Jefferson v. Herold

81 So. 714, 144 La. 1064
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 3, 1919
DocketNo. 21818
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 81 So. 714 (Jefferson v. Herold) 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. Herold, 81 So. 714, 144 La. 1064 (La. 1919).

Opinion

O’NIELL, J.

The plaintiffs, husband and wife, sued to have their farm declared their homestead, and, as such, exempt from seizure and sale. They obtained an injunction preventing a sale of the property seized in executory proceedings brought by the defendant J. K. Herold on four promissory notes, of $300 each, purporting to be secured by mortgage and vendor’s lien on the property. The cause of action is founded upon the allegation, stated broadly, that the pretended act of sale by the plaintiff J. Rogers Jefferson to one Rebecca Paysingle, for which she gave the promissory notes held by J. K. Herold, was only a sham or subterfuge, resorted to for the purpose of getting rid of the homestead exemption without the consent of the wife of Jefferson, and was made without payment of any price or other consideration, and without intention to convey title.

Defendant Herold pleaded that the plaintiffs had no right or cause of action, and in his answer to the suit, denied that the sale by Jefferson to Rebecca Paysingle was a simulation, and averred affirmatively that it was a genuine bona fide sale. He pleaded' that, by Jefferson’s subsequently purchasing the property from Rebecca Paysingle and assuming payment of the mortgage notes which she had given, the plaintiffs were es-topped and forbidden to deny that Rebecca Paysingle had acquired title by her purchase from Jefferson.

Judgment was rendered in favor of defendants, dissolving the writ of injunction and rejecting plaintiffs’ demands, and they prosecute this appeal.

Before the sale to Rebecca Paysingle, the property in question, being a farm of about 43 acres, belonged to the marital community between the plaintiffs and was their homestead. Jefferson owed to a firm of which J. K. Herold was successor an account for merchandise near $1,200, and owed a Mr. Heilperin a debt near $300. Both obligations were community debts. It appears that Jefferson was willing to pay or secure the debts, but was unable to do so, because his wife would not consent to a waiver of the homestead exemption, and he had no other property.

The Herold firm eventually brought suit against Jefferson, and, three or four days after being cited to answer the suit, he came to the city where his two creditors resided, with a view of settling or adjusting their claims, or to employ an attorney. It appears that, in response to a request from Mr. Heilperin, Jefferson called at Heilperin’s office or store to learn what he wanted, before seeing an attorney. Mr. Heilperin wanted to know what Jefferson intended to do about the suit the Herold firm had brought against him; and, after some discussion of the matter, Mr. Heilperin advised Jefferson to make a sale of the property on such terms as to obtain notes secured by a vendor’s lien, to be used as security or in settlement of the debts he owed. Jefferson consented, and went with Mr. Heilperin to the office of an attorney at law, where the act of sale was made to Rebecca [1067]*1067Paysingle, ostensibly for $1,850, of which $350 was said to be paid in cash, and for the balance Rebecca Paysingle signed and indorsed five promissory notes, for $300 each, secured by mortgage and vendor’s lien on the property. In the meantime, Mr. Heilperin had telephoned to the attorney of the Herold firm and suggested that Jefferson would give notes secured by vendor’s lien on the property, in settlement of both debts, and that he (Heilperin) would agree to the transaction, provided the mortgage securing his note should be superior in rank to that securing the notes to be given to the Herold firm. The attorney for the Herold firm was not satisfied with the proposition, but, after consultation with the senior member of the firm (now deceased), the latter consented to the arrangement. The attorney for the Herold firm then called at the lawyer’s office, where the sale had just been signed, and received four of the mortgage notes, in presence of Jefferson and Rebecca Paysingle. Heilperin retained the other note. Jefferson testified that Mr. Heilperin received the five notes from the notary, and handed four of them to the Herold firm’s attorney; but the latter testified that Jefferson handed him the four notes. The question whether Jefferson ever had possession of the notes, however, is not important in our opinion. The defendant in this suit, J. K. Herold, who, as junior member, succeeded the firm, had no knowledge of the transaction by which the firm acquired the notes. Nor does it appear that the senior member or the attorney of the firm knew that the sale made by Jefferson to Rebecca Pay-single was not genuine.

As a matter of fact, to the knowledge of Mr. Heilperin, the only purpose of the pretended sale by Jefferson to Rebecca Pay-single was to give occasion for making mortgage notes secured by vendor’s lien, exigible against. the homestead. Rebecca Paysingle, an illiterate and impecunious colored woman residing on the Jefferson farm," had no thought of buying the property, nor means with which to pay for it. She was merely interposed as a pretended purchaser, at the suggestion of Jefferson, after Mr. Heilperin had advised that such a sale be made. She did not pay the $350 mentioned as part of the purchase price, nor any part of it; nor did she intend to pay or incur any obligation when she touched the pen in lieu of signing the deed and promissory notes. The wife of Jefferson, having theretofore objected to a waiver of the homestead exemption, was not present at the pretended sale to Rebecca Paysingle, nor was she consulted about it. The plaintiffs are colored people, with little or no knowledge of business or legal transactions. The record discloses, however, that the husband could sign his name. The plaintiffs, as well as Rebecca Paysingle, continued residing on the farm after the pretended sale.

Six months after her pretended purchase from Jefferson, Rebecca Paysingle signed -and placed on record in the conveyance office an affidavit, declaring that the transaction was a fraudulent simulation, made for the purpose of defrauding Jefferson’s wife of her interest in the community property. A year and nine months later she executed and put on record an authentic act, in which she declared that she donated and retro-ceded the property to Jefferson for the purpose of restoring the title which she had pretended to acquire from him; and, nearly two months later, she and Jefferson executed an authentic act by which she declared- that she sold the property to him for the assumpsit by him of the payment of the five promissory notes of $300 each, which she had given in the original sale, and for the further sum of $175, for which Jefferson gave his promissory note, payable in one year. Jefferson’s wife was not a party to any of those transactions and did not at any time consent to a waiver of the homestead [1069]*1069exemption. Hence, as far as she is concerned, it seems that the homestead exemption was never waived or abandoned unless the sale by Jefferson to Rebecca Paysingle should be maintained as a transfer of title.

[1,2] The defendant Herold relies upon the law that a married man, as head and master of the community, may sell the homestead belonging to the community, without the consent of his wife. Defendant contends that, while the community exists, the wife has no right of action to attack as simulated a sale of community property made by her husband. He invokes the general rule that parol evidence is not admissible to

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 So. 714, 144 La. 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-v-herold-la-1919.