Luquette v. Floyd

147 So. 2d 894
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1962
Docket693
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 147 So. 2d 894 (Luquette v. Floyd) 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
Luquette v. Floyd, 147 So. 2d 894 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

147 So.2d 894 (1962)

Frances LUQUETTE, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
Mervine E. FLOYD, Defendant and Appellant.

No. 693.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

December 18, 1962.
Rehearing Denied January 17, 1963.
Certiorari Denied March 12, 1963.

*895 Edwards & Edwards, by Edwin W. Edwards, Crowley, for defendant-appellant

Domengeaux & Wright, by Bob F. Wright and Jerome E. Domengeaux, Lafayette, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before CULPEPPER, FRUGÉ and HOOD, JJ.

HOOD, Judge.

Plaintiff, Frances Luquette, obtained a judgment of divorce from defendant, Mervine E. Floyd, on February 5, 1951. On the day this decree was rendered the parties entered into an agreement purporting to be a settlement of the community of acquets and gains which theretofore existed between them. In this action, instituted on December 17, 1959, plaintiff contends that the above-mentioned property settlement agreement should be annulled because of the alleged fraudulent concealment and misrepresentation of facts by defendant. She demands judgment ordering that the community be re-inventoried and that there be included in that inventory certain property which she alleges belonged to the community, but which had been concealed and placed out of her reach by fraudulent transactions of defendant. Plaintiff further demands that she be decreed to be the owner of a one-half interest in all of said community property.

After trial, judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiff, annulling the property settlement agreement entered into on February 5, 1951, ordering that the community be re-inventoried, recognizing plaintiff as the owner of an undivided one-half of all said community property and decreeing that defendant be given credit in the partition of the community for the amount which he paid to plaintiff as consideration for the earlier property settlement. Defendant has appealed from that judgment.

The evidence establishes that the parties were married in 1934, and four children were born of that union. They experienced serious marital difficulties during the entire year 1948. On April 2, 1948, after having been told by a friend that defendant was "doing away with the property" of the community, plaintiff consulted an attorney and on his advice she executed and filed a formal declaration of family home affecting the property in Rayne which was then occupied by her and defendant as a residence. Their marital difficulties increased after the filing of this declaration, and finally the parties separated on September 11, 1948, at which time plaintiff left the defendant and moved to Abbeville. The parties have not lived together since that time, and a judgment of final divorce was rendered on February 5, 1951, dissolving the bonds of matrimony which theretofore existed between them.

On February 5, 1951, immediately after the final divorce decree was rendered, the parties entered into an agreement under the terms of which plaintiff, for a cash consideration of $5,500.00, sold and delivered to defendant all of her right, title and interest in and to thirteen separate tracts of land which belonged to the community which formerly existed between them. In this agreement *896 defendant assumed all debts and obligations of the community, and plaintiff waived any right to claim alimony. The agreement further contains the following provisions:

"* * * this act hereby constitutes a full and final property settlement of all of the property of the said community of acquets and gains which heretofore existed between the parties hereto.
* * * * * *
"This sale is likewise intended to cover all movable property which is not herein described and which belongs to the community of acquets and gains which heretofore existed between the parties hereto, being the intention to convey all of her rights, titles and interest in all bonds, stocks, cash in banks and any and all other property not herein described."

Plaintiff contends that she is entitled to have the above-described property settlement agreement annulled and the community re-inventoried and partitioned because defendant, by fraudulent conveyances and simulations, had concealed and had placed beyond her reach several other tracts of land which actually belonged to the community at the time the divorce was decreed. The evidence establishes that the following transactions took place during the years 1948 and 1952:

1. On March 16, 1948, which was prior to the divorce, defendant executed a deed purporting to convey to his son-in-law, L. Ellis Dupleix, and his wife (defendant's daughter by a prior marriage) a 20-acre tract of land in Acadia Parish for a consideration of $1,400.00. Also, on the same day, March 16, 1948, Arthur Myers, Jr., who was then indebted to defendant, conveyed to Dupleix and his wife an adjacent 20-acre tract of land for a recited cash consideration of $2,612.63. On April 2, 1952, which was subsequent to the divorce between the parties, these two 20-acre tracts of land were conveyed to defendant Floyd by Dupleix for a recited consideration of $4,012.63, which is the exact amount he supposedly had paid for the two tracts in 1948.
2. On April 3, 1948, prior to the divorce, defendant executed a deed purportedly conveying to Eddie Terro nine separate tracts of land in Lafayette Parish, totaling about 114 acres, for a recited cash consideration of $5,000.00. On December 18, 1948, Terro conveyed all of these tracts to Dupleix for the same consideration. Dupleix then conveyed the same tracts of land to defendant Floyd on April 1, 1952, after the divorce had been rendered, for a cash consideration of $5,000.00.
3. On April 27, 1948, before the divorce decree was rendered, James C. Arceneaux, Jr., who was Floyd's attorney in most of the transactions involved in this matter, conveyed to Delpha Stelly, a close friend of defendant, a 15-acre tract of land in Acadia Parish for a recited cash consideration of $5,000.00. On the following day, April 28, 1948, Stelly executed a deed purporting to convey the same 15-acre tract of land to defendant Floyd, also for a consideration of $5,000.00. The deed from Stelly to Floyd, however, was not recorded in the public records until December 30, 1952, which was after the judgment of final divorce had been rendered between plaintiff and defendant and more than four years after the deed was executed.
4. On July 1, 1948, before the divorce, defendant executed a deed purporting to convey to Delpha Stelly two city lots in Rayne for a recited cash consideration of $2,000.00. On August 23, 1948, Stelly executed a deed purporting to reconvey the same two lots to defendant Floyd for a consideration of $2,000.00, but this deed also was not recorded in the public records until *897 December 30, 1952, which was after the final divorce decree had been rendered.

It is apparent from the foregoing that record title to the tracts of land affected by the above-described conveyances was not vested in defendant Floyd or in the community at the time the divorce was rendered or at the time the property settlement agreement was entered into on February 5, 1951. None of the tracts of land affected by those transactions were described in the property settlement agreement entered into by the parties on that date, and plaintiff by that agreement did not convey her interest in those tracts to defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 So. 2d 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luquette-v-floyd-lactapp-1962.