Kuhn v. Bercher

38 So. 468, 114 La. 602, 1905 La. LEXIS 513
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 27, 1905
DocketNo. 15,363
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 38 So. 468 (Kuhn v. Bercher) 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
Kuhn v. Bercher, 38 So. 468, 114 La. 602, 1905 La. LEXIS 513 (La. 1905).

Opinion

LAND, J.

Fidele Bercher died at his domicile, in the city of Shreveport, in the year 01878, and his widow, Mrs. Fredericke O. Bercher, died in 1882. They left seven children, all of age, to wit, Mrs. Deal, Mrs. Dorian, Mrs. Doll, Mrs. Schilling, Mrs. Wappler, George Bercher, and Wm. A. Bercher.

This suit filed in January, 1904, is an action of partition, in which the first-named six heirs are plaintiffs, and the minor children of W. A. Bercher are defendants.

Plaintiffs allege “that the said Fidele Bercher and his wife, at the time of their death, left no property or assets, except a debt due by the said W. A. Bercher to their succession,” which originated from the assumpsit by the said W. A. Bercher of certain mortgages resting on several pieces of ■ real estate conveyed to him by Fidele Bercher on September 6, 1875. The petition represents that the said assumpsit bound W. A. Bercher personally to pay the mortgage debts, with interest, as a part of the purchase price, and that this obligation was secured by vendor’s privilege on all the property'conveyed; that W. A. Bercher died without paying said mortgages, and that the only payments made on same resulted from the seizure and sale of two of the three parcels of real estate by the mortgage creditors. The petition further alleged that the balance of said mortgages, with interest, assumed by him as part of the purchase price of said property, was due by him personally, and operated as a vendor’s privilege on the remainder of the property in Texas avenue included in said sale.

The petition details the mortgages covered by the assumpsit, the partial payment made by judicial sales of portions of the property, and concludes with a prayer for judgment against the succession of W. A. Bercher for the sums and interest claimed, and ordering said succession to collate said sums and interest for partition in the succession of Fidele Bercher and wife, and decreeing that the same are secured by vendor’s privilege on the property on Texas avenue included in the sale of September 6, 1875. The answer was a general denial, coupled with a plea of res judicata, and a plea of the prescription of 5 and 10 years. There was judgment for plaintiffs, and defendants have appealed.

On September 6, 1875, Fidele Bercher conveyed to his son W. A. Bercher, by act of sale duly recorded, all his real estate in the city of Shreveport, consisting of three properties, all subject to special mortgages. The act recited that the sale was made “for the consideration of the sum of Three Thousand (3000) Dollars, said sum being due said purchaser for wages for five years’ services, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and for the further consideration of the assumpsit by said purchaser of all mortgages-now existing on the records of Caddo Parish, against above described property, to-wit: [Here follows a detailed statement of four special mortgages, giving dates, amounts,, rate of interest, etc.]”

It may be here stated that Fidele Bercher was a brewer, married, and had seven children, one of whom was W. A. Bercher, who-worked with his father in the brewery business. The properties conveyed may be styled, for convenience, the brewery, the half lot on Texas street, and the Thornhill lots.

The mortgage on the brewery property was in favor of Mrs. E. Williams and for the sum of $2,781.25, with 8 per cent, interest from December 9, 1874.

There were two mortgages on the Texas street lot, one in favor of Edward Jacobs, for $1,200, with 8 per cent, interest from May 6, 1872, and the other in favor of Henry Rosenblath, with 8 per cent, interest from October 1,1872.

The mortgage on the Thornhill lots was for $2,810, in three notes, with 8 per cent. [605]*605interest from April 28, 1878, maturing in one, two, and three years.

The Jacobs mortgage was foreclosed in 1876, and the half lot on Texas street adjudicated to him for $800.

In the same year the mortgage on the Thornhill lots was foreclosed, and they were ■adjudicated to D. B. Martin, holder of the three notes, for $620.

In January, 1877, the mortgage of Mrá. E. Williams on the brewery property was canceled in full.

Eidele Bercher died in 1878, and his wife died in 1882. W. A. Bercher died in 1898, leaving a widow and several minor children. The widow was confirmed as natural tutrix, and the brewery property, less one lot transferred by W. A. Bercher to his sister Miss A. P. Bercher, now Mrs. Schilling, plaintiff herein, was inventoried as the property of said minors.

In 1903, plaintiffs herein brought suit in the district court of Caddo parish against said minors, represented by their tutrix, for the purpose of having the sale of September 6, 1875, from Pidele Bercher to W. A. Bercher, declared utterly null and void as a pure sham and simulation. The ease was tried, and the court held that such sale was not a simulation, but á real contract, based on wages justly due and an assumpsit of mortgages then resting on the property.

Plaintiffs thereupon instituted the present suit for a partition, alleging that the amounts of the special mortgages, with interest as stipulated, less the proceeds of two judicial sales, constituted a debt due by W. A. Bercher to the successions of his father and ■ mother, and that the minor heirs were bound to collate the same for the purposes of a partition.

The evidence in the case is almost entirely documentary, and the oral evidence does affect the pierits of the controversy.

Counsel for defendants offered in evidence the record cancellation of the special inortgage in favor of Mrs. E. Williams. Plaintiffs’ counsel objected, on the ground that defendants had not pleaded payment. This objection was properly overruled. The cancellation was evidence of payment. There was no evidence introduced in this case to show by whom or out of what funds payment was made. Counsel pleaded the judgment of the district court in the simulation suit as res judicata as to the fact that this mortgage was paid by Pidele Bercher. It is true that this matter was discussed in the opinion handed down by the district judge, but it was not adjudged,- nor was it necessary to do so on the question of simulation.

Evidence tending to prove that Pidele Bercher paid this mortgage was adduced for. the purpose of proving simulation. The judge, in commenting on the evidence, said that, if the testimony of the husband of one of the plaintiffs was admissible, he was of opinion that the evidence showed that Pidele Bercher paid $2,100 on the Williams mortgage, but that the testimony was too weak to prove that he paid the balance due on the same. The judge then said:

“Assumingthe fact to be that inl876,and again in 1877, Pidele Bercher came into possession of money which was used in paying the mortgage in whole or in part, it does not follow that the •sale made in 1875 was a pure simulation. Such payments may have been a loan or advance of money, and, if a gift or donation, the coheirs had their remedy.”

The evidence in the former suit was not offered on the trial below, and it cannot be said that it was adjudged that Pidele Bercher paid $2.100 on the Williams mortgage for $2,781.25, with interest thereon.

Plaintiffs offered no evidence in this case to prove payments made by Pidele Bercher, though they alleged that W. A. Bercher paid nothing on the mortgage. The record shows that the mortgage was paid in full and canceled. The evidence does not show by whom it was paid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 468, 114 La. 602, 1905 La. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuhn-v-bercher-la-1905.