George v. Delaney

35 So. 894, 111 La. 760, 1904 La. LEXIS 558
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 18, 1904
DocketNo. 14,913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 So. 894 (George v. Delaney) 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
George v. Delaney, 35 So. 894, 111 La. 760, 1904 La. LEXIS 558 (La. 1904).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

Plaintiffs allege that, as heirs of their mother, they are the owners of an undivided half interest in a tract of land, which they describe, in the parish of Avoyelles, and that in January, 1883, the defendant took, and has since that time retained, possession thereof; and they pray for judgment against him, putting them in possession, quieting their title, and condemning him to pay $2,375 as revenues for the time past, and $125 a year so long as he may hereafter continue in possession.

Defendant alleges that Charles H. George, the father of the plaintiffs, acquired the land in question by purchase from Clinton Atkinson November 11, 1879, but that the money with which he paid the price was loaned to him by Jas. F. Griffin, and that after the death of his wife he conveyed the same to Griffin in payment of the loan; that defendant bought said land from Griffin in January, 18S4, and has been in undisturbed possession ever since; and he pleads the prescription of 10 years, acquirendi causa. He further alleges that he acquired in good faith, by a title translative of property, and that, in the event of his eviction, he should recover $150 paid for the property, $200 expended in improvements, $400 representing increase in value, and $275 in reimbursement of taxes paid.

He further pleads that the plaintiffs are es-topped by reason of the fact that a portion of the consideration of the sale to Griffin was paid to the administrator of their father and inured to their benefit.

It appears from the record that upon November 11, 1879, Charles I-I. George, the father of the plaintiffs, who was then living with his wife under the régime of the community, and John W. Bell, purchased from Clinton Atkinson, represented by Jas. F. Griffin, two tracts of land, of 120 acres each, for $1,000, of which $150 was paid in cash, and for the balance the purchasers gave their three notes—one, for $183.33, payable February 1, 1880; another, for $333.33, payable January 1, 1881; and the third, for $333.33, payable January 1, 1882; all secured by mortgage on the property purchased.

In January, 1881, George and Bell effected a partition of one of the tracts thus acquired by them, and described as “bounded, on the South by Bayou des Glaises; North, by public land; East, by lands belonging to William O. Rusk; and West, by land belonging to Valerian Desselles, containing 120 acres, said tract lying and being on the left, descending, bank of Bayou des Glaises.” The act of partition recites that “the said John W. Bell takes, for his share * * *, the West half of the above described property and the said Charles George takes * * * the East half.”

In March, 1881, Mrs. George died, leaving, as surviving issue of her marriage, the plaintiff Mrs. Seward, then about six years old, and Ira N. George, her brother and coplaintiff, who was four years younger. Mrs. George’s succession was not opened, and the father of the minors did not take out letters of tutorship. Upon December 1, 1882, he sold to Jas. F. Griffin the 60-acre tract which he had acquired in the partition with Bell, and also his undivided half interest in the other tract, which he and Bell had bought from Atkinson, and which remained undivided. The act recites that the consideration of the sale is $500, of which $250 is paid in cash, and for the balance the purchaser gives two notes, of $125 each, bearing interest at 8 per cent, from date, maturing-in the months of January, 1884 and 1885, respectively, and secured by mortgage, etc. In 1883 Charles George died, and his succession was opened on the petition of his brother Hilary, who was appointed administrator, and caused an inventory to be made, in which the two notes last mentioned were appraised at $100 and $90, respectively, and which includes some other movables, the whole aggregating $400. 'The minors were then removed by their uncle to the parish of St. Helena, and lived at his house for about a year, when they were taken to the home of their grandparents, in the same parish, where they thereafter resided—the girl until 1895, and the boy for a few years longer, when he enlisted in the army and went to the Philip[763]*763pines. The administrator testifies that the Griffin notes were collected; that in December, 1885, from the collection so made, he paid to his father, for the use of the minors, $120, and in January, 1890, paid him the further sum of $100; that in January, 1902, he gave to the plaintiff Loula B. • George, now wife of O. B. Seward, $20 (though it does not appear he told her where it came from); and that he still holds $20 for the boy. He, however, produces no receipts for these payments, and from other evidence it appears that on the note due January 1, 1884, $50 was paid on account January 12, 18S5, and that the balance, in full, was paid September 28, 1885, at which date, also, the note due January 1, 1885, was paid in full. As the notes bore interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from date, the total amount collected should have been $323. Deducting from this the sum of $260, the total of the credits claimed by the administrator, including the $20 held for the boy, and he ought still to have in his hands a balance from these collections of $63; and, according to his own testimony, there ought to be a small balance from other assets. The administrator further testifies that the grandparents of the minors were poor, whilst from other testimony it appears that he is well off. He does not explain, however, why, of the money thus collected in 1885, and prior to that time, he had, up to January, 1890, turned over to the grandparents of the minors only $120, or why, after a lapse of 20 years, he still holds the balances mentioned. From the testimony of Griffin, it seems not unlikely that he loaned George part of the money needed by the latter to pay his proportion of the price of the property acquired by him and Bell from Atkinson. But his testimony is not altogether satisfactory. I-Ie seems to say at one time that he advanced the whole amount, and, upon the basis of that testimony, defendant’s counsel says in his brief, “Prom this evidence it is indisputable, therefore, that, as George had never paid anything for the property prior to his wife’s death, and transferred it to Griffin after her death, no community funds ever formed any part of the purchase price.’’ The fact is that, in the purchase from Atkinson, George’s proportion of the cash payment was $75, and of the credit portion of the price, $425, and that, in the purchase from George by Griffin, the cash payment is said in the act-of sale to have been $250, and for the balance, of $250, Griffin gave his notes, and afterwards paid them, which he would hardly have done if George had owed him the whole amount of the purchase price, or if he had loaned George the whole amount necessary to make all of the deferred payments due to Atkinson, as he elsewhere in the testimony states that he did; there being-some conflict in that respect between the position taken by the defendant’s counsel and the testimony of the witness.

The defendant testifies that when he bought he was not aware that the plaintiffs had any interest in the 'property. There are two witnesses who testify, and he admits that he was told that such was the case; but the witnesses are unable to state positively that the information was given to him before he purchased, and he states that it was several years afterward. It is shown that the defendant cleared 10 acres of the land, and that the value of that improvement was $10 an acre. It is not shown that he made any other improvement for which he would be entitled to recover in any aspect of the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 So. 894, 111 La. 760, 1904 La. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-delaney-la-1904.