Hartsfield v. Green

62 So. 2d 180, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 793
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1952
DocketNo. 7831
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 So. 2d 180 (Hartsfield v. Green) 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
Hartsfield v. Green, 62 So. 2d 180, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 793 (La. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

GLADNEY, Judge.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Dollie Green Harts-field, instituted this suit for the purpose of securing judgment for the principal, interest and attorney’s fees due on a $1,500 vendor’s lien mortgage note, identified with a certain notarial act authentic in form and importing a confession of judgment.

The defendant in the proceedings, D. Howard Green, is the son of Dr. B. F. Green and Mrs. Bamma Green, nee Holloway, who died November 1, 1921 survived by her husband and three children, F. Miles Green, G. Wallace Green and defendant. On October 1, 1923 Dr. B. F. Green married Dollie Lewis, plaintiff in the instant case. Dr. B. F. Green died intestate on June 16, 1945.

Plaintiff’s suit was filed on October 27, 1951, and was answered November 26, 1951. Defendant admitted therein his execution of the note and act of mortgage. As a defense he first alleged that simultaneously with the execution of the act of mortgage aforesaid he and plaintiff orally agreed that the consideration for the property described therein should be $1,000, and not $1,500 as stated. He declared this agreement was made in the presence of his brother, G. W. Green and his wife, Lena Green, together with respondent’s wife and R. V. Reeves, the attorney who prepared the legal documents in question. By way of reconvention defendant claims in the settlement of his father’s succession that plaintiff, who had exercised a surviving spouse’s usufruct, appropriated personal property rightfully his to the amount of $2,103.34, which sum offset by the note calculated at $1,000 and interest of $235 left a claim in his favor for $875.

On November 29th, a few days after the answer was filed, plaintiff filed a motion [182]*182presenting- the issue by rule as to her right to a judgment upon the petition and answer. Respondent then filed a supplemental and amended answer. In this answer respondent attempts to correct the original answer to show that plaintiff had no- usufruct on the community property left by Dr. Green and that she “had made use of personalty of the B. F. Green estate without having any legal right to the enjoyment of said property.” He then reiterated the aver-ments of his original petition claiming a reduction of the note and his entitlement to the sum claimed in reconvention. On January 31, 1952, the day upon which the case was tried on the merits and adjudicated by the trial court, respondent filed still another supplemental answer in which for the first time he alleges that he signed the note and mortgage through error and mistake, declaring that he was then under the belief plaintiff, as the widow of his father, was entitled to one-half of the property of which his father died possessed, -but he has subsequently .learned plaintiff had no interest in the property whatsoever, and the property he purchased from her did not belong to. her. The basis for this conclusion is that the property made the subject matter of the authentic act of sale and mortgage between plaintiff and defendant was part of the community between B. F. Green and defendant’s mother, Mrs. Bamma Green. His position is therefore, that the vendor’s lien mortgage note and the authentic act of sale with which said note is identified was a nullity.

We note in passing, none of the several pleas tendered by the defendant are pleaded alternatively. On January 31, 1952, judgment was rendered awarding plaintiff judgment as prayed for. From the minutes of the court we find that on December 17, 1951, the court denied the motion for judgment on the pleadings. We are advised through plaintiff’s brief that the motion was based on the inadmissibility of parol evidence to-change or vary the terms of the written note and act of mortgage. In furtherance of this objection counsel made timely opposition to the admissibility of parol evidence which, however, was admitted subject to the objections.

By way of summary after carefully ex-ammmg the three answers, we observe that respondent presented for the trial court’s consideration three contentions: (1) it is his claim that plaintiff had no interest in the property she sold to him and, therefore, the note was without consideration; (2) it is claimed that plaintiff failed to account for personal property which rightfully belonged to him in the amount of $2,103.34, which sum- he pleads in compensation to the demands of plaintiff; and (3) he claims when he signed the $1,500 note it was agreed between plaintiff and himself that he should pay only the sum of $1,000. Strangely enough none of these three contentions has been urged -by oral argument or in brief of defendant and appellant filed in this court.

Respondent’s appellate brief is entirely devoted to the following postulation found on page five of the brief:

“Defendant-Appellant alleged in his answer and reconventional demand that the property was not a part of the community between Dr. B. F. Green and Mrs. Dollie Green Hartsfield, and that the foreclosure 'by D. F. Walker and the deed reconveying the property to Dr.. B. F. Green during the time of his marriage with Mrs. Dollie Green, Plaintiff-Appellee herein, was a simulation,, and that same was done for the purpose of clearing the title and to defraud the-minor heirs of their rightful inheritance, and was null and void and of no-effect.”

We confess we find difficulty in harmonizing this statement with the several answers filed on behalf of respondent. In the first supplemental answer, paragraphs four and five thereof, respondent states that though in his original answer he admitted plaintiff had the usufruct of the personal property, upon her remarriage the usufruct ■ ceased. He then alleges plaintiff did not receive the usufruct ¡by law and his admission in his original answer was in error whereupon he proceeds to narrate that she had used such property illegally and unjustly, and respondent was entitled to one-third of the value of said property. In the second supplemental answer, paragraph four there[183]*183of, the charge was made that “plaintiff was selling property that she did not own and in which she had no interest and that said salé and mortgage (referring to the act of sale and special mortgage from plaintiff to respondent herein) was executed in error, and by mistake and with the fraudulent intent to deprive your respondent of what rightfully belongs to him.” He avers in the succeeding paragraph that his father, Dr. B. F. Green, acquired from John W. Maull on January 14, 1920, by an act of sale and mortgage with assumption of a mortgage executed by J. W. Maull to R. J. Walker, certain property, including that herein affected. He then points out that the acquisition of this property was during the community of acquets and gains between his father and mother. These allegations furr. nish no foundation upon which to predicate evidence relative to the act of simulation discussed in the brief.

In order to better understand the source of plaintiff’s title, we refer to certain instruments produced and filed into the record: John W. Maull to B. F. Green, dated January 14, 1920, sale with assumption' of vendor’s lien note given by Maull to R. J. Walker; B. F. Green to' Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, February 25, 1926, a special mortgage wherein respondent, Dollie Lewis Green, wife of mortgagor, joined in said act for the purpose of a homestead waiver; J. W. Maull to R. J. Walker, dated November 6, 1923, being a sheriff’s deed arising from a foreclosure of the property previously sold by Walker to Maull, and by Maull to B. F. Green; R. J. Walker to B. F. Green, dated November-27, 1925, being an act of sale and mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 2d 180, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartsfield-v-green-lactapp-1952.