Ruffino v. Hunt

99 So. 2d 34, 234 La. 91, 1958 La. LEXIS 1084
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 6, 1958
Docket43320
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 99 So. 2d 34 (Ruffino v. Hunt) 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
Ruffino v. Hunt, 99 So. 2d 34, 234 La. 91, 1958 La. LEXIS 1084 (La. 1958).

Opinion

McCALEB,, Justice.

Plaintiff instituted this suit against his former wife to have a certain piece of improved real estate, designated as Lot 13 of Square 48 in the Second District of New Orleans, bearing Municipal No. 624 St. Philip Street, declared to be his separate property and, if necessary, for a final partition of the community formerly existing between them.

The salient facts are not disputed respecting the acquisition of and subsequent transactions affecting the property. At the time of. the marriage in 1938, plaintiff was the owner.of the property, having purchased it in 1936 while a single man. In 1939, 1940 and 1944 he borrowed money on this property and an adjoining lot, which he had acquired after the marriage, from the Home Building & Loan Association. Each of those loans was effected by a transaction of sale and resale to and from the homestead, in conformity with R.S. 6:766, and, in none of the resales did plaintiff declare that he was acquiring the property with his separate funds and for his separate estate.

Plaintiff obtained a judgment of divorce from’ defendant in 1948. During those proceedings, there was an abortive attempt by the parties to partition the community property. However, the trial judge found this partition invalid since it was completed while the parties were still married.

Following a trial of the case, the judge declared the lot in dispute to be the separate property of plaintiff and further rendered judgment ordering the sale at auction of other community assets to effect a partition. In addition, he found that plaintiff was indebted to defendant in the amount of $1,867.27, in accordance with an account prepared by an auditor appointed by him, and ordered defendant to return a diamond ring belonging to plaintiff or suffer a debit of $1,000 on the amount due her.

The defendant has appealed from this judgment and the plaintiff has answered, requesting that the first settlement be declared valid and, alternatively, that the judgment be affirmed. 1

*97 Defendant asserts in this Court that the trial judge erred: (1) in holding the real estate in dispute to be plaintiff’s separate property; (2) in rejecting her claim for $19,550.21, allegedly due under her theory of a proper accounting, and (3) in concluding that plaintiff had not donated his diamond ring to her niece.

It is defendant’s contention that, notwithstanding its purchase prior to the marriage, Lot 13 became community property as the result of the sales and resales to and from the homestead in which resales plaintiff did not declare that he was purchasing the property with his separate funds and for his separate estate.

The proposition is not tenable. Article 2402 of the Civil Code provides that the community “ * * * consists of the profits of all of the effects of which the husband has the administration and enjoyment, * * of the produce of the reciprocal industry and labor of both husband and wife, and of the estate which they may acquire during the marriage, either by donations made jointly to them both, or by purchase, or in any other similar way. *. * *

As applied to this case, the key word of the article is “acquired”, which we have underscored. When real property is sold to a homestead for cash and simultaneously resold by the homestead to its owner, the latter has not acquired anything. Such a transaction, which is for the purpose of providing the homestead the security of a vendor’s lien and first mortgage, is purely a pignorative contract as this Court has heretofore designated it on two occasions. See Succession of Farley, 205 La. 972, 18 So.2d 586 and Capillon v. Chambliss, 211 La. 1, 29 So.2d 171.

Nevertheless, counsel for defendant, pointing to the statutory provisions declaring that such contracts shall not be considered as a loan but as a purchase by the homestead association from the member and as a resale to the member (See R.S. 6:766), say that the courts are thereby precluded from regarding such transactions in their true factual and legal character and, in support of this position, they derived comfort from a line of decisions in which the statutory pronouncement has been applied as to the contracting parties and those claiming under them. See Holloman v. Alexandria & Pineville Building & Loan Ass’n, 137 La. 970, 69 So. 764; Hutts v. Crowley Building & Loan Ass’n, 146 La. 85, 83 So. 417; Barnes v. Thompson, 154 La. 1036, 98 So. 657 and Liquidators of Prudential Savings & Homestead Society v. Langermann, 156 La. 76, 100 So. 55. 2

*99 The cited cases were considered and explained by this Court in the later case of Mayre v. Pierson, 171 La. 1077, 133 So. 163, 3 wherein it was held that a sale by a married woman of separate property to a homestead and the latter’s reconveyance of the property to her did not transform the status of that property from paraphernal to community. It was resolved that the device of sale and resale, provided by the Legislature to effect a vendor’s privilege and first mortgage in favor of homesteads in making loans on real estate, was to be considered as a sale and resale only as to the parties to the transaction but otherwise to be dealt with in its true character. Thus, the ruling of the Court is grounded on a common-sense interpretation of legislative intent- — that is, that the prime objective of the Legislature was to have homestead associations secured by a vendor’s lien and that it was' never its aim to produce a change in the status of property from separate to community as the consequence of the placing of a secured loan thereon.

Counsel for defendant would have us distinguish this case from Mayre v. Pierson, Succession of Farley and Capillon v. Chambliss on the basis that the separate property of married women was involved in those matters whereas, here, we are concerned with the separate property of the husband.

In Succession of Farley and Capillon v. Chambliss, the Court adverted to the well-established rule that, when real estate is purchased in the name of a married woman, the presumption that it belongs to the community is a rebuttable presumption even though there be no statement in the deed that the purchase is made with her separate funds under her exclusive administration and control, whereas, in the case of the husband, the presumption in favor of the community is juris et de jure in the absence of the dual declaration in the deed that the property is acquired with his separate funds and for his separate estate. 4 But the circumstance that the Court was dealing with the paraphernal property of married women in those matters, 5 and not the separate property of the husband, was purely obiter dicta and had no bearing whatever on the conclusion that the transactions were in reality mortgages and could only be con *101 sidered as sales when the issue was between the homestead association on the one hand and the borrower and his or her creditors on the other.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 2d 34, 234 La. 91, 1958 La. LEXIS 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruffino-v-hunt-la-1958.