Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Crigler

12 So. 2d 511
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1942
DocketNo. 6562.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 511 (Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Crigler) 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
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Crigler, 12 So. 2d 511 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiff was awarded by the Fourth District Court, Parish of Ouachita, on June 26, 1941, judgment for $520.21 on open account against F.A. Crigler, on which execution issued in March, 1942. The Sheriff of Ouachita Parish seized under the writ and advertised for sale, as the property of defendant, a 1941 model Chevrolet sedan. However, before the sale was consummated, Mrs. Crigler, by intervention and third opposition, asserted ownership of the car and prayed that the fi.fa. be set aside, that her ownership be recognized and possession of the car restored to her. She also sued for damages allegedly sustained by her on account of the unlawful seizure of the automobile, itemized in her petition, for the sum of $1,210. She also prays that should the car be sold prior to *Page 513 the termination of the issue of ownership, her right to proceed against plaintiff and the sheriff for its value be reserved to her.

Intervenor alleges that she purchased the seized car from Lee-Rogers Chevrolet Company, Inc., of the City of Monroe, Louisiana, for $1,228.84 on March 18, 1941, "having traded in a Ford pick-up truck which she purchased from money she secured from her first husband's estate". She also alleges:

"Petitioner further shows that she was paying for said automobile from funds which she was deriving solely from her first husband's estate and from her separate business over which her present husband, F.A. Crigler, has no control."

The sheriff and plaintiff were impleaded. Each answered. For lack of information upon which to base a belief, the sheriff denied the material allegations of the petition. Plaintiff denied articulately all of said allegations save that the car was seized pursuant to its instructions to the sheriff.

There was judgment for intervenor recognizing her ownership of the automobile, for attorney's fee in the sum of $150 and $500 for humiliation, embarrassment, loss of business, deprivation of the use of the car, and for costs. Her right to sue plaintiff for the car's value was reserved to her. From this judgment plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The primary question tendered by the intervention concerns the ownership of the car. Is it an asset of the community between Mr. and Mrs. Crigler or is it the separate property of the intervenor? If of the former status, of course, it is subject to seizure for payment of the husband's obligation, and sale thereof to satisfy such was legally made.

Mrs. Crigler purchased the car from Lee-Rogers Chevrolet Company, Inc., on March 19, 1941, for the price (including carrying charges) of $1,055.08, of which amount only $126.76 is recited in the act of sale to have been paid in cash. The balance was evidenced by her mortgage note payable in twenty-four (24) installments of $38.68 each. All installments were discharged to the time of seizure, a total of eleven. In reality, no part of the purchase price was paid in cash. The recited cash payment was the value of the equity intervenor had in a one-half ton pick-up truck she acquired from her son, Jerry, on account of indebtedness due to her.

Intervenor's first husband, Sam E. Love, died June 1, 1922, while living in Bossier Parish. He left three minor sons as his sole heirs, issue of his marriage to intervenor, to whom she qualified as tutrix. The inventory of the minors' property includes only one-sixth interest in a tract of ninety (90) acres in Bossier Parish, presumably the separate property of the deceased, and one-half interest in a bank deposit amounting to $703.87, and two other small items appraised at $22.50.

At the time of Love's death intervenor was earning $100 per month and, according to her testimony, continued to earn this wage from different employers until 1929 when she purchased and began the operation of a cafe in Bossier City, Louisiana, paying therefor $2,500. She continued in this business until some time during the year 1939. She married Mr. Crigler in September, 1929, after purchasing the cafe and has since continuously lived with him. She sold the cafe for $1,500 cash in 1939 and moved to the City of Monroe, Louisiana, in October of that year. At that time she owned a home in Bossier City but did not dispose of it until August, 1941. She testified that the lots on which this home was erected were owned by Love at the time of his death. The inventory does not support her in this respect. The lots are not listed thereon.

Intervenor's son, Jerry, preceded her to Monroe and was there engaged in running a produce store which he acquired with funds loaned him by his mother. He thereafter opened up a fruit stand on Louisville Avenue in said city which will hereinafter receive further discussion.

Intervenor and her husband testified that, all told, she loaned Jerry Love approximately $3,000, $500 of which was from the price of the cafe's sale. They also testified that Mr. Crigler exercised no control over nor participated in the conduct of the cafe, and that he has not worked any since his marriage to intervenor.

While Mrs. Crigler lived in Bossier City and other places prior to moving to Monroe, she carried checking accounts in different banks, and after adopting Monroe as her home she transferred her banking business there, using the Central Savings Bank and Trust Company for this purpose. After *Page 514 moving to Monroe, she leased her home in Bossier City for eighteen months at $50 per month and thereafter until it was sold, at $40 per month.

On March 3, 1941, intervenor took over the fruit stand business on Louisville Avenue and thereafter operated it as her own. On that date her son, Jerry, by written act, for a declared consideration of $100 cash, sold and delivered to her the entire stock of fruit and vegetables on hand. Also, on said date, by written act, Jerry leased to his mother for a period of five years, all of the fixtures employed in the fruit stand and the one-half ton pickup truck traded in on the price of the seized car. The fruit and vegetables on hand and all supplements thereto were included in this lease. The lease instrument contains this declaration, to-wit:

"The lessee has lent the lessor One Thousand and no/100 ($1000.00) Dollars on the above described property and has taken a chattel mortgage note on said equipment, and the said Thirty and no/100 ($30.00) Dollars rent herein paid is to be applied on the said One Thousand and no/100 ($1000.00) Dollars Chattel Mortgage note, first to the payment of interest due on said note and the balance to be applied on the principal on said note."

Contemporaneously with the execution of the above mentioned instruments, Jerry also executed the $1,000 note and chattel mortgage securing payment of same referred to in the lease, and delivered them to his mother. Thereafter (the date not being shown) he surrendered to her the truck.

The conditions of the delivery of the truck to intervenor are not disclosed. It was affected by a mortgage for $173.24 which the Lee-Rogers Chevrolet Company, Inc. paid off. Presumably, the truck was valued at $300 as the $126.76, recited cash payment on the price of the seized car, plus the amount of the mortgage against the truck equals this sum.

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-petroleum-co-v-crigler-lactapp-1942.