Livingston v. Morgan

26 La. Ann. 646
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1874
DocketNo. 463
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 La. Ann. 646 (Livingston v. Morgan) 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
Livingston v. Morgan, 26 La. Ann. 646 (La. 1874).

Opinion

Wyi.y, J.

Ti.e plaintiff, an emancipated minor and sole heir of R. D. Livingston, sues the defendant to compel him to transfer to her a certain plantation which he bought at the succession sale of her father on the second December, 1867, on twelve months’ credit for $1551, on the ground that said Morgan was the general agent and attorney at law of her mother, her natural tutrix, then absent from the State, and that he bought said land for the benefit of plaintiff, taking the title in his own name with the understanding that lie would transfer it to plaintiff when necessary, she making good to him the price given for the land. [647]*647The court gave judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demand and she has appealed. It will be necessary to examine the evidence.

G-. M. Croxtan testifies : I am administrator of the estate of R. D. Livingston, deceased, and Mrs. S. C. Livingston is coadministrator. I applied for and obtained an order for the sale of the land belonging to the estate of R. D. Livingston, .deceased. D. C. Morgan became the purchaser of the land at the sale, and it was my understanding that it was for the benefit of Mollie E. Livingston. I understood so from •Captain Morgan. I told parties that it was to be bought for Mollie E. Livingston. That was the understanding between me and Captain Morgan. That is, if the land did not sell for enough to pay the debts; if it did, he was to let it go. The debts were between $2500 and $3000. ■I have been on the place frequently; $500 would be fair average rent for the place; it is good gum land, and a fair average yield is about a bale of cotton and twenty-five or thirty, bushels of corn per acre.”

D. C. Morgan, the defendant, testifies: “That in the month of March, 1866, I agreed to act as agent for S. €. Livingston, tutrix for the minor child Mollie E. Livingstou, during their absence to the State of Alabama. I went with them to the city of New Orleans, and my last instructions from her was to avoid the sale of the land belonging to the succession of her husband, R. D. Livingston, the land'here in controversy. In 1867 the creditors of the succession of R. D. Livingston became clamorous for their money, and the land being the only property belonging to the succession the administrator was forced to get an order for its sale, and the property was advertised for sale. These facts were communicated by me to the tutrix by letter. I addressed, two or three times, letters containing the facts to her in Alabama. I stated I would buy the land if it did not sell for cash and if sold on a credit; and if her ward, Mollie E. Livingston, had funds to pay for the same at the time of the maturity of the obligation, and if she would take the necessary steps to take the title, that I would make a transfer of the title to her. This proposition I made once or twice before the sale and on two or three occasions subsequent, and once a short time previous to the maturity ot the obligation for the purchase price. I informed the tutrix that the note would soon mature and if she wanted to avail herself of my proposition she must be ready to meet it; that if I had the debt to pay I would certainly want to retain the title to the land. These propositions were all made through the •mail1 as above stated. I think I received a reply to some of those letters. I received no instructions to pay the note, for the very reason there were no funds available for the same that I knew of. I received no instructions to take any legal steps to transfer said title, by advice •of a family meeting or otherwise. The purchase, on my nart, of the [648]*648land in controversy and the proposition to transfer it to the minor, was not as agent of the minor, but as a friend of the minor. I had no authority .to act as agent to make said purchase. That at the time of said purchase, nor at the time of the maturity of the obligation of the purchase price, nor before nor since, has the plaintiff ever had in my hands one dollar belonging to her or the tutorship. At the close of the year 1869, or the first of 1870, 1 was indebted for the rent of land to the succession of Aaron Livitagston something over three hundred dollars, which, by an agreement of the administrator of the estate, I held and retained in my hands, for the benefit of the tutorship j but as the tutorship owed me then a large amount of money in excess of these rents I considered this amount compensated,” etc.

On cross-examination this witness states: “I expected to have funds in my hands from her grandfather’s succession, sufficient to pay the note given for the place in controversy. I have never paid all the note given for the land ; only paid in cash the amount indorsed on the back of it ($500).”

Prom the foregoing it appears that the defendant bought the land for the benefit of the plaintiff, expecting to collect funds as the attorney of plaintiff’s tutrjx from the succession of her grandfather, sufficient to pay the note given for the place in controversy,” he having all the business of the tutorship in his hands. And this conclusion is confirmed by the following written admissions of the defendant, which are in the record:

“Defendant admits that on or about the second day of December, A. D. 1867, he wrote a letter to the plaintiff, she being at the time in the State of Alabama, in which he informed her that the land in controversy in this suit, and which then belonged to the estate of her father, R. D. Livingston, deceased, had been sold on that day (second December, 1867), on a credit of twelve months for fifteen hundred and fifty-one dollars, and that he would take the title in his own name and can transfer the same to her (plaintiff) when necessary.

“ D. C. MORGAN.”

The letter, of which the above admissions contain the substance, written on the day of the sale, addressed to the plaintiff, then a minor child at school in the State of Alabama, taken in connection with the testimony of Croxton, the administrator who procured the order of sale, and also the statement of Morgan, the defendant, on eross-emamination, show beyond doubt that the land was purchased by Morgan for the benefit of plaintiff. He expected the plaintiff to have sufficient ■funds out of the succession of her grandfather to pay the note, given by him for the price at the maturity thereof.

•' Now the question is, having failed to collect for the minor funds suf[649]*649fieient to pay the note at maturity, was Morgan justified in refusing to transfer the title to the plaintiff in September, 1870, when she returned from Alabama, was emancipated by the court, and tendered to him the note which he had executed for the land and $500, the cash he had paid on that note, with $60, the interest on said payment? We are of the opinion that he was not justified under the circumstances in refusing to transfer the title to the plaintiff. In the position which the defendant occupied towards the plaintiff and her mother, the law exacted from him the utmost good faith. He had been put in charge of all their business, and they were absent from the State. In his letter to the minor on the day of the sale, according to his written admissions in the record, he informed her that her father’s place had that day been sold on a credit of twelve months for $1551; “ that he had taken the title in his own name and could transfer the same to her when necessary.” In this letter there was no condition stipulated upon the happening of which he designed keeping the land. He acknowledged that the purchase was for the plaintiff, and virtually promised to convey it to her when necessary, that is when required.

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Related

Scurto v. Le Blanc
184 So. 567 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1938)
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278 F. 921 (Fifth Circuit, 1922)
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Bluebook (online)
26 La. Ann. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-morgan-la-1874.