Miller v. Cates

3 La. App. 28, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 528
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1925
DocketNo. 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 3 La. App. 28 (Miller v. Cates) 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
Miller v. Cates, 3 La. App. 28, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 528 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

OD.OM, J.

This is a suit to correct an error, in a description of land sold by notarial act.

Plaintiff alleges that he is the owner and in possession of the SE% of SE% of Section 5 Township 18 North, Range 7 West in the Parish of Bienville which he purchased from the defendant, Mrs. J. E. Cates on the 8th day of December 1917, but that through error in the writing of the deed this land was omitted from the description.

He alleges that the deed made by defendant Mrs. J. E. Cates to him is not the depository of the intention of the parties and should be corrected by judgment of the court so as to include the SE% of SE% of Section 5.

Defendant answered admitting that she executed the deed to plaintiff but denied that there was any error in the description in the deed.

She further sets up in answer that the deed which she made to the plaintiff was a nullity for the reason that she received no adequate consideration for the land and she attacks the sale for lesion beyond moiety.

She prays that the plaintiff’s demand be rejected and, in reconvention, that the deed made by her to him on December 8, 1917, be decreed null.

[29]*29In this court defendant pleads the prescription of one year, setting up that this is “a suit quantum minoris and is prescribed in twelve months”.

ON THE PLEA OE PRESCRIPTION.

Article 2498 of the Civil Code provides that the action for supplement of the price on the part of the seller, and that for diminution of the price or for the canceling of the contract on the part of the buyer, must be brought within one year from the day of the contract, otherwise it is barred.

The plea of prescription, we assume is filed under this law. But it is perfectly clear that the plaintiff, the purchaser from Mrs. Cates, the defendant, has not brought an action to cancel the contract nor for the diminution of the price. His suit is to correct an error in the description of the land as contained in the deed. He alleges that he purchased the SE^ of SE% of Section 5 Township 18 North, Range 7 West but that through error in drawing the deed this land was omitted, and he prays for judgment “correcting the deed so as to include and describe said subdivision”.

The plea of prescription is therefore overruled.

It seems that Mrs. Cates, the defendant, was indebted to the mercantile firm of Hamner & Co. in a considerable sum, which indebtedness was long past due. Hamner & Co. had made repeated demands for payment of the debt but due to the fact that she had no money she could, not pay. However, she owned some land which she agreed to sell in order to satisfy the debt. Hamner & Co. did not want the land but ascertained that Isaiah Miller, the plaintiff herein, would purchase the land but was not willing to pay a price sufficient to satisfy the debt of Hamner & Co., and Hamner & Co. agreed to discount their debt so as to bring the land within the price Miller was willing to pay. Mrs. Cates was willing to sell in order to pay the debt and a sale by her to Miller Was agreed upon.

The sale of the land was by notarial act passed before W. H. Lazarus, a Notary Public of Bienville Parish, dated December 8, 1917, and signed by Mrs. Cates, authorized by her husband, Elton Cates, the land described in the deed being as follows: NW% of NE%; NE% of NW%; and N% of NW% of NWÍ4 of Section 5 and ten acres on east side of NE% of NE% of Section 6, Township 16 North, Range 7 West, and twenty-five acres on north side of NW% of NEJ4L of Section 9, Township 18 North, Range 7 West; with no acreage expressed; but a calculation shows that the description calls for 135 acres.

The defendant owned the SE% of SE1^ of Section 5, Township 18 North, Range 7 West at the date of the sale, and it is plaintiff’s contention that he purchased 175 acres, including the 40 acres in controversy, which was omitted from the description in the deed by error.

Defendant contends that she intended to sell and did sell only 135 acres as described in the deed.

Mr. Leslie, Hamner, a member of the firm of Hamner & Co., who seems to have negotiated the sale, swears positively that he talked the matter over with Mrs. Cates and her husband and that they agreed to sell 175 acres, and that Mrs. Cates and her husband went to Arcadia, the parish site, and looked up the description of the land which she owned and found that she owned not only the land described in this deed but the SE% of SE% of Section 5 also.

He says that the whole matter was discussed and that Mrs. Cates agreed to seil 175 acres including the land in controversy.

He further testifies that when the error [30]*30was discovered Mrs. Cates agreed to correct it and asked him to prepare a correction deed including the forty acres omitted and that, he prepared a deed in accordance with her request but that he did not present it to her for her signature on account of the fact that there arose about that time some litigation between her and one Joby Miller over the verity of a certain judgment which said Joby Miller had obtained against her under a foreclosure proceeding on a mortgage operating against the land in controversy, which mortgage it appears was given long before the sale to plaintiff.

The plaintiff, Miller, testified that Mrs. Cates went to him to sell 175 acres of land in Sections 5, 6 and 9 and that based no her proposition to sell 175 acres he agreed to purchase and that both Mrs. Cates and her husband said on the day of sale that there was 175 acres of land.

He says they thoroughly understood that they were selling that much land and, as before stated, it takes the forty acres of land alleged to be omitted from the deed in order to make up an area of 175 acres.

The plaintiff testified that he would not have purchased the tract had he not thought that the land in controversy was included.

On the other hand, the defendant and her husband swear positively that she did not intend or agree to sell the land in controversy; that she sold only 135 acres as described in the deed, and Elton Cates, the defendant’s husband, swore that he told his wife that .if she intended to sell the SE% of SE^A of Section 5 he would not sign the deed to authorize her.

Mrs. Cates denied that she told Leslie Hamner that she was willing to correct the error, although she admits that she spoke to him about it.

In the suit above referred to between Mrs. Cates and Joby Miller wherein Mrs. Cates successfully attacked and had annulled a Judgment which Joby Miller had obtained against her, she gave testimony as follows:

“Q. Didn’t you make Isaiah a deed?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Well, when he found out you made an error in the deed, you say Joby offered you $5.00 to correct it?
“A. Yes, sir, he offered me $5.00 to sign it.
“Q. And you made Isaiah a deed and through error that land was left out?
“A. I think so.”

The testimony was given in another suit which was tried prior to the trial of the present suit and was introduced in this suit and filed without objection.

The land referred to is evidently the land in controversy in this suit, as that was the land which she had previously mortgaged to Joby Miller.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 28, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-cates-lactapp-1925.