Prelow v. Dorian

53 So. 2d 467, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 802
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1951
DocketNo. 7678
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 So. 2d 467 (Prelow v. Dorian) 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
Prelow v. Dorian, 53 So. 2d 467, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 802 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The learned trial judge has painstakingly and correctly stated the facts, the pleadings and the issues in this case, in written opinion, which, in conjunction with the record, we have carefully studied. We agree fully with his resolution of the factual issues tendered and with the legal principles he has applied to such facts. So well has he discussed and treated the .case, in all of its phases, we have decided to adopt, as our own, the opinion rendered by him. It follows:

“About January 1950 plaintiff, Robert Prelow, a colored man, then residing at Timón, Louisiana, entered into a verbal [468]*468agreement with the defendant, Will Mc-Ghee, a colored man of Shreveport, Louisiana, whereby McGhee was to sell to .Pre-low for $325.00 Lot No. 3 of the Dorian Subdivision of Shreveport, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, Unit No. 1. McGhee was a builder of houses. At the time of this agreement McGhee did not own the lot described, but had a contract to purchase the same from the owner thereof, J. C. Dori,an, a defendant herein, for the sum of $250.00. Simultaneously with the agreement between Robert Prelow and Will McGhee for the purchase of the lot, the two entered into a separate verbal agreement in which Will McGhee agreed to build a house and residence on the lot for Robert Prelow for the price and sum of $1,050.00. Thereafter, as will be hereinafter shown, Robert Prelow made certain payments in cash to McGhee, and on March 23, 1950, McGhee executed and delivered to Robert Prelow a written contract of sale of said lot, which contract is part of a booklet containing, in addition to the contract itself, spaces for the notation of payments thereon. (See Exhibit P-1.)
“Beginning in February 1950 or thereabout, McGhee started construction on the building but proceeded very slowly and intermittently. During this time plaintiff, Robert Prelow, had his son, Noel Prelow, a plaintiff herein, to come to Shreveport to observe the work being done on the house. On May 8, 1950, Robert Prelow, whose work at Timón, Louisiana, prevented his coming, sent his wife, Beatrice Prelow, and their son, Noel Prelow, to Shreveport with instructions to secure from Will McGhee a deed to the lot. Robert Prelow gave Noel Prelow $300.00 in cash, to complete the transaction. We think the evidence also sustains our finding that Robert Prelow also authorized his son, Noel Prelow, to conclude with Will McGhee whatever other instruments might be necessary to reduce to writing and record his contracts with Will McGhee, including the building of the house.
“Noel Prelow and Beatrice Prelow, on arriving in Shreveport, contacted Will Mc-Ghee, and together they went to the offices of Mr. A. C. David, an attorney and notary public of Shreveport. McGhee notified Mr. Dorian to also appear at Mr. David’s office to receive the balance due on the purchase contract for the lot between Mc-Ghee and Mr. Dorian heretofore referred to. When Mr. Dorian arrived at Mr. David’s office there had been prepared for Mr. Dorian’s signature a credit deed from Dorian to Noel Prelow, which included both the lot and improvements thereon, and stipulated a consideration of $325.00 cash and a mortgage and mortgage note for $835.00 to represent the balance. Mr. Dorian refused to sign this instrument, stating correctly that he had only agreed to sell Will McGhee the lot and was not interested in the improvements, whereupon this document was destroyed. Mr. David then, on instructions of Will McGhee and Noel Prelow and Beatrice Prelow, prepared a cash deed from Mr. Dorian to Noel Prelow of the lot only. Mr. Dorian signed this instrument (See P-18 attached to plaintiffs’ petition) and upon receiving the balance due him under his sales contract with Mc-Ghee, left the office. Thereafter, on instructions from Will McGhee, Noel Pre-low and Beatrice Prelow, Mr. David prepared an act of mortgage covering the lot and improvements and a mortgage note identified therewith in the amount of $835.-00. (See said instrument attached to plaintiffs’ petition.) Noel Prelow then signed the mortgage and the note before Mr. David as notary. This note was payable to Future Holder and by Noel Prelow, the maker, endorsed in blank.
“Noel Prelow paid to Will McGhee $285.00, being part of the money his father had given him, and paid $15.00 to Mr. David for drawing the deed and mortgage. It was out of this money received by him that Will McGhee paid Mr. Dorian the balance due Dorian by McGhee on the contract of sale of the lot.
.“Copies of the deed from Mr. Dorian to Noel Prelow and of the mortgage executed by Noel Prelow were given by Mr. David to Noel Prelow and he returned with them to his home in Timón, Louisiana, where both instruments were seen and observed by plaintiff, Robert Prelow immediately.
[469]*469“Will McGhee had negotiated with defendant, T. H. McCain, a lender of money, to finance the construction of the house he had agreed to build for Robert Prelow, and for this purpose negotiated the mortgage note which Noel Prelow had executed to Mr. McCain. Out of caution, Mr. McCain did not give to McGhee whatever amount he had agreed to acquire the note for but, instead, required that all hills for materials and labor going into the building be presented to him for payment.
“After continued desultory progress on the building, McGhee finally defaulted and Robert Prelow had to complete the building at considerable cost to him, as will be hereafter shown.
“At the time Noel Prelow received the deed from Mr. Dorian, which deed named Noel Prelow as vendee instead of Robert Prelow, and at the time Noel Prelow executed the mortgage and mortgage note on the' lot and building, Noel Prelow was a minor, lacking about three months of attaining the age of twenty-one years.
“In this suit Robert Prelow asks judgment against the defendant, J. C. Dorian, ordering him to correct and reform the deed of May 8, 1950, so as to show Robert Prelow to be the vendee therein, instead ■of Noel Prelow. Judgment is asked against T. H. McCain as the holder and owner of the mortgage note, canceling and erasing from the records the mortgage given by Noel Prelow on May 8th, and annulling and canceling the mortgage note executed by Noel Prelow in connection therewith. Judgment is further asked by Robert Prelow against Will McGhee for the sum of $618.62 for the amounts allegedly paid by Robert Prelow for the completion of the building. It is plaintiffs’ contention that Noel Prelow was unauthorized to take a deed from Mr. Dorian in Noel Prelow’s name as vendee, and that Noel Prelow was likewise unauthorized to execute the mortgage and mortgage note. It is further contended by plaintiff Robert Prelow that, inasmuch as Noel Prelow was a minor at the time he executed the mortgage and mortgage note, they were null and void for that reason.
“Mr. Dorian’s defense is that he had a contract with Will McGhee to sell McGhee the lot in question for the sum of $250.00 and that when called to the office of Mr. David on May 8, 1950, he executed the deed to the person to whom Will McGhee directed him to execute same; that he knew nothing of Will McGhee’s transactions with the Prelows; that he did not know either Robert or Noel Prelow, and that he had no knowledge of the minority of Noel Prelow. We think the evidence abundantly establishes these facts.
“It is Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 2d 467, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prelow-v-dorian-lactapp-1951.