Maxwell v. Maxwell

1 La. App. 413, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 14
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 12, 1925
DocketNo. 1630
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 La. App. 413 (Maxwell v. Maxwell) 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
Maxwell v. Maxwell, 1 La. App. 413, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 14 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

STATEMENT OF CASE.

ROBERTS, J.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Eliza Maxwell, was married to W. H. Maxwell something like fifty years ago, and after rearing a family of children, issue of the marriage, became estranged in their feelings toward each other, and as a result of such estrangement, voluntarily separated, and effected, or attempted to effect, an extra-judicial division of the community property accumulated during the marriage, by means of a notarial act made in the form of a “Dation En Paiement,” wherein a certain forty-acre tract of land therein described is appraised by two appraisers, at $150.00, and wherein W. H. Maxwell declares that he is indebted to his wife in the above named sum, and that the forty acres of land is given in payment of the debt then acknowledged to be due his wife.

The act of Dation En Paiement contains a further stipulation that the wife “hereby renounces her right to all her community rights”.

After having lived apart from plaintiff, his wife, since 1906, W. H. Maxwell died on June 10th, 1921.

In the meantime, he had sold that portion of the community not transferred to his wife, and had invested the proceeds in eighty acres of land situated in' Grant Parish, and described as the E% of NE% of Section 9, Township 9 N. Range 1 East.

[414]*414Soon after W. H. Maxwell’s death, his five children all majors, and the surviving widow, plaintiff herein, executed a deed before S. M. Abel, Notary Public,- to the defendant, T. R. Maxwell, for a consideration of $1,500.00, covering the eighty acres of land in dispute.

When the deed was signed by the plaintiff and her five children, the Notary, to whom defendant had handed his check book, with the request that he draw checks in favor of the several vendors, asked plaintiff what part she was to get, and she told him that she had' no part, that she was always left out.

Thereupon, the Notary drew five checks for $200.00 each, which, together with five notes for $100.00 each, were delivered to the five children in payment of the agreed purchase price of $1,500.00.

It- appears that the price paid by defendant for the property exceeded, by $500.00, the next highest offer that had been made for the property.

About the same time the sale of the land in controversy was executed, the five heirs of W. H. Maxwell made a partition of eleven head of cattle left by their father, and according to the undisputed testimony, the plaintiff herein made no claims, and received no share in the division of the cattle.

The sale of the property in controversy was executed on June 25th, 1921, and on November 4th, following,' plaintiff filed this suit to set aside the sale, insofar as same affected her interest in the property, alleging that she was induced to sign the deed through the artifice of defendant; that the sale was made without price or consideration; that if it be construed to fix a consideration, then said deed recites an error, the true facts being that there was no price and no consideration ever agreed upon between petitioner and ‘ said T. R. Maxwell.

“That the only cause which induced petitioner to subscribe her name to said pretended deed and act of sale, was that petitioner was led into error of law, and induced to draw an erroneous conclusion of law relating to an undivided one-half interest in and to said land being invested in petitioner at the death of her. said husband, and that her erroneous conclusion of law was caused, created and continued by artifice on the part of said T. R. Maxwell, and with design on his part to obtain an unjust advantage for himself, and. to, cause a loss to petitioner.”
“That said T. R. Maxwell falsely asserted to petitioner: that she had not title or interest at all in and to said land by operátion of law or otherwise; and furthermore, the said T. R. Maxwell suppressed from petitioner what was and is true as to petitioner having title to an undivided one-half interest in and to' said land.”
“That these fálse assertions, and tbé suppression from petitioner of what was and is true on the part of said T. R. Maxwell, deceived petitioner,' and was the sole and only cause of her being led into said error.”

The defendant’s answer admits plaintiff signing the deed, but denies that she signed through any error, either of fact or of law. Defendant further denies the practice of artifice of deception in procuring plaintiff’s signature to the deed, and denies ever having had any conversation with her about the matter.

It is further averred by defendant that he purchased all rights of plaintiff and the heirs of her deceased husband, W¡ H-. Maxwell, in and to said property, having paid therefore the sum of $1,500.00, which was more than the property was worth; that he authorized S. M. Abel, the Notary Public who drew and prepared the said deed for signature, to draw checks for the signature of defendant, paying out the said $1,500.00 consideration then and . there agreed upon among the said vendors, and that the said plaintiff participated in said-proceedings and authorized and instructed the said S. M. Abel how to draw said checks, and that defendant, in this manner [415]*415paid out the sum of $1,500.00 for a deed to said property; that said plaintiff having signed said deed, and authorized and instructed the manner of the distribution of the said consideration, is fully estopped from denying receipt of any amounts that may have been due her, and defendant now expressly pleads said estoppel.”

Defendant further averred that the real reason why -plaintiff did not claim any part of the proceeds of the sale, was that on March 26th, 1906, she and her husband had a division of property, and that as shown by said so called “Dation En Paiement” of said date, the deceased husband of plaintiff made her a deed to forty acres of land which she still owns and retains, and that she relinquished all her rights to all the remaining community property.

On the issues as above set forth, the case went' to trial, resulting in a judgment rejecting the plaintiff’s demands, from which she has appealed to this court.

OPINION.

Taken as a whole, the testimony shows that the plaintiff and her deceased husband had not lived together as man and wife during a period beginning in 1906, when they divided the community property, and ending with- the husband’s death in 1921; that neither their separation, nor the division of -the community, affected between them, had ever been effectuated by judicial decree of any Court; that plaintiff still retains the forty acres of land conveyed to her in 1906; and as between plaintiff and her five children, has acquiesced in and ratified the division of community made in 1906.

We quote below from the brief of defendant’s counsel, a number of extracts from the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses:

Mrs. Eliza Maxwell testified in part: “Referring' to the sale and defendant, she said, ‘He never spoke to me about it”. When asked about her son, Ivy, working up the trade, she said, “he came over there * .* * and went to see Rich Maxwell about the place and sold the place- to him. The children all went off and didn’t ever talk to me about it, but when they got ready for selling, they wanted me to go to the Lumber Company office at Rochelle, and wanted me to go there and sign the deed, and I would not go, and they brought Morgan Abel to the house’ (tr. 27).

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Bluebook (online)
1 La. App. 413, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-maxwell-lactapp-1925.