Carter v. Pujol

14 Teiss. 160, 1917 La. App. LEXIS 18
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1917
DocketNo. 6839
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Teiss. 160 (Carter v. Pujol) 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
Carter v. Pujol, 14 Teiss. 160, 1917 La. App. LEXIS 18 (La. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

His Honor,

EMILE GODCHAUX,

rendered the opinion and decree of the Court, as follows:

Plaintiff is seeking to have defendant take title to certain real estate in compliance with his executory agreement of purchase.

An examination of the record satisfies us that the trial Court properly concluded that the condition of the title tendered is such that defendant should not be compelled to accept a conveyance.

In the first place plaintiff’s title is founded primarily upon an alleged sale to her by her father. Upon the latter’s death shortly thereafter, this transaction was attacked by one of the heirs as constituting a donation in [161]*161disguise, and the suit was regarded as of sufficient gravity by the present plaintiff to justify a compromise on her part by the purchase of this heir’s pretensions in and to the property. And incidentally it might be stated that through a purchase from another heir made, not in plaintiff’s name, but in that of her husband, there apparently still outstands a title adverse to the one which plaintiff now tenders to defendant.

In the next place, since that time two suits have been filed affecting the validity of plaintiff’s title, one instituted before defendant agrred '^o purchase the property — a fact of which he was not apprised — and the other subsequent to his agreement of purchase; and both suits are still pending and undetermined though two years have elapsed since they were instituted.

The litigation presents intricate issues, primarily of fact, concerning intimate family relations peculiarly if not exclusively within the knowledge of the parties thereto and involving charges of misrepresentation and concealment on the part of plaintiff and of others through whom she claims to-have fortified her title.

It is evident that to compel defendant to accept a conveyance will be to impose upon him the burden not only of an apparently serious and complicated litigation, but of a title which will remain wholly unmarketable until its validity has been judicially determined.. The Courts will not sanction the shifting upon an unwilling purchaser the duty of vindicating the title to the property under such conditions.

Beer v. Leonard, 40 A., 845.

James v. Meyer, 41 A., 1101.

Lockhard v. Smith, 47 A., 121.

Neuhauser v. Barthe, 110 La., 825.

[162]*162Opinion and decree, January 22nd, 1917.

We find no error in the judgment and it is accordingly-affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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Related

Neuhauser v. Barthe
34 So. 793 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Teiss. 160, 1917 La. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-pujol-lactapp-1917.