BLANCHARD, J.
Plaintiff, a judgment creditor of Catherine V. Aekermann, unable to find property of his debtor, standing in her name, out of which he could realize the amount due him, and having reason to believe that certain immovable property standing on the conveyance records in the name of Catherine L. Peters really belonged to his debtor and had been put in the name of the interposed person as a means to screen it from his pursuit, brought the present action to have the property referred to decreed that of his debtor and subject to seizure under his judgment.
Several pieces of property stood on the records in the name of Catherine L. Peters and plaintiff started out with the idea of embracing them all within the scope of his suit, but by various exceptions and pleas filed and rulings made the issue was, at the time the trial of the case began in the court below, narrowed down to a contest involving two squares of ground designated on the Assessment Rolls of the City of New Orleans as Nos. 613 and 649, but not involving the validity of certain encumbrances consented to on the same by the owner of record.
The view we take of the action renders unnecessary a discussion of the exceptions filed by the defendant Catherine L. Peters.
Her answer was a general denial. She prayed trial by jury, which was had, with the result that a verdict was returned favorable to the plaintiff, and on this verdict a judgment was predicated decreeing the two squares of ground to the extent of one undivided third thereof the property of Catherine V. Aekermann and subject to plaintiff’s moneyed judgment against her, in subordination, however, to the outstanding encumbrances resting on the whole property, placed there by Catherine L. Peters.
Defendant, Catherine L. Peters, appeals. The other defendant, Catherine V. Ackermann, filed no appearance either in the lower court, or in this.
The first question that arises for determination is the character of this action. This is to be ascertained from the allegations of the petition and from its prayer — more particularly the latter.
There is a charge that the two defendants entered into a fraudulent conspiracy to secrete the property of Catherine V. ■ Ackermann and cover the same from the pursuit of the plaintiff, and that such conspiracy and fraudulent combination began after plaintiff had filed his suit for a moneyed judgment against Catherine V. Aekermann, but before the judgment itself was recovered, and that the same had continued down to the time the present action was begun.
There is a charge that in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme and conspiracy to defraud and injure him by preventing him from collecting his judgment against Miss Aekermann, she and Miss Peters agreed that the title to the property in contestation should be taken in the name of the latter, but for the account and benefit of Miss Ackermann, who furnished the money with which the property was bought, and that the true and real owner of the property is Miss Aekermann.
There is a charge that Miss Peters was without the means to buy the property, while Miss Aekermann had money to invest.
An amended petition charges that the property was acquired by Miss Peters and is now held by her as the property of, and for account, convenience and benefit of Miss Ackermann, with whom Miss Peters was in con-[1074]*1074«piracy to defraud the plaintiff and prevent him from executing the judgment recovered against Miss Ackermann, and that the property has been continuously administered by Miss Peters for the account and benefit of Miss Ackermann, to whom the former has accounted for rents and revenues, etc.
The prayers of the two petitions are, practically, the same. Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters are asked to be cited and judgment is demanded against them decreeing the property to belong to Miss Ackermann and subject to plaintiffs judgment against her. To this end, it is prayed that “said property be uncovered and restored on the public records in the name of Catherine Veronica Ackermann.”
Undoubtedly, this is the action en declaration de simulation, and not the revocatory action, as held by our learned brother of the District Court.
The allegations and prayer of the petition make the case presented a fraudulent simulation — a simulation, because the real owner is Miss Ackermann and not Miss Peters; fraudulent, because the title was put in the name of Miss Peters in order to elude the pursuit of Miss Ackermann’s judgment creditor.
It is not a suit to annul the sale by which the property was acquired in the name of Miss Peters from John B. Meyers, the vendor. Herein lies the error of defendant’s counsel and the inapplicability of the authorities on which he relies.
If it were sought to annul the sale which Meyers made to Miss Peters, Meyers would necessarily have to be made a party defendant.
The simulation is not in the title to the property conveyed by Meyers; it is in the ■name of the party to whom the property was conveyed. The title was transferred, but placed in the name of an interposed party. Therein was the simulation.
The sale made by Meyers was and is a valid sale, and it is not attached, and the vendor’s privilege and special mortgage retained by him to secure the unpaid portion ■of the purchase price are valid and unassailable, and the attack upon same was eliminated from the ease before it went to trial.
It is not pretended that Meyers is a party to the fraudulent simulation by which the title was placed in the name of Miss Peters, instead of in that of the real purchaser, Miss Ackermann.
Meyers knew no one in the transaction but Miss Peters. He was no party to the scheme to defeat plaintiff’s collection of his judgment against Miss Ackermann by placing property really purchased by her in the name of another.
Meyers, therefore — his rights and interest being in no way involved — was properly left out of the case. There was no necessity to make him a party defendant.
