Culver v. Culver

178 So. 252, 188 La. 716, 1937 La. LEXIS 1311
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 29, 1937
DocketNo. 34466.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 178 So. 252 (Culver v. Culver) 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
Culver v. Culver, 178 So. 252, 188 La. 716, 1937 La. LEXIS 1311 (La. 1937).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Mrs. Cora M. Culver, who owned an undivided seven-ninths interest in the N% of the SW% of section 24, township 16 north, range 5 west, filed suit in October, 1934, to have the property partitioned by Imitation. The suit was against Clarence A. Culver and Mrs. Georgia Culver Causey, who owned the remaining interest in the property. Various and sundry issues were raised in the answer of the defendants in that suit, which delayed the proceedings until November 20, 1936, when judgment was rendered ordering the property sold in order to effect the partition.

A writ was issued directing the sheriff to sell the property in accordance with the judgment. The sheriff advertised it for sale at public auction to the last and highest bidder, for cash, the sale to take place on January 9, 1937. On that day Bert Kouns became the purchaser for $3,250, his bid being the last and highest. He paid the price to the sheriff, who executed a deed in his favor. The sheriff turned the proceeds of the sale over to the clerk of court, who was designated in the judgment as the notary to complete the partition.

While the proceeds were yet in the hands of the clerk of court, Kouns, the purchaser, brought the present suit against the plaintiffs and defendants in the partition suit, to set the sale aside and to recover the sum he had paid to the sheriff as the purchase price, on the ground that the title conveyed to him was defective and suggestive of litigation. The sheriff and the clerk of court were made parties. He asked for, and was granted, a preliminary injunction restraining the clerk from distributing the proceeds of the sale.

Various exceptions, pleas, and defenses were urged, among them being the exceptions of no cause of action and pleas of *719 estoppel. As to the merits, defendants de-i nied generally the allegations of nullity set up by plaintiff.

There was judgment for plaintiff, annulling the sale a.nd ordering the return to him of the amount he had paid. Defendants appealed.

The grounds on which Kouns, the plaintiff in the present suit, seeks to set aside the sale and to have returned to him the price of the adjudication, as set out in his petition, are that, subsequent to the date on which Mrs. Culver instituted her suit to have the property partitioned and prior to the date on which the judgment ordering it sold was- rendered — in other words, while the partition suit was pending — Mrs. Cul-ver, the plaintiff, Clarence A. Culver, and Mrs. Causey, defendants in that suit, leased the land by separate instruments for oil and gas development, and, in addition thereto, sold, also by separate acts, certain mineral interests in the land; that the lessees and the vendees of these mineral interests were not made parties to the partition suit, and for that reason his attorneys advised him, after the sale, that “very probably” the sale was null and void, “or, at any rate, title to said property in petitioner would be hazardous and suggestive of litigation”; that his attorneys had advised him further that, inasmuch as the lease holders and owners of mineral interests had recorded their leases and titles prior to the date on which the judgment ordering the partition was rendered, “in all probability the said sales of mineral interests and oil and gas leases would remain in effect and petitioner very probably would not obtain good and valid title to the whole of said property, including mineral rights and other real and personal rights constituting appurtenances to said land; but that in any event, title in petitioner to the whole of said land, including the appurtenances thereto, such as mineral rights and gas rights, would be hazardous and very suggestive of litigation.” Paragraph 11, Petition.

It is alleged in paragraph 13 of plaintiff’s petition: “That said lands are valuable principally because they have oil and gas possibilities, they being within one and one-half (1%) miles of a large producing gas well and within the same distance of other drilling operations for oil and gas; and that the value of said lands, including all oil, gas and mineral rights and other appurtenances thereunto, is set at the sum of three thousand two hundred fifty dollars ($3,250.00).”

And in section 14 it is alleged: “That petitioner does not want to acquire the said lands, with said mineral interests and oil and gas interests outstanding in said other parties; but he is willing to comply with his said bid and accept a deed to said property, provided that the whole of said property, including valid title to the naked land and valid title to all oil, gas and mineral rights pertaining thereto, is conveyed to him.”

Plaintiff’s counsel in their brief seem to concede that the adjudication conveyed to him good and valid title to the “naked land”;' that is, the land without the mineral rights. Their argument is that the sale to effect the partition did not divest the lessees and vendees of the mineral interests of their rights and that by the adjudication *721 he acquired no more than what might be termed the “naked ownership” of the land, whereas plaintiff was entitled to and expected to acquire the land and all its “appurtenances,” including the minerals; and that, if it be held that he acquired the land with the minerals, the recorded leases and sales of minerals operated as a cloud upon his title, suggestive of litigation. They argue that, under the circumstances, the plaintiff should not be held bound by his bid, and, since he paid the price under “compulsion,” the judgment ordering the -return of the price is correct and should be sustained.

Under the view which we take of the case as made out by the pleading and the evidence, it is not necessary to discuss the questions presented and argued in plaintiff’s brief. Our conclusion is that, even though plaintiff acquired no more than the naked ownership of the land, he is not entitled to recover the price which he paid. The reason is that he knew before and at the time of the adjudication that the land had been leased for oil and gas development and that mineral interests therein had been sold by the owners while the partition suit was pending, and that the lessees and vendees of the mineral interests were protesting and had notified the sheriff, who acted as auctioneer, of their outstanding interest in that property, and that they had not been made parties to the suit. In other words, he knew at the time of and before the sale all he knew later, was acquainted with all the defects in the title of which he is now complaining. And yet he accepted the adjudication and paid the price.

Paragraph 8 of plaintiff’s petition reads as follows:

“That said sales and assignments of mineral rights and interests and oil and gas leases were of record in the Conveyance Records of Bienville Parish, Louisiana at the time of the trial and the rendition of judgment in said suit, entitled ‘Mrs. Cora M. Culver vs. Clarence A. Culver et al. and the said purported sale by said Sheriff,- and were then in full force and effect and have not been canceled and erased from said Conveyance Records.”

Paragraph 10 reads as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Crist v. Dickson Welding, Inc.
957 F.2d 1281 (Fifth Circuit, 1992)
Daniels v. Conn
378 So. 2d 451 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Richmond v. Zapata Development Corp.
350 So. 2d 875 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1977)
Collins v. Slocum
317 So. 2d 672 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
Bank of Louisiana v. Argonaut Insurance Company
248 So. 2d 349 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
Davis v. Lewis & Lewis
78 So. 2d 173 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1954)
Weingart v. Delgado
16 So. 2d 254 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1943)
Mayer v. Ford
12 So. 2d 618 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 So. 252, 188 La. 716, 1937 La. LEXIS 1311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culver-v-culver-la-1937.