Hatch v. Morgan

12 So. 2d 476
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 1942
DocketNo. 6357.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 476 (Hatch v. Morgan) 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
Hatch v. Morgan, 12 So. 2d 476 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiff sues to recover the price of two notarial acts of sale of minerals unto him by the defendant, with legal interest thereon from May 6, 1933, and for the fee of the attorney employed to file and prosecute this suit. Each of said acts of sale carried unrestricted covenant of warranty. The prices equal $1,200. Plaintiff was evicted from the property described in said instruments by and through the foreclosure of a conventional mortgage thereon executed by H.L. Thomason, defendant's grantor, and others, antecedent in registry to the transfers to plaintiff.

Defendant's answer is quite lengthy. He denies that by the instruments sued on he sold to plaintiff, or that plaintiff thereby purchased from him, as vendor, the minerals and mineral rights therein described. Tersely stated, the suit, as reflected from the answer, is resisted primarily on the ground that defendant was not in reality the owner of the property ostensibly sold by him to plaintiff, but that the same was in truth and *Page 478 fact owned by said H.L. Thomason, the fee owner, who, for convenience and to protect himself against the pursuit of his creditors, simulatedly transferred the property to defendant who thereafter held it as nominal owner or party interposed; and that plaintiff well knew the true facts of the matter, negotiated the sales to him with Thomason personally and his attorney, C.J. Ellis, Jr., and knew that the prices paid by him did not inure to defendant's benefit but were in fact received by Thomason.

The answer elaborately sets forth detail of facts to support the defense. With the aforementioned position as a premise, defendant theorizes that the covenant of warranty in the transfers sued on were never in effect as to him and that plaintiff may not avail himself thereof as a means to recoup the loss sustained by him because of the eviction.

Further, defendant takes the position and alleges that in view of plaintiff's personal knowledge of the true facts existing prior to and attending the confection of the two transfers to plaintiff, and of the true status of the title of the property he acquired from defendant, as party interposed, the effort now being made by him to hold defendant liable as warrantor "is founded in bad faith and if enforced would constitute a fraud against your respondent."

In the alternative, defendant pleads that should plaintiff prevail to any extent herein, credit should be given on the judgment in his favor for the amount of royalties received by him under the transfers in question, the total of which, it is alleged, is $685.58.

Judge C.J. Ellis, judge of the Fifth District Court, recused himself for cause and appointed Judge D.I. Garrett of the Fourth Judicial District Court to try the case. On June 28, 1938, the case was partly tried but was held open for an indefinite date in order to procure the testimony of Judge Ellis. By agreement of counsel, the case was again taken up for trial on April 29, 1940, at which time counsel for defendant expected Judge Ellis to be present and testify although he had not been summoned. Judge Ellis did not appear when trial was resumed and this forced plaintiff to move for a continuance because of the judge's absence. The motion was overruled and the case closed. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff for the full amount sued for, excepting the attorney's fee. Both parties appealed to this court.

The motion for a continuance, it is conceded, was properly overruled if the ruling of the trial judge that parol testimony is inadmissible under the pleadings to establish the facts set up in defense is correct.

It appears that in the negotiations culminating in the sales to plaintiff and also in that to Mr. Chennault (involved in suit No. 6358), Judge Ellis, then a practicing attorney at Rayville, Louisiana, represented all the parties. As there was then no conflict of interest between any of these parties it was perfectly ethical for him to so act. The knowledge acquired by Judge Ellis while so acting, defendant contends, is material to the defense and should be divulged on the witness stand.

We agree with the trial judge's ruling that under the pleadings parol testimony is incompetent and inadmissible to change, modify or alter the contents of the authentic acts of sale to plaintiff. This being true, Judge Ellis' testimony would not be admissible. Therefore, the continuance was properly denied.

The cardinal rule of law which inhibits the introduction of parol testimony to contradict, alter or vary the contents of written instruments is embodied in Article 2276 of the Civil Code. It reads: "Neither shall parol evidence be admitted against or beyond what is contained in the acts, nor on what may have been said before, or at the time of making them, or since."

If defendant's contention be sound, then without any allegation of fraud or error, the authentic acts of sale to plaintiff may be so emasculated by parol testimony as to materially modify their primal import. A different vendor would in reality be substituted, the covenants of warranty would be rendered entirely impotent, and the price would be traced to Thomason instead of to defendant. The law does not permit such to be done.

The solemnity attached to and the integrity of written instruments, it was intended, should not be impaired by parol evidence save in exceptional cases and under appropriate allegations, and then only when the testimony in support thereof is clear and convincing. If this were not true it is easily seen that the probative worth of such instruments would ofttimes *Page 479 be reduced to nearly nothing and in many cases totally destroyed. Human recollection is uncertain and generally non-dependable. For this, among other good reasons, the law uniformly encourages, and in many cases requires, that contracts be reduced to writing.

In the present case we are dealing with the sale of a real right in authentic form. Such an instrument perforce must be in writing. Civil Code, Article 2440. And, when in authentic form, constitutes a most binding obligation between the parties thereto, their heirs or assigns. Article 2236 of the Civil Code is conclusive on the subject. It reads as follows: "The authentic act is full proof of the agreement contained in it, against the contracting parties and their heirs or assigns, unless it be declared and proved a forgery."

Touching the sacramental character of the discussed rule of law, the court in Cary v. Richardson, 35 La.Ann. 505, 509, said: "The rule is consecrated by law and jurisprudence that, as between the parties to a written act, the only admissible evidence to prove simulation is a counter letter, which is proof of equal dignity. R.C.C. 2238, 2239. The unbending jurisprudence of this Court does not, accordingly, allow a party to vary or destroy his own voluntary declarations, or written agreements, by anything short of written evidence. The rule applies not only to agreements relating to immovables, but also to such as concern movables."

This judicial pronouncement was affirmed and repeated in Hemler v. Adcock, 166 La. 704-708, 117 So. 781.

In Locascio v. First State Bank Trust Company of Hammond,168 La. 723, 123 So. 304, 305, it is said: "It is the unbroken rule that authentic sales cannot be attacked, except by means of a counter letter, or by interrogatories on facts and articles, or by allegation and proof of fraud or error."

It is now well settled by the jurisprudence of this state that a sale of minerals and mineral rights is a sale of a real right or a servitude in the land. Vincent et al. v. Bullock et al.,192 La. 1

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-morgan-lactapp-1942.