The simulation was a concoction, purely, of Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters’. The former was buying the property; the latter was lending her her name as a mask to cover it from the pursuit of plaintiff.
This is the theory of plaintiff’s petition, and the only parties needed to be cited were Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters.
The judgment rendered in the ’case — if the charge of simulation be sustained — could not and would not affect Meyers. It would be merely substituting Catherine V. Ackermann as the vendee instead of Catherine L. Peters.
It matters not to Meyers who the vendee of the property is so that the sale he made is not disturbed, and his mortgage rights not affected.
Therefore, he is a party without interest in a contest between the plaintiff on one side and Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters on the other, the sole object of which is judicially to ascertain whether the vendee is Miss Ackermann or Miss Peters. ■
Where a person with means to invest buys a piece of property, and, with the view of screening it from his creditors, causes the title to be inscribed in the name of another, who consents thereto, that part of the transaction relating to the name used is a simulation, and to expose the mask and uncover the true owner may well be the province of the action -en declaration de simulation,
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BLANCHARD, J.
Plaintiff, a judgment creditor of Catherine V. Aekermann, unable to find property of his debtor, standing in her name, out of which he could realize the amount due him, and having reason to believe that certain immovable property standing on the conveyance records in the name of Catherine L. Peters really belonged to his debtor and had been put in the name of the interposed person as a means to screen it from his pursuit, brought the present action to have the property referred to decreed that of his debtor and subject to seizure under his judgment.
Several pieces of property stood on the records in the name of Catherine L. Peters and plaintiff started out with the idea of embracing them all within the scope of his suit, but by various exceptions and pleas filed and rulings made the issue was, at the time the trial of the case began in the court below, narrowed down to a contest involving two squares of ground designated on the Assessment Rolls of the City of New Orleans as Nos. 613 and 649, but not involving the validity of certain encumbrances consented to on the same by the owner of record.
The view we take of the action renders unnecessary a discussion of the exceptions filed by the defendant Catherine L. Peters.
Her answer was a general denial. She prayed trial by jury, which was had, with the result that a verdict was returned favorable to the plaintiff, and on this verdict a judgment was predicated decreeing the two squares of ground to the extent of one undivided third thereof the property of Catherine V. Aekermann and subject to plaintiff’s moneyed judgment against her, in subordination, however, to the outstanding encumbrances resting on the whole property, placed there by Catherine L. Peters.
Defendant, Catherine L. Peters, appeals. The other defendant, Catherine V. Ackermann, filed no appearance either in the lower court, or in this.
The first question that arises for determination is the character of this action. This is to be ascertained from the allegations of the petition and from its prayer — more particularly the latter.
There is a charge that the two defendants entered into a fraudulent conspiracy to secrete the property of Catherine V. ■ Ackermann and cover the same from the pursuit of the plaintiff, and that such conspiracy and fraudulent combination began after plaintiff had filed his suit for a moneyed judgment against Catherine V. Aekermann, but before the judgment itself was recovered, and that the same had continued down to the time the present action was begun.
There is a charge that in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme and conspiracy to defraud and injure him by preventing him from collecting his judgment against Miss Aekermann, she and Miss Peters agreed that the title to the property in contestation should be taken in the name of the latter, but for the account and benefit of Miss Ackermann, who furnished the money with which the property was bought, and that the true and real owner of the property is Miss Aekermann.
There is a charge that Miss Peters was without the means to buy the property, while Miss Aekermann had money to invest.
An amended petition charges that the property was acquired by Miss Peters and is now held by her as the property of, and for account, convenience and benefit of Miss Ackermann, with whom Miss Peters was in con-[1074]*1074«piracy to defraud the plaintiff and prevent him from executing the judgment recovered against Miss Ackermann, and that the property has been continuously administered by Miss Peters for the account and benefit of Miss Ackermann, to whom the former has accounted for rents and revenues, etc.
The prayers of the two petitions are, practically, the same. Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters are asked to be cited and judgment is demanded against them decreeing the property to belong to Miss Ackermann and subject to plaintiffs judgment against her. To this end, it is prayed that “said property be uncovered and restored on the public records in the name of Catherine Veronica Ackermann.”
Undoubtedly, this is the action en declaration de simulation, and not the revocatory action, as held by our learned brother of the District Court.
The allegations and prayer of the petition make the case presented a fraudulent simulation — a simulation, because the real owner is Miss Ackermann and not Miss Peters; fraudulent, because the title was put in the name of Miss Peters in order to elude the pursuit of Miss Ackermann’s judgment creditor.
It is not a suit to annul the sale by which the property was acquired in the name of Miss Peters from John B. Meyers, the vendor. Herein lies the error of defendant’s counsel and the inapplicability of the authorities on which he relies.
If it were sought to annul the sale which Meyers made to Miss Peters, Meyers would necessarily have to be made a party defendant.
