Jackson v. Golson

91 So. 2d 394
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1956
Docket8567
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 91 So. 2d 394 (Jackson v. Golson) 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
Jackson v. Golson, 91 So. 2d 394 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

91 So.2d 394 (1956)

Fannie Foster JACKSON et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Tom J. GOLSON et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 8567.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

November 29, 1956.
Rehearing Denied January 11, 1957.
Writ of Certiorari Denied February 25, 1957.

*395 Trousdale & Oliver, Monroe, James T. Jeter, Shreveport, for appellants.

Pipes & Pipes, Monroe, Tucker, Bronson & Martin, Shreveport, Sholars, Gunby & Guthrie, Monroe, for appellees.

AYRES, Judge.

This action was brought by plaintiffs to have a deed containing a provision *396 conferring upon the vendor the right or privilege of redemption declared to be a mortgage given as security for debt and that accordingly plaintiffs be decreed the owners of the property mortgaged. The matter is now on appeal from a judgment sustaining exceptions of no cause and of no right of action and a plea of prescription of ten years acquirendi causa, the trial of which was submitted to the court on the allegations of plaintiffs' original and supplemental petitions. The exceptions and pleas having been so submitted for determination, the allegations of the aforesaid petitions are assumed to be a true statement of the facts for the trial of said exceptions and plea and for the purpose of the review of the ruling thereon on this appeal.

The plaintiffs are the surviving widow and children of Everett Jackson, who, on October 31, 1917, purchased a certain tract of land comprising 120 acres, more or less, situated in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, for a consideration of $700 cash. Under date of March 30, 1925, Everett Jackson executed an instrument to and in favor of D. P. Golson, which purports to be a deed covering said property, with the right of redemption. This instrument, recorded December 28, 1925, and reciting a cash consideration of $431.17, contains this provision:

"It is agreed and understood by and between the parties hereto that the vendee herein hereby extends to the vendor herein the right of redemption of the property hereinabove described at any time from the date hereof until the first day of January, A.D. 1926, he the said vendee hereby obligating himself to reconvey the above described property to the vendor within that time on the payment by the vendor to him of the purchase price as herein expressed together with the price of this transfer whatever taxes he the said vendee may pay out on the above described property and any other expenses incident and necessary for the maintenance of the property hereinabove described together with interest on the aggregate of the above purchase price, taxes, costs and charges at the rate of eight per cent per annum from date of payment until finally paid."

The defendants are the heirs of D. P. Golson and of his wife, Mrs. Lizzie V. Golson, who are alleged to be in unlawful possession of said property; the Atlantic Refining Company, which is alleged to unlawfully claim rights upon said property as a lessee in oil, gas and mineral leases, and 14 named individuals who are alleged to be unlawfully asserting claims to overriding royalty or mineral interests through leases and/or royalty or minerals deeds granted and executed by the Golson heirs.

Following his purchase of said property Jackson cleared and fenced a substantial portion thereof, constructed a residence and outbuildings thereon and maintained the family home there for many years. It is alleged, incidentally, that in March 1925, Jackson had become mentally afflicted and, in fact, was insane; that his affliction was well known to those who knew him, and that by order of court of May 3, 1930, he was committed to the Central Louisiana State Hospital for the Insane at Pineville, Louisiana, where he died February 22, 1931.

It is further alleged that, following Jackson's death, his minor children were taken from the family home to live with a married sister, and that thereafter D. P. Golson or his heirs took possession of the property and, notwithstanding amicable demands, refused to return it to the surviving widow and children.

Presented as the sole question for review on this appeal is the correctness vel non of the judgment sustaining the aforesaid exceptions. The defendants have neither appealed nor answered the appeal and the other pleas of prescription of 10 days, 30 days, one year, four years and 30 days and of laches and estoppel are not now before the court for determination. The trial court, however, observed that the prescriptions plead in bar of plaintiffs' rights allegedly *397 asserted because of the alleged insanity of Everett Jackson were well founded. In passing, however, we may state that, from our understanding and appreciation of the character of plaintiffs' action, their claims are not based upon any claim of Jackson's insanity and that, therefore, the pleas of prescription referred to are inapposite, as well as the plea of four years' prescription, as this is not an action for rescission of a sale for lesion beyond moiety, as is the plea of prescription of 30 years, because defendants are not alleged or shown to have had possession for that requisite period of time.

Appellants complain and point out that the trial court committed the following specific errors:

(1) In holding that the subject simulated `deed with right of redemption", which the parties intended to be a mortgage, was an act translative of title to the property;

(2) In maintaining a plea of prescription of 10 years acquirendi causa where the subject instrument was not translative of title and the defendants later took and continued in possession in bad faith;

(3) In holding that a fraudulent simulation is prescribable where the vendee remains in possession of the property;

(4) In holding, in effect, that a mortgagee under a simulated "deed with right of redemption" may by his own act take possession of the security and thereby acquire a just title in good faith; and

(5) In construing plaintiffs' action to be one to declare the instrument in question an absolute nullity because of the insanity of Everett Jackson.

Pertinent and material to the issues presented are the allegations of plaintiffs' original and supplemental petitions, which, in substance, allege:

(1) That the instrument upon which this action is predicated was intended to be a mortgage by the parties thereto;

(2) That the consideration was wholly inadequate, the property being worth at least $2,000 and the consideration being only $431.17; and

(3) That the borrower, Everett Jackson, remained in full and complete possession of the property for a number of years following the passage of the act; that possession was never delivered to defendants but, on the contrary, the defendants, in bad faith, took possession of the property following Jackson's death in 1931.

The nature of the controversy between plaintiffs and defendants is as was stated by the Supreme Court in Latiolais v. Breaux, 154 La. 1006, 98 So. 620, wherein the court, in referring to the action therein instituted, said:

"This is an action to have an alleged sale of land with right of redemption (vente a remere) declared a mere pignorative contract (common-law mortgage); the difference being this, that in sales with right of redemption the purchaser becomes the owner of the property sold, subject only to the right of the vendor to reacquire the property ([LSA-]C.C.

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Bluebook (online)
91 So. 2d 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-golson-lactapp-1956.