Howard v. Coyle

111 So. 697, 163 La. 257, 1927 La. LEXIS 1624
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 31, 1927
DocketNo. 27658.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 111 So. 697 (Howard v. Coyle) 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
Howard v. Coyle, 111 So. 697, 163 La. 257, 1927 La. LEXIS 1624 (La. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiff purchased by deed under private signature from one I. N. Greer a quarter section of land described in the petition.

The deed bears no date, b'ut was acknowledged before a notary public on November *259 21, 1910.. It was not recorded, however, until April 2, 1913.

■ The vendor, Greer, reserved to himself all of the merchantable timber on the land.

On April 25, 1912, Greer executed another deed to the land to his sister, Mrs. Ada Bayassee. This deed was recorded on May 1, 1912.

On December 10, 1912, Mrs. Bayassee sold the land to J. J. Mqody.

This deed was registered December 30, 1912.

Thereafter, on February 8,1913, Moody sold an undivided half interest in the land to R. M. Coyle, and on July 12, 1915, Moody sold an undivided half interest to C. G. Coyle. This deed was recorded July 22, 1915.

There appeared to have been an error in the description of the land in the last deed, and Moody made a correction deed in favor 'of the widow and heirs of O. G. Coyle on March 22, 1920.

On August 13, 1912, Greer sold all of the merchantable timber on the land to R. M. Coyle and J. J. Moody.

The timber is not an issue in this suit.

The suit is to have the deeds to the land from Greer to Mrs. Bayassee and from her to Moody and from Moody to R. M. and C. G. Coyle and the latter’s heirs declared to be simulated, and, if not simulations, then that said deeds be declared to have been made in fraud of plaintiff’s rights, and that plaintiff be recognized as the true owner of the ■ land.

It will be noted from the facts herein-before recited that the plaintiff’s deed from Greer was not placed of record until after the recordation of the sale from Greer to Mrs. Bayassee, from Mrs. Bayassee to Moody, and from Moody to R. M. Coyle. From which it follows that the plaintiff has nó legal cause of action against any of the defendants unléss a clear case of fraud is made out against them by which they prevented plaintiff from having his deed recorded.

The law is well settled that all contracts affecting immovable property, which shall not be recorded in the parish where the property is situated, “shall be utterly null and void except between the parties thereto.” McDuffie v. Walker, 125 La. 152, 51 So. 100.

And in the case of Gonsoulin v. Sparrow, 150 La. 107, 90 So. 528, the late Chief Justice Provosty, in a concurring opinion, said:

“By the decision in McDuffie v. Walker, 125 La. 152, 51 So. 100, this court settled the at one time vexed question as to whether a third person can acquire, a good title from the owner of record even though knowing this owner not to be the true owner.
“That view has since been repeatedly reaffirmed.” — citing'a long list of cases.

In the McDuffie' Casé, supra, the court indicated that where it is alleged and proved that a vendor had been induced by fraudulent representations to leave his deed unrecorded and that loss had thereby resulted, such vendee would no doubt be granted relief as against the perpetrator of the fraud.

The only question therefore presented on this appeal is whether there is proof sufficient to justify the court in holding that the defendants through concerted action or misrepresentation prevented the plaintiff from recording his deed or led him in any manner to believe that his deed had been recorded.

A fair analysis of plaintiff’s petition will show:

That the gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint is that two of the defendants, Moody and R. M.- Coyle, were partners in buying lands and timber. That Coyle was a director in the bank in which plaintiff left his deed, with instructions to the bank officials to have it recorded. That the bank officials failed and neglected to record the deed, and when the deed was called for said Coyle told plaintiff the deed had been recorded.

*261 That Moody and Coyle knew when the land was purchased by them that plaintiff had a deed to the land, and that they caused Greer to make the sale to a party interposed with the understanding that such party should in time transfer the property to them. From all of which the plaintiff draws the inference that there was a collusion and a conspiracy between Greer, Coyle, and Moody to defraud plaintiff out of the land.

There is no allegation in the petition and no proof whatever in the record that would connect Mrs. Bayassee, C. G. Coyle, or his widow and heirs with the alleged fraud and conspiracy. So far, then, as these purchasers are concerned, they must be regarded as innocent purchasers upon the faith of the public records and without any notice whatever of a prior unrecorded deed from Greer to the plaintiff.

It is true Mrs. Bayassee and Greer each testify that Mrs. Bayassee paid nothing for the land and received nothing when she executed a deed to Moody.

But the fact remains that the deed from Greer to his sister was valid in form and sufficient to transfer the property, as was likewise the deed from Mrs. Bayassee to Moody. Surely it cannot be for a moment contended that even if the two deeds mentioned were pure simulations, that such fact would affect the purchasers from Moody, when such purchasers were in no manner responsible for the failure of plaintiff, Howard, to have his deed recorded.

R. M. Coyle testified:

That he never knew Greer until he met him in the courthouse in February, 1925, and that he had never seen plaintiff, Howard, before that time. That he had never had any conversation with either Greer or Howard and that he had no knowledge whatever of any deed from Greer to Howard being left in the bank with instructions to be recorded. That he never in any manner or form attempted to prevent the recordation of plaintiff’s deed.

J. J. Moody testified:

That in the fall of 1910 he went over the land with Mr. Howard, and that Howard told him that he owned the land. That in August, 1912, Greer came to him and proposed to sell him both land and timber. That he asked Greer if he could make a good deed, and he told him he could. He then told Greer that Howard claimed to own the land, and Greer said that Howard had nothing to do with it. That he then got Mr. Charles Roberts, an attorney at law, to examine the records, who notified him that in his opinion the title was .all right. That he then wrote to Greer that if Mrs. Bayassee would sell the land at the price he mentioned to have her make the deed and send it to him, and he would close the deal. That he gave a draft on the Bank of Cotton Valley, payable to Mrs. Bayassee, and delivered it to Mr. Greer.

Moody further testified:

That he had nothing to do with the making of the deed from Greer to Mrs. Bayassee. That the deed was already made and recorded when he took the matter of buying the land up with Greer.

That Greer never told him that he had sold the land to Howard. That when he asked him about Howard claiming the land, Greer said there was nothing to it.

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 697, 163 La. 257, 1927 La. LEXIS 1624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-coyle-la-1927.