Pattison v. Bryan

26 So. 2d 778, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 466
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1946
DocketNo. 2813.
StatusPublished

This text of 26 So. 2d 778 (Pattison v. Bryan) 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
Pattison v. Bryan, 26 So. 2d 778, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 466 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

The plaintiff, the widow of Cecil Vernon Pattison, alleges that she and Cecil Vernon Pattison were married in October, 1937; that the said Pattison died intestate on June 5, 1941, without issue of the marriage, leaving plaintiff and his mother, Mrs. George Pattison, as his sole and only forced heirs. She alleges that by royalty deed dated October 25, 1940, and filed and recorded on December 11, 1940, Manning Oil Corporation *Page 779 sold to Thelma Bryan, the defendant, for a consideration of $300, certain royalty interest and rights, to-wit: 15/54 of 5/12 of the whole of any oil, gas or other minerals underlying a certain tract of land situated in the Parish of Cameron, including all of the right, title and interest in and to a certain fund deposited in escrow in the matter of a concursus proceeding entitled Union Sulphur Co. v. Campbell then pending in the District Court for Calcasieu Parish. She alleges that the defendant is a sister of her deceased husband; that the said royalty rights were in fact purchased by her said husband during the existence of the community, with community funds and for the use and benefit of her said husband; that while the purchase of the said royalty rights was made in the name of the defendant, the defendant did not know of the transfer at the time the deed was executed; that defendant never paid any part of the consideration; that the placing of the royalty deed in the name of defendant was a fraud upon her and was done to injure and deprive her of her rightful interest in the community then existing between her and her said husband.

In the last article of her petition, she alleges "that said purported sale to defendant was in reality placed in the name of said defendant for the use and benefit of petitioner's husband, Cecil Vernon Pattison, and said defendant was holding said royalty interest for the use and benefit of the said Cecil Vernon Pattison, and your petitioner is entitled to be recognized as the surviving spouse in community and as a forced heir of her deceased husband, Cecil Vernon Pattison, and, as such, she desires to be recognized as the owner of an undivided 3/4 interest in the royalty interest set out in Article 3 of this petition, together with all rights and benefits flowing therefrom." The prayer is in accordance with her petition.

The defendant filed exceptions of no right and no cause of action, which were overruled. The defendant then filed an answer in which she admits the relationship of the plaintiff to Cecil Vernon Pattison, her brother, but alleges that he was also survived by his father and mother; she also admits the royalty sale by the Manning Oil Corporation to her and alleges that her brother, Cecil Vernon Pattison, deceased husband of plaintiff, handled the purchase of the royalty interest for her with funds in his possession belonging to her, all of which was done with her knowledge and authority. She denies the remainder of plaintiff's petition and avers "that there was no thought of defrauding the Community as alleged, nor was the Community defrauded." She prays that plaintiff's demand be rejected at her cost.

Plaintiff filed a supplemental petition in which she alleges that the reason for taking the royalty deed in the name of defendant rather than in the name of her husband was because the royalty interest was involved in a suit and that the purchase of same in the name of her husband would have been the purchase of a litigious right and prohibited by Article 2447 of the Revised Civil Code. She further avers, in the alternative and only should the court hold that she is not the owner of the royalty in question, then that she should recover judgment against defendant in the sum of $225.99, being 3/4 of the purchase price of the royalty deed from Manning Oil Corporation to defendant, with legal interest thereon from judicial demand until paid, and costs. The prayer is in accordance with her petitions.

The case was tried and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, as prayed for in her original petition. Defendant has appealed.

As defendant does not urge the exceptions filed by her and overruled by the lower court, we consider them abandoned.

As we view the petitions of plaintiff, this suit is, first, to substitute the name of Cecil Vernon Pattison as the purchaser in a deed duly acknowledged and recorded in the conveyance records for the Parish of Cameron wherein it appears that the Manning Oil Corporation sold, for the price and consideration of $300 unto Mrs. Thelma Bryan, a certain royalty interest and rights in real estate situated in the Parish of Cameron and thereby establish title in someone other than the person in whom the recorded title exists, and, second, in the alternative, to secure a judgment for 3/4 of the named consideration in the deed against the party in whose name the recorded title exists.

In seeking to prove her demand as contained in the original petition, plaintiff offered *Page 780 the oral testimony of herself, which testimony was timely objected to and which objection will hereinafter be discussed, the original petition in the suit of Union Sulpher Co. v. Campbell et al., and a certified copy of the opinion of the Supreme Court in the case, 207 La. 514, 21 So.2d 626, a deed from the Civic Realty Company, Inc., to Manning Oil Corporation and the deed from the Manning Corporation to the defendant, Mrs. Thelma Bryan, and then rested her case.

It is evident that the offering of the petition, together with the decision of the Supreme Court, in the case of Union Sulphur Co. v. Campbell et al., was to show that the royalty interest involved in the suit was involved in a concursus proceeding and is immaterial in determining the issue involved, nor does it show title to Cecil Vernon Pattison, unless parole evidence is admissible.

The introduction of the deeds from Civic Realty Co., Inc., to Manning Oil Corporation is a link to show that the Manning Oil Corporation was the owner of the interest sold by it to Mrs. Bryan.

The testimony of plaintiff was taken out of court. When plaintiff sought to prove by parole that her husband was the owner of the royalty interest, and in reality was the purchaser of it in the sale made by the Manning Corporation and that the sale was made apparently to defendant as a matter of convenience to him, the subject matter being a litigious right, timely objection was made to such proof substantially on the grounds that title to real estate cannot be established by parole evidence, and that such evidence was not admissible to contradict the deed made by Manning Corporation to defendant. The transcript fails to show the ruling of the District Judge, but evidently it must have been overruled in that we find the evidence in the transcript and in his reasons for judgment, the trial court considered such evidence as legal evidence. There was no written evidence offered to establish the alleged title in plaintiff's deceased husband, therefore none to establish the alleged title in the plaintiff. Plaintiff did not propound to the defendant interrogatories on facts and articles as provided for by Civil Code Article 2275 in any attempt to establish written evidence pertaining to the title of this real property. Nor did plaintiff produce any counterletter signed by the defendant setting forth that she held title to the property for her brother, Cecil Vernon Pattison, the deceased husband of plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 778, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pattison-v-bryan-lactapp-1946.