Dimmer v. Spearman

178 So. 764
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 1937
DocketNo. 5518.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 178 So. 764 (Dimmer v. Spearman) 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
Dimmer v. Spearman, 178 So. 764 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The widow and heirs of Gus Gipson, deceased, bring this action to have canceled and annulled, because of alleged error of fact and law on their part, sales made-by them in the year 1919 to N. S. and W. R. Spearman of undivided interests in and to the “S.W.% of Section 15, Township 23, Range 16 West, and 51% acres in Section 22, same Township and Range described in their petition, and situated in Caddo Parish, Louisiana.”

One sale conveys an undivided two-fifths interest in said tracts, and the other conveys a one-tpnth interest therein.

It was the intention of the grantors, reflected from the allegations of their petition, to sell and convey such interest in the lands described as was by them acquired by in *765 heritance from Gus Gipson, deceased, and “which he inherited from his father, Richard Gipson.” It is not disclosed how the widow of Gus Gipson could have inherited from Richard Gipson, the father of Gus.

The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is clearly disclosed from the below-quoted articles of their petition:

“7. That said sales and deeds were and are null and void because the said vendors therein erroneously believed then that they and the said minors actually owned the interests and titles therein sought to be conveyed, but that they did not in fact own such interests and titles in the said property, and were therefore without any legal right or authority to sell the same.
“8. That at the time the said vendors believed that they and the said minors had inherited said interests in said property as follows: that Gus Gipson, Sr., had inherited an undivided one-tenth interest in said property from his deceased father, Richard Gipson, by being a legal heir of his said father, and an undivided one-tenth interest in said property from his deceased mother, Louisa Tyson Gipson, by being a legal heir of his said mother, and that the said vendors and the said minors as the widow and children of the said Gus Gipson, Sr., had inherited that interest in the said property from and through him, but that as a matter of fact, as your petitioners have lately learned and now allege to be true, the said Gus Gipson, Sr. was not a legal heir of his deceased father, Richard Gipson, and did not inherit any interest in said property from him, and was not a legal heir of his deceased mother, Louisa Tyson Gipson, but on the contrary was one of her natural children, and only inherited from her a right to have himself recognized as one of her irregular heirs and as such to be put in possession of a portion of her estate by judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, and that neither the said Gus Gipson, Sr., nor your petitioners, as his legal heirs and representatives have yet been recognized as such heir or heirs and sent into possession of any portion of her estate by final judgment of any court of competent jurisdiction.”

Tender to the vendees of the price of each of said sales is alleged. The prayer in substance is that said deeds and the sales they evidence be decreed null and void, and that petitioners be released and relieved “from the warranty and any and all other obligations arising from or under or as a result of or in connection with the said deeds,” etc., upon paying over to defendants or depositing to their credit in bank or court registry the price of said sales.

Defendants, being residents of the state of Texas, were cited through a curator ad hoc who appeared in the case through counsel.

A prayer for oyer of the deeds sought to be annulled was first filed, but before being passed on, defendants in one pleading filed and urged exceptions as follows:

1. Lack of sufficient interest or right in plaintiffs to bring and prosecute the suit;

2. Prematurity of the action;

3. No cause or right of action;

4. Prescription of five and ten years, as is provided in articles 3542 and 3544 of the Revised Civil Code; and

5. Nonjoinder of parties.

The prayer for oyer, the plea of prematurity, and the exceptions of no cause and no right of action were all sustained and the suit dismissed. From judgment thus disposing of the' case, plaintiffs have appealed. Here, by answer, defendants urge us to amend this judgment by sustaining the pleas of lack of interest, prescription, and the exception of nonjoinder.

The prayer for oyer is obviously well founded and was properly sustained, but compliance with the court’s order thereon would virtually have been futile because in the same breath the suit was wholly dismissed on other pleas. The plea of prematurity and the exceptions of no cause and no right of action are so closely related in their legal aspects that they may be consolidated for the purpose of discussion. These are buttressed upon the legal proposition that a vendor in an act of sale of real estate is without right, cause.or interest, and is legally estopped, to seek its annulment for the alleged reason that he at the time of sale was not vested with a valid title to or interest in the land sought to be conveyed; and particularly so if the vendee is not being disturbed in his possession and chooses to stand upon the title deed given him by the grantor. ’ As is clearly reflected from the above-quoted allegations of their petition, plaintiffs’ position is that as they only had the right as the natural or irregular heirs of Gus Gipson to be recognized as owners and placed in possession of the property constituting his estate and had *766 not availed themselves of this legal right, they were not the owners of the interests they sought to convey to the Spearmans, and because of-error on their part in this respect, they should be relieved from all obligations under their solemn contracts by judicial annulment thereof. We do not hesitate to conclude that this position is basically unsound. Article 2452 of the Civil Code is relied on by plaintiffs. It reads as follows:

“The sale of a thing belonging to another person is null; it may give rise to damages, when the buyer knew not that the thing belonged to another person.”

And article 949, which deals with the rights of natural or irregular heirs, follows:

“Natural children and the surviving husband or wife before being put into possession of the estate left to them, are not considered as having succeeded to the deceased from the instant of his death; but they do not the less transmit their rights to their heirs, if they die before having made their demand to be put into possession. The reason is, that this sort of heirs having only a right of action to cause themselves to be put into possession of successions thus falling to them, this right and this action form a part of their succession, which they transmit to their heirs.”

If plaintiffs’ contention be sound, the vendor’s warranty in a sale of real estate not owned in whole or part by him amounts to little or nothing. To sustain this contention, as to sales more than ten years' old, would virtually render impotent the curative power of prescription based upon good faith and possession, because such prescription is only necessary to the consummation of title when such is acquired from one not the true owner.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dimmer-v-spearman-lactapp-1937.