Jefferson v. Childers

179 So. 30, 189 La. 46, 1937 La. LEXIS 1325
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 29, 1937
DocketNo. 34410.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 179 So. 30 (Jefferson v. Childers) 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
Jefferson v. Childers, 179 So. 30, 189 La. 46, 1937 La. LEXIS 1325 (La. 1937).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

In this suit plaintiff seeks to have declared null and void and canceled two *49 sales of a 40-acre tract in Bossier parish of this state. The first sale is of date March 16, 1934, and purports to have been made by plaintiff to Mary Childers, femme sole, by notarial act, and for a cash consideration of $400. The second sale is of date January 31, 1936, arid purports to have been made by Mary Duke Childers to S. L. Brown, for a consideration of $200 cash, and a note secured by vendor’s lien and special mortgage on the property for $1,000.

The first sale is attacked on ,the ground that the signature thereto had been fraud7 ulently obtained by defendant, J. E. Childers, acting for his wife and codefendant, Mary Childers, by representing to plaintiff, an aged and illiterate colored woman, that he desired her to sign an affidavit with reference to the matrimonial status of certain persons living near the home of plaintiff in Bossier parish.

In the alternative, plaintiff alleges that neither Mary Childers, nor J. E. Childers, nor any other person has paid to her any consideration for the transfer of the property, and therefore the deed is null and void.

Pleading further in the alternative, plaintiff avers that, should this court find that she was not fraudulently induced to execute the deed and that the consideration was the agreement of the vendee, Mary Childers, to pay plaintiff, then, in that event, Mary Childers and her agent acting for her, J. E. Childers, defrauded plaintiff by agreeing to pay the consideration therefor, and induced plaintiff to-sign the deed, when, in fact, they did not pay plaintiff the consideration mentioned therein, upon her execution of the instrument, and thereafter fraudulently refused to do so.

The attack made by plaintiff against the second sale, made by Mary Duke Childers to S. L. Brown, is that she was then married to J. E. Childers, and that the sale was purely and simply a simulation intended to place the property beyond the reach of plaintiff.

On January 23, 1936, eight days prior to the sale made by Mary Duke Childers to S. L. Brown, Justin R. Querbes, trustee, obtained a mineral lease from the record owner on the forty acres in dispute, and intervened in this suit to assert and protect his rights as lessee.

The case was tried and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendants,. Mary Childers, J. E. Childers, and S. L. Brown, decreeing null and void the deed from plaintiff to Mary Childers, and from Mary Duke Childers to S. L. Brown; and .in favor of intervener, Justin R. Querbes, and against plaintiff and defendants, decreeing the oil and gas lease from Mary Childers to intervener valid and subsisting and decreeing plaintiff entitled to the rentals deposited by intervener in the registry of the court. T. 158.

Defendants only have appealed from this judgment.

(1) The deed from Laura Jefferson, plaintiff, to Mary Childers was dated March 16, 1934, and was recorded in the conveyance records of Bossier parish on April *51 6, 1934. On its face,' it is a cash deed reciting a consideration of $400, by authentic act, passed before George T. Mc-Sween, notary public in and for Caddo parish, La. On January 23, 1936, intervener, Justin R. Querbes, leased the property herein involved, for exploration for and production of oil, gas, and other minerals, from Mary Childers, the record owner of the property and the vendee of plaintiff. This lease was filed for record the same day.

Plaintiff alleges that she executed the deed to Mary Childers (petition, par. 1, T. 19), and seeks to have same set aside on allegations of fraud practiced by the husband of the vendee, and of nonpayment of consideration. This she cannot do to the prejudice of intervener, a third person, who relied upon the public records in taking the mineral lease.

In Waller v. Colvin, 151 La. 765, 92 So. 328, 329, this court said:

“Under Civ. Code, Arts. 2236, 2266, relative to the recording of contracts, and the admissibility of parol testimony, in a suit to reform recorded deeds from defendant to C., an4 from C. to plaintiff, who purchased from C, on the faith of the records, oral evidence was not admissible to show fraud on C.’s part in obtaining the deed, or to show that the act of sale was intended as a donation omnium bonorum, and therefore void, or that no consideration was paid.”

While the defendants, Mary Childers and her husband, J. E. Childers, and S. L. Brown, have appealed from the judgment rendered in this case, their appeal as to intervener can have no effect, and, obviously, was not so intended, because in their answers they have admitted all of the essential allegations of the petition of intervener. (Answer of Childers, T. 70; answer of Brown, T. 74.)

The plaintiff has not appealed from the judgment in favor of intervener and against her, nor has she answered the appeal of the defendants. As to the judgment rendered on the merits after the trial of the case, plaintiff cannot now have the judgment in favor of intervener and against her set aside, as plaintiff has not appealed or answered the appeal of defendants. Code Prac. arts. 592, 888.

(2) Here plaintiff seeks to annul her deed to defendant, Mary Childers, intervener’s lessor.

Intervener’s cause of action is based upon the estoppel resulting from the execution by plaintiff of a deed placed upon the public records upon which he relied in taking the oil and gas lease, and he is clearly entitled to invoke that estoppel, as he acted in good faith and relied upon the public 1 records. Getman v. Harrison, 112 La. 435, 36 So. 486; Thompson v. Hibernia Bank & Trust Co., 148 La. 57, 86 So. 652; Lognion v. Fontenot, 121 La. 901, 46 So. 914.

The lessee of an oil and gas lease has an action against his lessor, the landowner, to have the validity of his lease judicially determined. Smith v. Kennon, 188 La. 101, 175 So. 763.

Even if plaintiff is successful in her suit against defendant, she can only re *53 cover the property subject to transactions affecting it made by her apparent vendee with third persons acting in good faith. In effect, she becomes the lessor of intervener, to the same extent as though she had been the original lessor.

Intervener is not urging the petitory or possessory actions. Therefore, plaintiff’s exception of no cause of action to the petition of intervention, based on the doctrine of Gulf Refining Co. v. Glassell, 186 La. 190, 171 So. 846, is inappropriate and was properly overruled in the lower court.

(3) The contentions of the plaintiff are that her signature to the deed to “Mary Childers, femme sole,” of date March 16, 1934, was obtained by fraud. Upon reaching Shreveport, Laura Jefferson, plaintiff, and Jim Hamilton, her son, state that they got out of the car near the foot of Texas street and went up to the office of the notary, Mr. McSween, where she touched the pen to a paper, which she thought was an affidavit, but which later developed into the deed in question.

On the other hand, the defendants contend that they brought her to town in order to make the purchase from her, and that they secured her signature legitimately.

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Bluebook (online)
179 So. 30, 189 La. 46, 1937 La. LEXIS 1325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-v-childers-la-1937.