Byrd v. Babin

200 So. 294, 196 La. 902, 1940 La. LEXIS 1207
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 2, 1940
DocketNo. 35441.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 200 So. 294 (Byrd v. Babin) 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
Byrd v. Babin, 200 So. 294, 196 La. 902, 1940 La. LEXIS 1207 (La. 1940).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This is a suit instituted by Mrs. Estelle McGehee Byrd, wife of W. T. Byrd, against Louis U. Babin and John T. Lay-cock to recover a certain sum of money which she alleges is due her as her share of the profits realized from the sale of her separate property.

Plaintiff, as owner of a tract of land situated near the City of Baton Rouge, entered into a contract with defendants to sell them the land for $27,500, plus one half of the profits which might result from the sale of lots into which this tract was to be subdivided by the defendants.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Byrd, is a married woman living with her husband under the regime of the community, and the defendants excepted to her capacity to sue on the ground that the amount she seeks to recover is a community debt and not her individual debt, and therefore the suit should have been brought by her husband as master of the community. The exception was sustained by the district court, but, on appeal, was overruled by this Court and the case remanded for further proceedings. Byrd v. Babin, 181 La. 466, 159 So. 718.

After the case was remanded to the district court, the defendants filed exceptions of vagueness and of no cause or right of action, and, in the alternative, of partial lack of cause or right of action. The exception of vagueness was overruled. The exception of no cause or right of action was partially overruled and partially sustained.

Prior to the trial of the case, John T. Laycock, one of the defendants, was adjudged a voluntary bankrupt and, upon *907 proper motion, was eliminated from the case. His trustee, B. E. Perkins, was made a party to the suit and defended it as such.

The trial on the merits resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants jointly in the sum of $3,-646.71, with interest and costs. Louis U. B.abin, one of the defendants, appealed. B. E. Perkins, trustee in bankruptcy of John T. Laycock, did not appeal, nor did Mrs. Byrd, the plaintiff, appeal.

Plaintiff has answered the appeal, asking to have the judgment amended by increasing the amount awarded her to $6,-650.48, and by changing the judgment from a joint to a solidary one. Plaintiff has also filed a plea of estoppel in this Court, alleging that appellant is estopped to contend that the property in dispute is not shown to be the separate property of appellee and that the allegations of her petition are insufficient to allow proof as to its paraphernal character. Louis U. Babin, defendant and appellant, has filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s suit if the Court should, in answer to plaintiff’s prayer, amend the judgment so far as to make it solidary instead of joint. Appellant avers that if the obligation sued on is solidary plaintiff has, without reservation, remitted her claim as to appellant’s co-defendant, except to the. extent of the joint judgment, and accordingly has released appellant from any obligation to her.

The appeal presents for review not only the judgment on the merits, but also certain preliminary rulings of the trial judge.

The appellant excepted to plaintiff’s petition on the ground that it fails to disclose with what funds she acquired her alleged paraphernal property, and also on the further ground that it fails to set forth the facts and details upon which she bases her claim for a share of the interest and revenues collected by defendants from the lots and parcels of land sold by them. The exception was overruled and appellant complains of the ruling. Appellant’s complaint is not well founded.

Appellant and his co-defendant, who has not appealed, prayed for oyer of plaintiff’s titles and that she be compelled to produce and file them in Court within ten days, in default of which, that her suit be dismissed. The prayer for oyer was granted by the trial judge. In compliance with his order, plaintiff produced and filed in court certified copies of the two deeds under which she acquired the property. In both deeds it is disclosed that plaintiff purchased the property “with her separate, paraphernal funds, under her separate management and control,” and that plaintiff’s husband, W. T. Byrd, appeared and signed to authorize his wife. Plaintiff’s petition shows that in the transaction in which defendants acquired the property from plaintiff, her husband again appeared for the purpose of authorizing his .wife. In the sale from plaintiff to defendants, the property was described as being the same property that plaintiff acquired in the deeds produced and filed by her in response to the prayer and order of oyer. In these instruments, the paraphernal character of the property conveyed to defendants was specifically declared, which declaration was consented to by plaintiff’s husband who also joined in *909 this suit for the purpose of aiding his wife. The appellee has filed in this Court a plea of estoppel, based on these facts.

We do not see how appellant can pretend ignorance of plaintiff’s title, since, as shown by the allegations of the petition and the documents produced and filed by plaintiff in response to the prayer and order for oyer, appellant’s title is itself predicated on plaintiff’s title. By now claiming that the property acquired by him and his co-defendant, who has not appealed, was not plaintiff’s separate and paraphernal property, appellant is directly attacking his own title.

So far as plaintiff’s claim for interest, rents, and revenues is concerned, the nature and amount of the claim are set forth and the period within which they are alleged to have been collected by defendants is given, viz., up to the 15th day of June, 1930. The failure to give further particulars is clearly due to the fact that those particulars were in the possession of the defendants who suffered no disadvantage because the details of plaintiff’s claim were not more fully stated. If well founded plaintiff’s demand is not beyond relief. The defendants, and not the plaintiff, kept the books and records of their transaction.

The exception of no cause or right of action, filed alternatively after the exception of vagueness was overruled, was leveled not only at the entire petition generally, but also specifically at plaintiff’s demand for rents and revenues, interest collected, one-half interest in the unsold property, and for a solidary judgment against defendants.

The trial judge overruled the exception so far as it was leveled at the entire petition and so far as it related to the rents, revenues, and interest received from the property, but he sustained the exception so far as it related to the demand for a one-half interest in the property remaining unsold. The question as to whether the obligation sued on is joint or solidary was referred to the merits.

On the merits, the defendants reaffirmed their contention raised on the exception, filed in limine, that plaintiff was without right to institute the suit, and they also objected on the same grounds to the introduction of evidence. At the termination of the trial, the defendants again urged their exception and argued it orally to the trial judge. The exception was again overruled, and appellant now asljs this.Court to revise the rulings of the trial judge and to dismiss the suit. We can not accede to appellant’s request. There was no error in the rulings of the trial judge.

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Bluebook (online)
200 So. 294, 196 La. 902, 1940 La. LEXIS 1207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrd-v-babin-la-1940.