Peterson v. Moresi

186 So. 737, 191 La. 932, 1939 La. LEXIS 1043
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 34898.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 186 So. 737 (Peterson v. Moresi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Moresi, 186 So. 737, 191 La. 932, 1939 La. LEXIS 1043 (La. 1939).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

On the 19th of August, 1907, A. P. Moresi bought from William L. McFarlain, for $2,000 cash, seven acres of land, in which the plaintiffs in this suit are claiming an interest. On the same day Moresi acquired from McFarlain an oil lease on other lands of McFarlain, which lease, however, is not involved in this suit. On the same day Moresi signed an instrument which he called “Recognition of Interest,” — on which this suit is founded, — thus:

*935 “State of Louisiana
“Parish of Calcasieu
“Recognition of Interest
“I, A. P. Moresi, a resident of the Parish of Iberia, State of Louisiana, do hereby state that I have this day purchased from' William Lee McFarlain, of the Parish of Acadia, State of Louisiana, Seven (7) acres of land, being a part of Lot numbered Three (3) in Section Forty-one (41) in Township Nine (9) South, Range Two (2) West, of the Louisiana Meridian, situated in the Parish of Acadia, in said State, and fully described in the warranty deed filed for record on this day, and that I have leased this day from the said William L. Mc-Farlain Lots numbered Four (4) and Five (5), except the earthern tanks and buildings thereon, and being a part of said Section Forty-one (41), and also Twenty (20) acres in the Northeast corner of Lot Four (4) of Section Thirty-eight (38) in said township and range, and that the following named persons have the following interest in said property:
“A. P. Moresi an undivided interest therein;
“S. A. Moresi an undivided %i interest therein;
“A. D. Moresi an undivided interest therein;
“Arthur Schexnayder an undivided %i interest therein;
“Jules Maritzky an undivided %i interest therein;
“Ike Maritzky an undivided %i interest therein; and that said named persons have paid their pro rata share and portion of said purchase price, and when so requested I will execute an act of transfer conveying to them or their assigns their respective interest in said premises.
“Witness my hand at Jennings, Louisiana, this 19th day of August, 1907, in the presence of the undersigned lawful witnesses.
“[Signed] A. P. Moresi”
“Witnesses:
“[Signed] David H. Livingston
“[Signed] J. H. Heinen.”

A. P. Moresi died, intestate, on the 26th of March, 1936. His widow and two daughters, who are his only heirs, are the defendants in this suit.

It is admitted that the name S. A. Moresi, in the instrument which we have copied, was intended, for L. A. Moresi. He and Jules and Ike Maritzky died, intestate. Their heirs, and A. D. Moresi, are the plaintiffs in this suit. Arthur Schexnayder did not join in the suit. The instrument on which the plaintiffs are suing, and which we have copied, was obtained by A. D. Moresi from Arthur Schexnayder in November, 1936; that is to say, about eight months after A. P. Moresi died. A. D. Moresi had the instrument recorded in the conveyance records of Acadia Parish on December 1, 1936; and thereafter he had the instrument attested by the two witnesses, David H. Livingston and J. H. Heinen, and again had it recorded, on March 15, 1937. The instrument was never recorded before December 1, 1936. It is admitted that it be^rs the genuine signature of A. P. Moresi.

*937 The plaintiffs, haying made demand upon the widow and heirs of A. P. Moresi, to be recognized as joint owners of the 7 acres of land, brought this suit against them, praying to be decreed the owners of the undivided interests in the land, as set forth in the so-called “Recognition of Interest,” and to have the defendants ordered to execute a conveyance to them for their interests, respectively, within a time to be specified in the judgment, or, in default thereof, to have the judgment stand in lieu of such conveyance. The plaintiffs prayed also for an accounting of any and all revenues that A. P. Moresi or his widow and heirs might have received from the seven acres of land, and for their share thereof.

In defense of the suit, the defendants set up and are yet urging two pleas, which we excerpt from their brief, thus:

(a) The contract was not accepted by or delivered to the plaintiffs or their ancestors; was, therefore, incomplete and no contract at all; or, at most, constituted an unaccepted offer or proposal, which, under article 1810 of the Civil Code, could not be enforced against the heirs of A. P. Moresi.

(b) Alternatively, if the contract was complete and at one time enforceable, that right prescribed in ten years under article 3544 of the Civil Code.

The judge of the district court, after hearing the evidence and the facts which were agreed to by the parties, overruled the defendants’ pleas, and gave judgment for the plaintiffs. The defendants are appealing from the decision.

The appellants’ principal plea or defense is founded upon the idea that the instrument sued on, called “Recognition of Interest,” was only an executory contract, — such as an offer to sell. Article 1810 of the Civil Code refers only to such contracts, thus: “If the party making the offer, die before it is accepted, or [if] ' he to whom it is made die before he has given his assent, the representatives of neither party are bound, nor can they bind the survivor.”

Our opinion, however, is that the so-called “Recognition of Interest” was not merely an executory contract, or merely an offer on the part of A. P. Moresi to convey to the other parties named in the instrument the interests which they were said to have in the seven acres of land. In Ballentine’s Law Dictionary, the definition of “executory contract of sale” is taken ■ from 23 R.C.L. 1346, thus: “A contract of sale is executory when there remains something to be done, the performance of which is a condition precedent to the transfer of the property.”

The appellants lay great stréss upon the concluding paragraph of the instrument signed by A. P. Moresi, in which he declared that, when requested so to do, he would execute an act of transfer conveying to the persons named in the instrument, as the co-owners with him, their interest in the property. But that expression did not mean that an act of transfer by A. P. Moresi to the co-owners named in the instrument would be essential to the joint ownership which was acknowledged in the instrument. A. P. Moresi acknowledged in the instrument, not only that each of the other parties *939 named in the instrument owned the interest stated, but also that he himself owned only the remaining %i interest in the 7 acres of land. He acknowledged also that each of the persons named as being co-owners with h-im had paid to McFarlain his — the co-owner’s — proportionate share of the price for which all of them jointly had bought the land; and hence he, A.’ P. Moresi, acknowledged that he had paid to McFarlain only his, A. P.

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 737, 191 La. 932, 1939 La. LEXIS 1043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-moresi-la-1939.