The simulation is not in the title to the property conveyed by Meyers; it is in the ■name of the party to whom the property was conveyed. The title was transferred, but placed in the name of an interposed party. Therein was the simulation.
The sale made by Meyers was and is a valid sale, and it is not attached, and the vendor’s privilege and special mortgage retained by him to secure the unpaid portion ■of the purchase price are valid and unassailable, and the attack upon same was eliminated from the ease before it went to trial.
It is not pretended that Meyers is a party to the fraudulent simulation by which the title was placed in the name of Miss Peters, instead of in that of the real purchaser, Miss Ackermann.
Meyers knew no one in the transaction but Miss Peters. He was no party to the scheme to defeat plaintiff’s collection of his judgment against Miss Ackermann by placing property really purchased by her in the name of another.
Meyers, therefore — his rights and interest being in no way involved — was properly left out of the case. There was no necessity to make him a party defendant.
The simulation was a concoction, purely, of Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters’. The former was buying the property; the latter was lending her her name as a mask to cover it from the pursuit of plaintiff.
This is the theory of plaintiff’s petition, and the only parties needed to be cited were Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters.
The judgment rendered in the ’case — if the charge of simulation be sustained — could not and would not affect Meyers. It would be merely substituting Catherine V. Ackermann as the vendee instead of Catherine L. Peters.
It matters not to Meyers who the vendee of the property is so that the sale he made is not disturbed, and his mortgage rights not affected.
Therefore, he is a party without interest in a contest between the plaintiff on one side and Miss Ackermann and Miss Peters on the other, the sole object of which is judicially to ascertain whether the vendee is Miss Ackermann or Miss Peters. ■
Where a person with means to invest buys a piece of property, and, with the view of screening it from his creditors, causes the title to be inscribed in the name of another, who consents thereto, that part of the transaction relating to the name used is a simulation, and to expose the mask and uncover the true owner may well be the province of the action -en declaration de simulation, and when the intention of the real purchaser and that of the interposed person is to defraud the creditors of the true purchaser, and fraudulent simulation and injury is charged by the creditor, who brings the action, as was the case here, parole testimony is admissible on part of the creditor to establish [1076]*1076the simulation. Testart v. Belot, 31 La. Ann. 795; Nouvet v. Vitry, 15 La. Ann. 653; Telle v. Fish, 34 La. Ann. 1243.
(Nov. 16, 1903.)
In such case the creditor may do, in that respect, what is ordinarily denied to the real purchaser and the interposed party as between themselves.
Nor does it make any difference that the real purchaser was not known to the vendor, and that the transaction was begun and completed entirely through the interposed party. In such case it is not a mere agency to buy real estate which, ordinarily, must be proved by written evidence. Were this so, it might be impossible, ever, to establish that property is held fraudulently under simulated title by one person for another, though such were really the case, and creditors might behold their debtor in the enjoyment of large means which they would be unable to reach and make amenable to their just claims.
Wherever a fraudulent simulation exists, no matter through what instrumentalities the mask was applied — even though it be the machinery of the courts themselves — creditors alleging the fraud and injury practiced upon them may resort to parol testimony to expose the simulation. Telle v. Fish, 34 La. Ann. 1244.
In the instant case the jury found as a fact that to the extent of a third interest in the property, the title held by Miss Peters was really held for the account and benefit of Miss Ackermann, who is the true owner of such third, and that her interest is subject to the plaintiff’s judgment, but in subordination, as seen, to the existing encumbrances on the whole property placed there by the apparent owner.
We quite agree with the jury in this finding, though our view of the pleadings and the facts of the case make it a case of a mask to be removed through the action in declaration of simulation, rather than an act of the debtor and her co-conspirator to be set aside and annulled through the revocatory action.
In Mackesy v. Schultz, 38 La. Ann. 385, it was held that where a sale was alleged to be “simulated and fraudulent” the court was authorized to grant relief if the evidence established either simulation or fraud, or both.
It does not appear that the defendants in that case took any exception to the petition whose averments seemed to cover both therevocatory action and the action of simulation, and a mass of evidence was taken indis^ criminately, with the result that the court held that the case hs to the revocatory action was made out and the sale was annulled, which judgment was sustained on appeal.
The fact that the trial court charged the-jury the action was revocatory in character and not one to expose a simulation, while erroneous, is not such error as justifies the remanding of the case.
It was held in Schlater v. Wilbert & Sons, 41 La. Ann. 406, 6 South. 127, that, in civil causes, so far as errors in the judge’s charge to the jury are concerned, the jurisdiction over the law and the facts vested in this-court, authorized it, in its discretion, to disregard them and to apply the law correctly to the case as made on the evidence, the whole of which is before the court. See, also, Starns v. Hadnot, 45 La. Ann. 319, 12 South. 561.
Judgment affirmed.