herein, a portion of this lot of ground, having a width of 40 feet by a depth of 100 feet. Brown, instead of fencing in a lot of 40 feet in width and 100 in depth in accordance with his title, fenced in a tract of 58 feet wide by 140 deep.

This property, including the two lots sold, as aforesaid, was inherited by plaintiff, the sole heir of Delphine Radler Stevenson.

John Siracusa, defendant herein, having purchased this property from parties who were not the owners, plaintiff Savannah Brown employed Mr. Walter T. Gilmore, attorney at law of St Mary, to recover the land from Siracusa. Mr. Gilmore was successful and received from Savannah Brown one-half the land for his fee.

After plaintiff had recovered the property, it was sold by her to defendant Siracusa for $1,500; Mr. Gilmore joining in the deed to. ratify the sale.

After alleging that Mr. Gilmore was a part owner of the property, plaintiff avers that he is made a codefendant to have all parties before the court who attempted to convey title to the land to defendant Sira-cusa. Mr. Gilmore is now eliminated from the case as a codefendant, the issues submitted for decision being restricted between Savannah Brown, plaintiff, and John Sira-cusa, defendant.

The act of sale by which plaintiff sold to defendant was prepared by Mr. Gilmore in his office and was sent to Mr. Himel, notary public, by whom it-was authenticated. 1

As hereinabove explained, Welman Brown, *96 husband of plaintiff, had fenced in 58 feet in width and 140 in depth of the land, instead of 40 in width and 100 deep to which he was entitled under his title from Delphine Radler Stevenson, his mother-in-law. He had therefore taken 18 feet of land on the width and 40 in the depth, beyond the limits fixed in his title.

The complaint of the plaintiff is that when she sold the property, it was agreed between her and defendant Siracusa that the sale was to be from “fence to fence,” as the fences stood at the time of the execution of the deed. If a stipulation to that effect had been inserted in the deed, it would necessarily have secured to her 18 feet on the front of the property and 40 in the rear in excess of that which had been, conveyed to Welman Brown, her husband, by her mother, Del-phine Stevenson.

Plaintiff contends, also, that it was agreed between her and defendant that a shelled right of way on the side of the property was to be reserved in the sale for the benefit of the lot deeded to Welman Brown by her mother, which her husband had later sold to Mr. Greenwood, and where plaintiff, with her husband, was living at the time of this transaction.

Her complaint is that the sale was not made to defendant from “fence to fence” as agreed so as to include the 18 and 40 feet to which we have referred, and that it also failed to make the reservation of the shelled right of way, above mentioned.

This act of sale was passed in the office of Mr. Gilmore on December 27, 1930, and had been preceded by a conference on the night of December 26, 1930, held at the home of plaintiff, where defendant and others were present.

In the act of sale executed December 27, 1930, the property is not sold from “fence to fence,” which would have included the reservation of the 18 and 50 feet of ground, nor was there any reservation of a shelled right of way which plaintiff claims should have been inserted in the deed. ■

In the deed, however, the lot which had been sold to the ’ Pilgrim Grove Church in 1891 by the mother of plaintiff, also the lot 40 by 100 deeded to Welman Brown in 1910, by plaintiff’s mother, are excluded in the sale made by plaintiff 'to defendant, executed December 27, 1930, in Mr. Gilmore’s office.

This suit was instituted to have that sale of December 27, 1930, reformed, so as to include the reservations of the land from “fence to fence” and also the shelled right of way which plaintiff contends if so reformed would comply with the conditions contained in the agreement she entered into with defendant Siracusa for the sale of her property.

Plaintiff testifies that on December 26th, the night prior to the execution of the deed, Clarence Cross, John Thomas, and her husband, Welman Brown, were present at the conference she held with defendant in reference to the sale. Her testimony is that at this interview, she told the defendant she would sell the property for $1,500, provided the sale was from “fence to fence”; that she would reserve the land inside the fence and a shelled road or right of way that ran along the side of the property.

Clarence Cross does not say he was present at that conference, but testifies that he was sent by defendant to plaintiff to talk to her about purchasing the land; that he saw plaintiff, who told him to tell defendant she would sell from “fence to fence, with a right of way,” which, we take, as having reference to the shelled road.

John Thomas, who plaintiff says was at the conference the night before the sale, testifies that he was present. His testimony is that plaintiff agreed to sell the land she had inherited from her mother and made no reservations of the land from “fence to fence,” and that there was then no discussion about a right of way but which was discussed the next day at Mr. Gilmore’s office, and it was then the first time he heard the subject mentioned.

The defendant says plaintiff agreed at the conference to sell him all the property for $1,500, that she made no reference of any reservations of the land included from “fence to fence,” and none as to the shelled right of way about which the agreement was made, and which was inserted in the deed when.it was written by Mr. Gilmore at his office the next day.

Welman Brown, plaintiff’s husband, testifies that the' reservations of the land from fence to fence and the right of way were agreed to at that conference, where he was present.

Plaintiff and Welman Brown, her husband, who were at the conference, claim that these reservations were to be inserted in the sale, which is denied by John Thomas and defendant, who state that no such reservations were mentioned or agreed to.

The only other witness who testified in reference to what preceded the conference was Clarence Gross, who said plaintiff had told him to say to defendant that she wanted to make these reservations.

In the deed executed by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-siracusa-lactapp-1934.