Johnson v. Johnson

185 So. 299, 191 La. 408, 1938 La. LEXIS 1380
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1938
DocketNo. 34825.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 185 So. 299 (Johnson v. Johnson) 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
Johnson v. Johnson, 185 So. 299, 191 La. 408, 1938 La. LEXIS 1380 (La. 1938).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

On April 18, 1935, plaintiff, Mrs. Mollie O. R. Johnson, executed before A. D. Johns, notary public in DeSoto Parish, a deed to her home place in Caddo Parish, consisting of 95.45 acres, for a recited consideration of $500 cash “and other valuable considerations,” to S. D. Johnson, her father-in-law and defendant herein. Some years prior thereto the property had been transferred to plaintiff by L. B. Johnson, her husband, in repayment of an amount in excess of $2,900 which she had received from her father’s estate and had turned over to him. In the meantime plaintiff had placed improvements on the property which cost in excess' of $1,000. This suit, which was filed in December, 1936, is to annul that sale.

Plaintiff alleges that the deed was signed by her in obedience to the influence, dictation, imposition and coercion of her husband, who represented to her that for the security of her title thereto it was necessary that the title be placed temporarily in the name of her father-in-law, S. D. Johnson; that at the time she deeded the property to S. D. Johnson, her husband, L. B. Johnson was in bankruptcy and S. D. Johnson was assisting him through the bankruptcy proceedings; that her father-in-law and her husband, knowing her ignorance of law and legal proceedings, conspired and colluded to defraud her out of her said property and that plaintiff, relying on and confiding in her husband, executed the deed believing it was necessary and proper; that while the deed recited a consideration of $500 paid by S. D. Johnson to her and other valuable considerations, no such amount and no other considerations and, in fact, no consideration whatever was paid to plaintiff on account of the sale; that S. D. Johnson was not present when the deed was signed and that plaintiff remained in possession of the property, but that re *411 cently S. D. Johnson and her husband, L. B. Johnson, demanded that she vacate the premises; that since the deed was executed, her husband has made a trip to Arkansas where he obtained a divorce and since his return had made a written demand on her for the delivery of the property and the store thereon, which plaintiff was induced to run and operate in her own name and had run and operated after her husband was adjudicated a bankrupt, “from which it has become apparent to petitioner that her said father-in-law, S. D. Johnson, aided and abetted by her said bankrupt husband, L. B. Johnson, is holding and intends to continue to hold said property as his own or for the use and benefit of her said husband, L. B. Johnson, and intends to beat petitioner out of said property and that said purported sale should be annulled for the reasons above set forth”; that in the event the Court should for any reason hold that plaintiff is bound by the recital in the notarial act as to the receipt of the consideration of $500, then and in that event and in the alternative, plaintiff alleges that the sale should be set aside for lesion beyond moiety. By supplemental petition plaintiff claims an additional sum of $350 for the removal from the premises of a portable sawmill and the batteries of a Delco Lighting System.

Defendant answered, admitting the execution of the deed and the recital therein for a consideration of $500 and other valuable considerations, and denied generally all the other allegations of the petition. Defendant alleged that at the time of executing the deed plaintiff had been operating a store for her own account and had become involved in debt which she was unable to pay and had sent her husband, L. B. Johnson, to defendant, proposing that if he would pay the indebtedness of $1,353.25 due by her in the operation of the store and pay in cash the sum of $1,500, she would transfer to him the property now in dispute; that in accordance with the request of plaintiff’s said husband, defendant purchased the property on the terms stated; that $500 was paid in cash in advance as part payment on March 12, 1935, and that a few days after the execution of the deed defendant advanced the plaintiff, through her husband, the sum of $1,000 in cash; that defendant gave plaintiff and her husband the right to occupy the premises until January 1, 1936, on which day a rental contract was arranged whereby plaintiff’s husband paid to defendant the sum of $7.50 a month for the store and $7.50 a month for the house, and that said rental was paid up to April 1, 1936, when L. B. Johnson notified defendant that he had obtained' a divorce in the State of Arkansas against his wife, the, plaintiff herein. Defendant prayed that plaintiff’s demands be rejected and for judgment in reconvention ordering the plaintiff to vacate the premises and deliver up the possession thereof to him.

The court below annulled the sale for lesion beyond moiety and 'rendered judgment subject to the right of election by defendant, within thirty days, to supplement the price of the sale by paying plain *413 tiff $2,400 in cash, or to surrender the property to plaintiff, free of mortgages and other encumbrances, within that time and in that event, the $500 paid by defendant to plaintiff as the price of said property shall be delivered to defendant, and should defendant not elect to supplement the price of the sale as herein fixed, the property should become the property of plaintiff in full ownership.

The defendant has appealed from this judgment, and the plaintiff has answered the appeal, asking that the sale be dissolved as alleged and prayed for and that she recover Of defendant an additional sum of $350; in the alternative, plaintiff prays that the judgment be affirmed and that the said sum of $350 be added to the amount of $2,400 decreed by the district court to be paid by defendant in the event he chooses to make up the just price for the property.

The record shows that L. B. Johnson went into bankruptcy about 1932. Prior thereto he deeded to his wife by dation en paiement the property in dispute for $2,900, which was less than the amount he had received from her. He was refused his discharge and consequently, could not carry on the business in his own name. After the sale of his property in bankruptcy, his mercantile business, which had been run in his own name, was run in the name of his wife, Mrs. Mollie O. R. Johnson, plaintiff. L. B. Johnson was assisted in running the store by a young lady. His wife helped to run the farm and also looked after the property inherited from her father on which she raised cotton. S. D. Johnson, the father of L. B. Johnson, assisted his son in his bankruptcy proceedings and also furnished him money subsequent thereto. On April 18, 1935 the deed of sale under attack was executed by Mrs. Mollie O. R. Johnson. S. D. Johnson, the vendee, was not present at the sale and did not sign the deed. L. B. Johnson placed the deed of record.

S. D. Johnson, the defendant, testified that the deed was executed by Mrs. Mollie O. R. Johnson, the plaintiff, in pursuance to an agreement that he had with L. B. Johnson to advance him money for the payment of the store accounts; he further testified that he advanced L. B. Johnson $500 on March 12, 1935, which was about a month before the deed was executed, and that Mrs. Johnson owed him for checks he had issued for her account during the years 1932, 1933, 1934 and January, 1935, amounting to $1,353.25; and that he gave L. B. Johnson an additional $1,000 when the deed was executed and delivered to him.

Mrs. Mollie O. R. Johnson testified in substance that she knew 'nothing of any indebtedness claimed by S. D.

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 299, 191 La. 408, 1938 La. LEXIS 1380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-johnson-la-1938.