Mullins v. Page

457 So. 2d 64
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 22, 1984
Docket16386-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 457 So. 2d 64 (Mullins v. Page) 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
Mullins v. Page, 457 So. 2d 64 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

457 So.2d 64 (1984)

Dodge E. MULLINS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
James Franklin PAGE, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 16386-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

August 22, 1984.
Writ Denied November 9, 1984.

*66 Hargrove, Guyton, Ramey & Barlow by J. Marshall Jones, Jr., Shreveport, for plaintiff-appellant.

Bowers & Bowers by Gary A. Bowers, Shreveport, for defendant-appellee.

Before PRICE, JASPER E. JONES and SEXTON, JJ.

PRICE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Dodge E. Mullins, appeals from a judgment denying the rescission of the sale by him of certain immovable property to defendant, James Franklin Page, on the grounds of lesion beyond moiety.

The facts reveal that the subject property is a somewhat irregularly shaped tract consisting of approximately three acres. The property is located at 3312 North Market Street (also known as U.S. Highway 71 and Louisiana Highway 1) between Deer Park Road and Booth Drive within the corporate limits of Shreveport, Louisiana. North Market Street is a four-lane boulevard. The property is in the northern portion of the city in a neighborhood generally known as the North Highlands area. The boundaries of the neighborhood are Twelve-mile Bayou on the east, Pine Hills Road or a projection thereof on the north, Interstate 220 on the south, and undeveloped lands to the west just off North Market Street. The neighborhood is primarily residential with some commercial zoning classifications. The subject tract is zoned B-2, neighborhood business district.

The subject property is unimproved except for six abandoned buildings which formerly served as a motel travel court known as Spring Court. The buildings are in an advanced state of deterioration. At the time of the sale, there was a pond located on the northeastern portion of the property which was approximately 1.24 to 1.3 acres in size. The pond had been created by an earthen dam and a concrete overflow structure with a culvert type overflow. The property or a portion thereof was considered to be in a flood hazard zone.

In February 1979, defendant purchased a piece of property from plaintiff and his niece, Barbara Sneed, adjacent to the subject tract. Several months later, defendant acted as a realtor for Mullins and listed the subject tract for sale. The subject property had been donated to the plaintiff by his mother. Plaintiff, Mullins, later requested that Page personally purchase the property. Defendant testified that he asked plaintiff to obtain a value on the property and then he would make an offer.

At the time of these negotiations, plaintiff was being cared for by the Fellowship Mission Center in Shreveport, Louisiana. The president and director of the center, Reverend Bobby Henderson, contacted Mark Montgomery, a realtor of Bossier City, to make an appraisal or valuation of the property on behalf of Mullins. Montgomery placed a value on the property within a range of $25,000 to $40,000 after a somewhat hurried appraisal, depending upon the amount of usable land available.

This appraisal information was provided to defendant, Page, and he made an initial offer of $25,000 to purchase the property which was rejected by plaintiff Page subsequently offered $27,500 which offer was accepted by the plaintiff.

*67 On September 28, 1979, plaintiff conveyed the subject property to defendant by a credit sale deed. The deed recited that the sale was made for the consideration of the sum of $27,500. Of this amount, $2,000 in cash was to be paid and a note was executed by defendant to the order of future holder in the amount of $25,500. The note was payable in consecutive monthly installments of $229.50 each until paid in full (approximately a twenty-year period) and was to bear a nine percent interest rate. The deed further stated that "[v]endor agrees that he will execute a subordination of this mortgage to any mortgage which may be executed by vendee covering the herein described property." A correction deed was executed on November 12, 1980, containing a more detailed property description of the property conveyed to defendant.

The evidence established that although the deed recited $2,000 was to be paid in cash to plaintiff as a down payment, this amount was substantially reduced by defendant's retention of a six percent realtor's fee on the sale price in the amount of $1,650. The cash amount received by plaintiff was further reduced when the 1979 taxes due on the property were prorated between the parties.

It was established that at the time of sale, the city of Shreveport was undertaking a drainage project on the property to alleviate flooding problems in the surrounding neighborhood. The City Council passed Resolution 862 of 1976 on December 14, 1976 authorizing the engineering firm of Aillet, Fenner, Jolly & McClelland to prepare construction plans, specifications, and contract documents for the "North Highland Area Drainage Project." The council passed Ordinance No. 269 of 1977 on December 13, 1977, establishing the 1978 Federal Revenue Sharing Capital Budget which allocated $180,000 to the North Highlands/Empire Circle drainage project. This ordinance was advertised in the Shreveport Journal on December 17, 1977. A preliminary survey of the subject property was made by Aillet, Fenner, Jolly & McClelland around August 21, 1978.

Insofar as it affected the subject property, the project basically consisted of removing the pond and constructing a concrete drainage ditch.

The evidence is unclear as to the actual date the construction on the drainage project was commenced. It appears that work was begun sometime in 1979 and the project was completed in October 1982. Work on the project seems to have been intermittent. Defendant's testimony indicates that the earthen dam was not "cut" in order to drain the pond until sometime in 1980.

The drainage ditch was generally constructed in the central portion of the property and essentially divides the subject tract in two with approximately 1.6 acres located southeasterly of the ditch and approximately 1.05 acres located on the northwesterly side of the ditch. The drainage easement contains approximately 15,258.1 square feet.[1]

On February 10, 1981, plaintiff filed suit to rescind the sale of the property on the grounds of lesion beyond moiety. Plaintiff, Dodge Mullins, was later interdicted in March 1982 and Hugh Sneed was appointed as his curator. Sneed's son is married to Barbara Sneed, a niece of the plaintiff, Mullins. Sneed was substituted as the proper plaintiff in this suit prior to the trial of this matter.

A lengthy trial on the merits was held in which both parties produced expert testimony as to the market value of the subject tract at the time of the sale.

James Young and Thomas Dupree of Waguespack, Dupree and Felts, Inc., testified on behalf of the plaintiff. The value of the property was analyzed by them by the comparison of the subject site with the sales of six comparable sites that occurred in the area in recent years. In the opinion of these appraisers, the highest and best use of the subject tract was commercial with an alternate residential use such as *68 townhouse or multi-family development. The appraisers ascertained the value of the subject property under two premises. Premise one took into consideration the public drainage project and premise two was without regard to the construction project.

The comparable sites used in the appraisal are as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
457 So. 2d 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullins-v-page-lactapp-1984.