Fair v. Williams

172 So. 393
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 1937
DocketNo. 5350.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 So. 393 (Fair v. Williams) 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
Fair v. Williams, 172 So. 393 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

At the time of his death, Willis W. Williams, Sr., was the owner of several hundred acres of land in DeSoto parish, La., including the S. W. ^ of S. E. Sec. 10, Tp. 11 N., R. 14 W. He had acquired the 40 acres of land at sheriff’s sale from Calvin Johnson by proper description. In recording the deed, the clerk of court and ex-officio recorder’ erroneously described the property as the S. E. J4 of S. E. J4, Sec. 10, Tp.'Il N., R. 14 W. After the death of Williams, his succession was administered by the Bank of Commerce & Trust Company. Ari inventory of the property of the succession was made in which the erroneous description of the 40 acres in dispute here was carried, and the correct .description was not. After a great length of time had passed, the administrator applied to the court for an order to sell the property of the succession for the purpose of paying the debts. The prayer of the petition is that the court order the sale of all the properties, real and personal, belonging to the succession, and for a new appraisement of said properties to be made by appraisers appointed by the court. The order of the court was that all the properties, both real and personal, be sold, and appointed appraisers to appraise anew the properties to form the basis of the sale. The appraisers appointed by the court at this time were different from those who appraised the properties when inventoried in 1926. The order for the sale was in the year 1930.

The commission to sell issued by the clerk at the instance of the court’s order and addressed to the administrator described the 40 acres involved here as the S. E. % of S. E. % of Sec. 10, Tp. 11 N., R. 14 W. This particular 40 was appraised at $200 by the new appraisers, the same as it was originally appraised in the inventory. The advertisement of the sale carried the same erroneous description and the administrator’s deed to the purchaser, the DeSoto Corporation, also described the 40 as the S. E. % of S. E. %, Sec. 10, Tp. 11 N., R. 14 W.

The administrator’s sale whs consummated on July 19, 1930. At the time of the sale the purchaser there was already the owner of the S. E. J4 of S. E. Sec. 10-11-14, by virtue of a deed from the Bank of Commerce & Trust Company of date September 13, 1929. Willis W. Williams, Sr., was never the owner of the S. E. J4 of S. E.. J4, Sec. 10-11-14, at any time.

On February 1, 1936, the DeSoto Corporation transferred by deed to’P. C. Fair the S. W. % of. S. E. Sec. 10-11-14. Soon thereafter, Fair discovered that his vendor did not have a recorded title to the land sold him and filed this suit impleading the widow and heirs of Willis W. Williams, Sr., deceased, the DeSoto Corporation, and the clerk of court, alleging error in the recordation of the deed from Calvin Johnson by sheriff to Willis W. Williams, Sr., and by virtue of that error, the following error throughout the administration of *395 the Williams succession, as above related. He prayed for judgment reforming the record wherein the erroneous recordation was made and reforming the deed to the DeSoto Corporation from the succession, now represented by the widow and heirs of Williams, deceased; and that he be decreed the owner of the S. W. % of S. E. of Sec. 10, Tp. 11 N., R. 14 W.

The curator ad hoc appointed to represent one absent heir filed an exception of no right or cause of action to the petition. A similar exception was filed by the attorney for the widow and other Williams heirs. Both attorneys for the widow and Williams heirs then filed a prayer for oyer of the following documents: The inventory of the DeSoto parish properties of the Williams succession; the order of court under which the real estate was ordered sold; the official advertisement of the sale; and the deed or act of sale from the succession to the DeSoto Corporation.

This prayer was complied with by plaintiff and it was agreed by counsel that in passing upon the exceptions heretofore filed, these documents be considered together with the petition. The exceptions were overruled by the lower court and áre reurged here.

The exceptors then answered denying that plaintiff is the owner of the S. W. % of S. E. Sec. 10-11-14; admitting that plaintiff acquired the deed to this property from the DeSoto Corporation; but denying that the DeSoto Corporation ever acquired said property from the Williams succession. Further answering, they show:

“* * * That shortly after the death of Willis W. Williams, deceased, the Bank of Commerce & Trust Company, then the owner of a majority of the shares of the capital stock of its real estate holding company, DeSoto Corporation, the vendor of this plaintiff, qualified as the administrator of the succession of Willis W. Williams, deceased; that in the said proceeding inventories were made, under the direction of the court, of the property and effects of the succession; that in the inventories several hundred acres of land belonging to deceased were inventoried; that subsequently thereto, under order of court, the property inventoried as the property of the succession in the Parish of DeSoto, particularly the real estate aforesaid, was ordered sold, advertised for sale and sold to the DeSoto Corporation; that the property of the .estate aforesaid consisted of hundreds of acres of land described according to government surveys and that the SWj4 of SE14, Section 10, Township 11 North, Range 14 West, was never inventoried or sold or advertised for sale and sold by the administrator of the succession of Willis W. Williams, deceased. 1

“That at the sale aforesaid, the DeSoto Corporation purchased the real estate of the succession of Willis W. Williams, deceased, by bidding or offering for said property two-thirds of the appraised value of the said property. That, as evidenced by the act of sale and the order for the advertisement of sale, it 'was not the intention of the DeSoto Corporation to acquire any specific property, but as an alleged creditor of the estate of Willis W. Williams, deceased, it sought to purchase in globo the property of the succession of Willis W. Williams, deceased, and particularly, at the time of the sale, it was not the intention of the said DeSoto Corporation, as evidenced by the proceedings in the said succession, to acquire the SW^ of SE14, Section 10, Township 11 North, Range 14 West; and accordingly the said DeSoto Corporation acquired no title whatever to the said described forty acres of land.” and pray that plaintiff’s demands be rejected at his costs.

The clerk of court answered alleging he had no interest in the outcome of the case and suggested to the court that if judgment were rendered against him, it be stayed until a final determination of the case between the other parties to the suit.

The DeSoto Corporation answered admitting every allegation of plaintiff’s petition.

After plaintiff had closed his case in chief and after he had offered in evidence suit No. 15,156 on the docket of the Eleventh district court for the parish of DeSoto, La., styled Mrs. Mable C. Williams et al. v. DeSoto Bank & Trust Company, and at the time defendants began offering their evidence, he interposed a plea of judicial estoppel, based upon the allegations made in said petition, wherein defendants Williams admitted and alleged that the whole of the property belonging to the succession of Willis W. Williams, Sr., located in DeSoto parish, La., had been sold by the administrator.

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fair-v-williams-lactapp-1937.