Campbell v. Thomas

140 So. 2d 163, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1811
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1962
DocketNo. 532
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 140 So. 2d 163 (Campbell v. Thomas) 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
Campbell v. Thomas, 140 So. 2d 163, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1811 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge.

Plaintiff, Jeff Campbell, instituted this suit for judgment decreeing him to be the true and lawful owner of a 16.5-acre tract of land in LaSalle Parish, and decreeing that a deed from Sim B. Thomas to Clyde P. Ganey, dated March 8, 1928, be reformed and corrected to show that the same tract of land was actually conveyed by that deed. Plaintiff contends that by this 1928 deed Sim B. Thomas intended to sell to Clyde P. Ganey, and Ganey intended to purchase, the following described property situated in LaSalle Parish, Louisiana, to-wit:

The North Half of the Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (N 1/2 of SW 14 of NE i/4, of Section 2, Township 8 North, Range 2 East, Less and Except three (3) acres previously sold to Mary Ireland and Less and Except one-half ('i/2) acre, more or [165]*165less, previously sold to George Hassan, containing 16.5 acres, more or less.

Plaintiff alleges, however, that a mistake was made in the description contained in that deed, and that because of that mistake the deed erroneously purports to convey to the purchaser the East Half, instead of the North Half, of the 40-acre tract therein described (less three and one-half acres previously sold). Accordingly, plaintiff contends that he is entitled to judgment reforming the 1928 deed to show the correct description of the property which the parties intended to convey.

The defendants in this suit are the surviving heirs of Sim B. Thomas, now deceased, who was the vendor in the deed which plaintiff seeks to reform. The defendants filed an answer denying substantially all of the facts alleged by plaintiff, and praying that his demands be rejected. On the day of the trial defendants also filed an exception of no cause of action, which was overruled by the trial court, and an exception of no right of action, which was referred to the merits.

After trial of the case, judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiff and against defendants, decreeing that the deed from Thomas to Ganey, dated March 8, 1928, be reformed and corrected to show that the North half, rather than the East half, of the 40-acre tract therein described was conveyed by that deed. Defendants have appealed from that judgment.

The evidence establishes that on and pri- or to February 8, 1913, Sim B. Thomas owned property in LaSalle Parish which included a tract, containing approximately 40 acres, described as the Southwest quarter of the Northeast quarter (SW 14 of NE l/Q of Section 2, Township 8 North, Range 2 East of the Louisiana Meridian. On February 8, 1913, Thomas sold to J. A. Chapman the South half of that 40-acre tract, and after Chapman’s death his widow sold it to J. U. Greer, the deed to Greer being dated June 15, 1914. Since 1914, therefore, Greer has owned the South half of that 40-acre tract.

After 1913 and before March 8, 1928, Sim B. Thomas sold a one-half acre tract to George Hassan and a three-acre tract to Mrs. Mary Thomas Ireland, both of the tracts so conveyed being located in and constituting parts of the Northeast ten acres of the 40-acre tract originally owned by Thomas.

On March 8, 1928, the deed which plaintiff now seeks to reform was executed. By that deed Sim B. Thomas purported to convey to Clyde P. Ganey a tract of land containing 16.5 acres, more or less, which is described in the deed as being the East half of the original 40-acre tract, less the three and one-half acres previously sold. Thomas at that time, of course, did not own all of the East half of that forty (less the acreage specifically excepted from the sale), a portion of it having been previously sold by him to Chapman in 1914. He did own all of the North half of the forty (less the part specifically excepted) and, as has already been pointed out, plaintiff contends that the parties to that sale actually intended to transfer title to the North half of that 40-acre tract.

On July 28, 1929, Clyde P. Ganey sold the property to M. I. Campbell, but in that deed, as in the sale to Ganey, the property was described as the East half of the 40-acre tract. M. I. Campbell owned the property for almost 30 years, and on January 8, 1959, he sold it to his son, Jeff Campbell, who is the plaintiff in this suit. In the 1959 deed to plaintiff the same allegedly erroneous description was used, the deed purporting to convey to the purchaser the East half of that forty. M. I. Campbell died in 1960, which was prior to the time this suit was filed.

Clyde P. Ganey, the only living original party to the deed which plaintiff seeks to reform, testified that in that transaction he intended to buy from Thomas, and Thomas intended to sell to him, the North half of that 40-acre tract. He stated that at the time of the purchase he walked over the [166]*166property with Thomas, and that Thomas pointed out to him that Greer owned the South half of the forty and that he was selling to Ganey the North half. According to Ganey’s testimony, some time prior to 1928 Greer constructed a fence running east and west dividing the North half from the South half of this 40-acre tract, and that this fence was in existence at the time he and Thomas walked over the land. After the sale was completed Ganey built a house in the Northeast ten acres of that forty, and he lived in that house for approximately one year, until he sold the property to M. I. Campbell. He further testified that while he owned the property he sold timber from the northwest 10 acres of the forty, and that the timber was cut and removed from that particular part of the land at that time.

The evidence further establishes, without contradiction, that immediately after M. I. Campbell purchased the property from Ganey in 1928 he went into possession of all of the North half of the original 40-acre tract (less the three and one-half acres excepted from the sale). He farmed parts of it, fenced' portions of it, including the extreme northwestern portion of the forty, and cut -timber from various parts of the North half of said forty. The evidence also shows that the fence, originally constructed by Greer, does not extend the .full length of the line separating the North half from the South half of that forty, but it does extend along the major portion of that line, and in our opinion it constitutes a visible marker separating the North and South halves of that tract. This fence has been maintained in that location continuously since 1928, with Ganey and his assigns occupying the land immediately north of that fence and the Greers occupying the land south of it. Neither Sim B. Thomas, nor any of his heirs, ever claimed title to any part of the North half of this forty from March 8, 1928, until shortly before this suit was instituted in 1961.

No right, title or interest in and to the North half of this forty has been acquired by a third person since the execution of the deed which plaintiff seeks to reform, so no issue is raised in this suit as to the right of a third person who may have purchased property on the faith of the public records'.

After considering all of the facts, the trial judge concluded that an error was made in the description contained in the 1928 deed to Ganey, and that plaintiff was entitled to judgment reforming and correcting that deed to show the true intent of the parties. In his written reasons for judgment the trial judge said:

“The testimony of Mr. Ganey is in no wise contradicted.

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 2d 163, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-thomas-lactapp-1962.