Krouse v. Stewart

121 So. 229, 10 La. App. 454, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 77
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1929
DocketNo. 3191
StatusPublished

This text of 121 So. 229 (Krouse v. Stewart) 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
Krouse v. Stewart, 121 So. 229, 10 La. App. 454, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 77 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

ODOM,- J.

Plaintiff and defendants are all children or descendants of Mrs. Rosaura Krouse who died in 1918. In July, 1911, the said Mrs. Krouse, who owned as her separate property some 390 acres of land near Minden, Louisiana, entered into a purported lease contract with one of her sons, C. P. Krouse, plaintiff here, whereby she leased to him all of said land for a period of 25 years. The consideration for the lease as expressed in the contract, which was signed by both parties and duly recorded, is “$1,000 heretofore received by lessor from the lessee, constituting 'a debt due by her to said lessee which debt is hereby cancelled; and the further consideration of the care and support given the lessor by said C. P. Krouse for the past 16 years; also the improvements put on the property of the value of $1,000 by said C. P. Krouse.”

The said contract contained the following stipulation: “Said C. P. Krouse shall and is hereby granted partly for the above consideration the right to purchase the property herein described at any time during the term of this lease for the price and sum of $3.00 per acre.”

Three years later, in 1914, C. P. Krouse exercised his option to purchase the land under the last quoted clause of the contract, and accordingly, Mrs. Krouse executed a deed transferring to him 310 acres of the land for the purported cash consideration of $3.00 per acre.

Mrs. Krouse died in 1918. Shortly after her death, her other forced heirs sued the vendee to set the sale aside on the ground that it was a fraudulent simulation. The District Court set the sale aside and that judgment was affirmed on appeal by this Court on January 27, 1920.

In that suit, C. P. Krouse, defendant, who is plaintiff here, made two alternative demands, one of which was that the lease from his mother to him be declared a valid obligation. For some reason, the District Court did not pass on that part of defendant’s alternative demand, and, while this Court said this should have been done, yet inasmuch as it was not, defendant’s demand in that respect was dismissed as in case of non-suit.

The present suit is by C. P. Krouse against the other heirs of Mrs. Krouse for specific performance of the contract above referred to, demanding that said heirs now execute in his favor a deed to said property at $3.00 per acre under the option given him to purchase.

There were exceptions, both dilatory and peremptory, filed by defendants, which were either overruled or referred to the merits. Defendants also filed pleas of estoppel and res actjudAcata which were referred to the merits. Reserving their rights under all exceptions and pleas, defendants answered setting up that the pretended option and contract entered into by Mrs. Krouse and C. P. Krouse in 1911, was null and void as having been given without consideration; that the price stipulated was vile and insignificant, the price named being less than one-fourth the value of the property; that the effect of the contract was to divest Mrs. Krouse of all her property; and that it was void for want of mutuality and was a ym&um pactum.

There was judgment in the lower court rejecting plaintiff’s demands, and . he has appealed.

[456]*456OPINION.

Our learned brother of the District Court rejected plaintiff’s demands on the ground of estoppel. The lease contract with an option to purchase was entered into between Mrs. Krouse and C. P. Krouse, plaintiff in this case, in 1911. Three years later, C. P. Krouse exercised his option to purchase the land and caused his mother to deed 310 acres thereof to him, at $3.00 per acre. The deed was duly recorded in the notarial records and C. P. Krouse took possession and held as owner until 1918, when his mother died, and for some years thereafter. When his co-heirs sued him to set aside the sale, he answered, alleging that he had exercised his option to buy and had bought the property for a valuable consideration which he had paid in cash. As a witness in his own behalf, he swore to those facts.

The District Judge was of the opinion that, having exercised his option to purchase the land, the contract and option of 1911 was at an end, and that C. P. Krouse has no rights under it now, and, having-alleged and sworn in the former suit between the same, parties that he owned the land, he is now estopped to deny these allegations, and that he has no standing in Court now against his co-heirs to force them to make title to him under the contract.

That holding may be correct. We have given the point no consideration for the reason that the case is before us, not only on the exceptions and pleas filed by defendants, but upon the merits as raised by the answer as well, and we prefer to go directly to the merits and rest our decision there.

Defendants specifically challenged the validity of the so-called contract of 1911 on various grounds, one of which was that it was entered into by Mrs. Krouse without any consideration whatsoever and was the result of a fraudulent scheme practiced by this plaintiff upon his aged mother in order to get possession of all her property to the detriment of her other children and descendants.

The record in the former suit was filed in evidence in the present suit. Both records are voluminous, but we have laboriously read them both and arise from that reading thoroughly convinced that the contract which plaintiff now seeks to enforce was without any consideration whatsoever, and was therefore never binding on Mrs. Krouse, and is not binding upon her heirs; . and furthermore, that the price stipulated at which C. P. Krouse might purchase the land was inconsiderable as compared with the real value of the property, and was therefore vile.

The facts as disclosed by the record are. that Mrs. Krouse and her husband, Dr. Krouse, had eight children. Dr. Krouse died leaving no property. Mrs. Krouse, his wife, however, owned in her own name and right considerable real estate, including the 310 acres here involved, on which there was a farm in good state of cultivation. After her husband’s death, Mrs. Krouse turned her business, including the management of the farm, over to one of her sons, Otto, who looked after it and his mother until his death, about 1895. After Otto’s death, the plaintiff, who was single, took his place in the household of his mother, as well as the possession and management of the farm. All the other children, except possibly two, had left home and these two soon left. The plaintiff and his mother lived together- on the homestead from 1895 until her death in 1918. During all of that time, plaintiff [457]*457had entire charge of the farm, as well as some live stock, all of which belonged to his mother. During a portion of the time, he leased some of the land on shares and at times hired labor to help make the crops. But, during the whole time, he paid his mother no rent and never accounted to her for any of the revenues from the property. Whatever he made, he claimed and kept as his own. His mother got nothing above the bare, and we think, scant necessities of life. We are not alone in our conclusion- that what little she got was doled out to her by her son with a miserly hand. The late Judge Porter, who was the organ of this Court in the former suit in which the present plaintiff was defendant, in discussing the conditions under which Mrs. Krouse lived with her son, said:

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Bluebook (online)
121 So. 229, 10 La. App. 454, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krouse-v-stewart-lactapp-1929.