Butler v. Burks

99 So. 2d 180
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 26, 1957
Docket8722
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 So. 2d 180 (Butler v. Burks) 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
Butler v. Burks, 99 So. 2d 180 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

99 So.2d 180 (1957)

Roxie Ann BUTLER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Indiana BURKS et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 8722.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

November 26, 1957.
Rehearing Denied December 19, 1957.
Writ of Certiorari Denied February 10, 1958.

*181 Dhu & Lea S. Thompson, Monroe, for appellant.

Howell H. Heard, West Monroe, for appellees.

GLADNEY, Judge.

Roxie Ann Butler instituted an action in jactitation against the two named defendants, Indiana Burks and Judge Taylor, praying for a decree quieting petitioner in her possession of certain property, situated in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, and requiring the defendants to assert and prove their claims of title thereto. As a result of responsive pleadings thereafter filed, the suit was converted into a petitory action and the issue of title was presented for determination. The cause came on for trial of the controversy on its merits, wherein the primary point at issue was whether the property was part of the community of acquets and gains created by the marriage between Richard Taylor and Georgia Elmore Taylor. The decree of the court recognized Judge Taylor and Indiana Burks as owners of an undivided 1/24th interest each to the subject property, described as:

"The Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (SE¼ of SW¼) of Section Five (5); and the East half of the Northwest Quarter (E½ of NW¼) and Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (NW¼ of NW¼) and the East half of the Southwest Quarter (E½ of SW¼) of Section Eight (8), Township 17 North, Range 1 East."

From the judgment so rendered, plaintiff has appealed.

*182 Our approach to a resolution of the case requires recitation of the family history of the parties litigant, plaintiff and defendants, and a deraignment of the title of the property herein involved from a common owner.

Roxie Ann Butler is the sole and only heir of Georgia Elmore Taylor and was recognized as such in probate proceedings following the death of Georgia Elmore Taylor in 1951. Georgia and Novie Elmore were the only children of M. M. Elmore, who died intestate about the year of 1924. He had become the owner of the two hundred forty acres of land hereinabove described. In 1920 Elmore mortgaged his property to the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans for the sum of $1,500, the act of mortgage providing for payments of $93.75 annually following the first installment of $97.50. At the time of the execution of the mortgage, Elmore was aged and his physical condition no longer permitted him to actively farm his property. For a purpose not disclosed by the instrument, on December 30, 1922, M. M. Elmore deeded his property with assumption of the Federal Land Bank mortgage to his only children then living, Novie Elmore and Georgia Elmore Taylor. The deed recited Novie Elmore was a femme sole over the age of majority and Georgia Taylor was a married woman whose husband was Richard Taylor. The price or consideration was declared to be the sum of $1,500, represented as being the amount due on the Federal Land Bank mortgage, the entire payment of which was assumed by the named grantees. No other consideration is mentioned in the deed. A further examination of the instrument reveals that it was not placed of public record until December 1, 1924, at which time it was recorded in Conveyance Book No. 133, page 151, of the records of Ouachita Parish. The only signatories to the instrument were Novie Elmore, Georgia Taylor, M. M. Elmore and the latter's wife, Charity Elmore, together with the witnesses and notary public. Richard Taylor is not mentioned in the deed.

On December 6, 1918, Richard Taylor married Georgia Elmore Calhoun and became her third husband. Her first husband was Peter Young, who died prior to her second marriage, which was Albert Calhoun. She was divorced from Calhoun prior to her marriage with Richard Taylor. The sole issue of the three marriages was her daughter Roxie Ann Young, the plaintiff in this case, who was married to Adna Butler in the year of 1921. Richard Taylor had once before been married and then to Mary Zeigler, who died in 1918 prior to his marriage to Georgia Elmore. Nine children were born of the first marriage, six of whom, including the two defendants, Judge Taylor and Indiana Burks, survived their father. Richard Taylor died during the year 1944.

Georgia Taylor, in 1947, entered into a partition deed with the heirs of Novie Elmore for a division of the entire Elmore tract and received as her portion of the undivided property, the North Half of the Northwest Quarter (N½ of NW¼) and the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (SE¼ of NW¼), Section Eight (8), Township Seventeen (17), North, Range One (1) East. The claims asserted by Judge Taylor and Indiana Burks antedate the partition of the property between Georgia Taylor and the heirs of Novie Elmore, and therefore affect the undivided one-half interest in the Elmore property as conveyed to her by her father. The record further reflects that on June 29, 1945, Frank Taylor, Beulah Fleming, Arie Williams and Elijah Taylor quit-claimed unto Georgia Taylor all their right, title and interest to which they might have had any claim by inheritance from Richard Taylor, the relinquishment affecting the entire property deeded by M. M. Elmore to his two daughters. It is established that at the time of Richard Taylor's death in 1944, his sole surviving heirs were the children named in the quit-claim deed, and Judge Taylor and Indiana Burks, who did not sign the quit-claim instrument.

The decision of the trial court held the property acquired from M. M. Elmore in *183 the name of Georgia Taylor fell into the acquets and gains of the then existing marriage between Georgia and Richard Taylor, and that consequently Judge Taylor and Indiana Burks must be recognized as having an interest in that property. We are in agreement with the opinion of the judge a quo in that the principal legal question posed herein is whether or not the property acquired by Georgia Taylor from M. M. Elmore became separate property of Georgia Taylor or whether it fell into the community existing between Georgia Taylor and her husband, Richard Taylor.

The determination of the community or paraphernal status of property claimed through or by one of the spouses has repeatedly received the consideration of the appellate courts of this state, a fact disclosed in the reported decisions. From the jurisprudence certain legal principles have been firmly established which are uniformly recognized by the bench and bar. It is no longer subject to serious question that the status of the property is fixed at the time of its purchase, and where it was acquired during the existence of the community, the presumption is that it is community property. LSA-Civil Code articles 2399, 2402 and 2405. The presumption so created, however, can be overcome upon proper proof, the requirements of which were pronounced in Betz v. Riviere, 1947, 211 La. 43, 29 So.2d 465, 472, wherein the Supreme Court set forth the following rules.

"Under our community system of law all property acquired by either spouse during the existence of the marriage is presumed to fall into the community of acquets and gains and to overcome this presumption the wife claiming the property in her own name to be her separate property must establish (1) the paraphernality of the funds used for the purchase; (2) her individual administration of the property; and (3) that the money was invested by her.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 2d 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-burks-lactapp-1957.