Latour v. Guillory

64 So. 130, 134 La. 332, 1914 La. LEXIS 1591
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 5, 1914
DocketNo. 19,808
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 64 So. 130 (Latour v. Guillory) 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
Latour v. Guillory, 64 So. 130, 134 La. 332, 1914 La. LEXIS 1591 (La. 1914).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This case is before us on a second appeal, having been remanded for certain purposes. See Latour v. Guillory et al., 130 La. 570, 58 South. 341.

In that case the following judgment was rendered by the Supreme Court:

“For reasons stated, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from is avoided, annulled, and reversed.
“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that plaintiff recover judgment for the amount of $5,000, with interest, plus 10 per cent, fee of attorney, stipulated in the deed, less deduction of amount due by plaintiff to defendants.
“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the defendants account for the notes identified with the deed of sale; that these notes and the price stated in the deed are secured as to their payment by privilege and mortgage as herein stated.
“The case is remanded to the district court in order to ascertain and fix the amount due .by plaintiff to defendants; consideration received by him from defendants and amount of judgment and mortgage held by the defendants, if any be found, due by the former to the latter. Costs in both courts to abide the final decision of the suit.”

It appears that the plaintiff sued to annul a certain sale of his undivided interest in three tracts of land, made to Mrs. Latour, wife of O. E. Guillory, on September 15, 1905, on the ground of the nonpayment of the price, and in the alternative for judgment against both of them for the price of $5,000, with interest and attorney fees.

Defendants for answer pleaded the general issue and set up a donation of the same property by the plaintiff to Mrs. Guillory on September 5,1905. Defendants, after making other averments not necessary to mention, concluded their answer as follows:

“Now your respondents, in the event that the plaintiff should be decreed the owner of said property, and only in that event, assume the position of plaintiffs in reconvention and aver that Emile A. Latour is justly and truly indebted unto your respondents in the sum of $16,035, with legal interest thereon from date of judgment until paid”—

for improvements, administration, and expenses relating to said tracts of land.

Defendants further averred that' plaintiff was indebted to them in the sum of $75 per month from September 5, 1905, to date of answer for the support of plaintiff’s father and two sisters, and also $1,000 for attorney fees and expenses from the filing of the suit.

The answer concluded as follows:

“Wherefore, premises considered, respondents pray that plaintiff’s demand be rejected and his suit dismissed, with cost, and, in the event the plaintiff be decreed the owner of the property in dispute, respondents pray that in the alternative there be judgment in their favor and against said plaintiff in the full and true sum of $16,035, with legal interest thereon from date of judgment until paid.”

The judge a quo dismissed plaintiff’s suit on the ground that he had donated the property to Mrs. Guillory.

This court held tha,t the donation was null for want of proper legal form; that the sale could not be annulled on the ground of non[335]*335payment of the purchase price; and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the price, with interest and attorney fees as stipulated.

The reeonventional demand of the defendants was not considered because it was eliminated by the rejection of plaintiff’s demand to annul the sale.

The ease .was remanded for the purpose of giving the defendant Guillory an opportunity to assert any claim that he might have against the plaintiff growing out of his payment of the Marqueze judgment or the payment of attorney fees. The decree remanding the case, however, is broad enough to cover other claims of the defendant Guillory against the plaintiff which may be properly urged by way of reeonvention.

After the rendition of judgment by this court, Arthur Latour and other parties instituted a suit in which they alleged that they and Mrs. O. E. Guillory were the sole heirs of Cora Roy, deceased wife of Emile Latour, and as such were the owners in indivisión in the proportion of one-tenth each of the three tracts of land described in the petition in the present suit of Latour v. Guillory. When this case was called for trial on the reeonventional demand, O. E. Guillory moved for a stay of proceedings; this motion was overruled; but the court, over the objections of the plaintiff, ordered that, “if judgment is rendered against the defendant in this suit, the same shall be inexigible until the issues in suit No. 175, entitled Arthur Latour et al. v. Dr. E. A. Latour et al., are finally determined.” This order was improvidently made, as it tended to postpone the execution of any judgment which might be rendered in favor of the plaintiff. Moreover, the two suits were between different parties, on different causes of action, and could not be consolidated.

The case was tried, and judgment was rendered in favor of O. E. Guillory for items aggregating about $6,200, with interest for a number of years. The plaintiff appealed, and the appellees have not prayed for an amendment of the judgment.

[1] The lands described in the petition formerly belonged to Emile Latour, Sr., and constituted the family homestead. Latour, Sr., in 1892 transferred this property to his sons E. A. Latour and Alexis Latour. A few days later Alexis sold his half interest therein to E. A. Latour for $1,500 on a credit. In 1893 E. A. Latour sold to his father, Emile Latour, an uhdivided half interest in the same property. It appears that the notes given by E. A. Latour to Alexis Latour, for the purchase price, passed into the hands of John H. Cole, who in 1894, at a foreclosure sale, became the purchaser of Alexis Latour’s interest in the property.

Thus stood the titles to the property in 1905, when O. E. Guillory and his wife intervened and procured the act of donation of September 5, 1905, which vested a life usufruct of one undivided half of the property in Emile Latour, Sr., and the naked ownership in Mrs. O. E. Guillory. Ten days later Guillory procured from the plaintiff a power of attorney to transfer, incumber, and alienate his “hopes and prospects of title and ownership” to the three tracts of land described in plaintiff’s petition for the purpose of settling certain indebtedness (not described) assumed by O.- E. Guillory, and to raise sufficient money to defend and prosecute his rights and claims in and to said property. Soon after the date of this power of attorney, a so-called counter letter was executed, which contemplated the transfer of the property to Mrs. O. B. Guillory on condition of the payment of two judgments on the notes given by plaintiff to Alexis Latour for the purchase price of his interest in the property. These judgments were never paid by Mr. or Mrs. Guillory. Guillory, under the power of attorney, sold plaintiff’s half interest in ■ the property to one Miller, his brother-in-law, [337]*337for $3,000. This sale was really a mere security for a debt due by Guillory to Miller.

On April 26, 1906, Miller and the plaintiff sold the half interest in the property to Mrs. O. E. Guillory for $5,000, represented by five notes for $1,000 each, bearing S per cent, interest.

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Bluebook (online)
64 So. 130, 134 La. 332, 1914 La. LEXIS 1591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latour-v-guillory-la-1914.