Ducote v. Stark

87 So. 2d 770
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 1956
Docket8407
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 87 So. 2d 770 (Ducote v. Stark) 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
Ducote v. Stark, 87 So. 2d 770 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

87 So.2d 770 (1956)

Adeline Turner DUCOTE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Sidney STARK, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 8407.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

May 21, 1956.
Rehearing Denied June 14, 1956.
Writ of Certiorari Denied September 28, 1956.

*771 Charles A. Riddle, Jr., Marksville, for appellant.

Earl Edwards, Marksville, John A. Boatner, Jr., Bunkie, for appellee.

HARDY, Judge.

This is an action to annul a conveyance of property executed by plaintiff in an act of sale to her son-in-law, defendant herein, on the ground that the said conveyance was in reality a donation in disguise, which donation, being one omnium bonorum, was a nullity by reason of the prohibition set forth in Article 1497 of the LSA-Civil Code. After trial there was judgment in favor of defendant rejecting the demands of plaintiff, from which she prosecutes this appeal.

The facts are that on July 5, 1951, the plaintiff, Adeline Turner Ducote, executed an act of sale to and in favor of her son-in-law, Sidney Stark, by which she purported to convey four acres out of a tract of approximately twenty-one acres, together with the improvements thereon, for a recited consideration of $360, represented by two notes in the sum of $180 each, payable in one and two years after date respectively. In addition to the stated consideration *772 the vendor reserved the use for life of a bedroom in the house, which was located upon the property transferred. Estimates of the value of the property conveyed and that retained by the plaintiff, as reflected in the testimony of witnesses on trial of the case, indicate a considerable variation, but we think it is established that a minimum valuation on the property conveyed should be fixed at $1,800, whereas the admitted value of plaintiff's remaining property was placed at $1,400. Judgment from his written opinion these appear to be the figures accepted by the district judge. There is little testimony, and that of a very vague and uncertain nature, with reference to the expected income from the seventeen or eighteen acre tract retained by plaintiff, but, at best, it does not appear that this represents more than the approximate amount of $150, which would be derived from a farm lease on a share basis. It is established and emphasized that plaintiff receives an old age pension from the State of Louisiana in the amount of $50 per month. It is noted that the district judge predicated his conclusion upon the valuation of the property retained and the monthly gratuity of $50 received by plaintiff from the State of Louisiana.

Plaintiff's attack upon the act of sale and the basis for her action are found in the following recitals of her petition:

"Petitioner shows that the purported Act of Sale referred to hereinabove was in truth and in fact a donation in disguise; that there was never any real consideration intended at the time of the execution of same, that none was paid nor has any been paid since, and that it was in truth and in fact the consummation of a method by which petitioner could live on her property and at the same time continue to receive old age benefits from the State of Louisiana, and by which defendant could acquire the said property without the payment of any consideration.
"Petitioner shows that at the time of the execution of the alleged Act of sale aforesaid, she did not reserve unto herself enough property for her subsistence, and that consequently the donation of the property described in said deed is null and void for the whole thereof; that the only property which she had remaining at the time of the purported Act of Sale consisted of approximately seventeen acres of land located near Dupont, Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana."

It is obvious that plaintiff seeks the relief prayed on the ground that the purported sale was, in reality, a donation in disguise, which donation, being one omnium bonorum, is null and ineffective under the specific prohibition of law contained in LSA-Civil Code Article 1497.

To plaintiff's petition defendant interposed an exception of no right and no cause of action and a special plea of estoppel, which were referred to the merits. Following trial on the merits, defendant again filed an exception of no cause nor right of action based upon the pleadings and the evidence adduced on trial. The burden of defendant's exception is that, in the absence of allegations of fraud, error or misrepresentation, parol evidence was not admissible on trial for the purpose of varying or contradicting the terms of the written act of sale. In other words, counsel for defendant strenuously objected, and here reiterates, his objection to the admission of parol evidence designed to establish the instrument of conveyance as a donation rather than an act of sale. These objections were overruled by the district court and we think properly so.

Article 1497 of the LSA-Civil Code reads as follows:

"The donation inter vivos shall in no case divest the donor of all his property; he must reserve to himself enough for subsistence; if he does not do it, the donation is null for the whole."

It is clear, in view of the prohibition established in the above article, that a donation omnium bonorum is one in fraudem legis. As early as 1860 we find a pronouncement pertinent to our consideration of this issue in the case of Lazare v. *773 Jacques, 15 La.Ann. 599, in which the court stated:

"This is not the case of a simulated sale, but of a prohibited donation made under the form and semblance of a real contract of sale.
* * * * * *
"But it is well settled that parol evidence is admissible whenever the obligation is one contracted in fraudem legis, and that it is immaterial what form may be given to the reprobated contract." (Emphasis supplied.)

Counsel for defendant insistently urges that the contract of sale, being valid upon its face and containing acknowledgment of receipt of a substantial consideration, is not subject to attack by parol evidence. Unquestionably, this would be a correct assumption were it not for the fact that the determination of the true nature of the instrument is an essential element in the application, vel non, of the prohibition of law contained in the above quoted codal article. As pointed out by our distinguished brother of the district court, it would be impossible to establish the actual nature of a conveyance as being a reprobated and prohibited donation omnium bonorum unless evidence extraneous to the recitals of the formal act should be admissible. The district judge relied upon the holdings in Cahow v. Hughes, La.App., 169 So. 801 and La.App., 173 So. 471, 473; Jeansonne v. Jeansonne, 187 La. 939, 175 So. 626; and Kelly v. Kelly, 131 La. 1024, 60 So. 671, 672, from which latter case the following extracts from the opinion were quoted:

"The nullity of donations omnium bonorum is based upon motives of public order, and estoppel by acknowledgment or admission cannot be invoked to maintain a condition or state of things created in violation of a prohibitory law. Ackerman v. Larner et al., 116 La. 101, 40 So. 581.
* * * * * *
"It concerns the state that a donor should not pauperize himself by his gratuities."

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Bluebook (online)
87 So. 2d 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ducote-v-stark-lactapp-1956.