Scurto v. Le Blanc

184 So. 567, 191 La. 136, 1938 La. LEXIS 1354
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 7, 1938
DocketNo. 34337.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 184 So. 567 (Scurto v. Le Blanc) 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
Scurto v. Le Blanc, 184 So. 567, 191 La. 136, 1938 La. LEXIS 1354 (La. 1938).

Opinions

ROGERS, Justice.

Joseph Scurto sued Santa Scurto LeBlanc, his daughter, to be recognized and decreed to be the owner of three parcels of real estate situated in the City of Houma. The-real estate is in the name of the defendant and was acquired by her by three separate authentic acts of sale from Mateo Scurto, Joseph Piazza and the Estate of A. F. Davidson. The first two sales were executed on November 12, 1931, and the third sale was executed on June 8, 1933. In the sales from Mateo Scurto and Joseph Piazza to Santa Scurto, Joseph Scurto, the plaintiff, appeared as the agent of the vendors, under powers of attorney signed by them in the City of Chicago, and executed for his principals the acts of sale, conveying their respective properties to the vendee. All the acts of sale were duly recorded in the conveyance records of the Parish of Terrebonne.

On October 15, 1935, Santa Scurto married Edward LeBlanc. This suit was filed on June 10, 1936, about eight months after defendant’s marriage to LqBlanc and about three years after her acquisition of the Davidson property.

Plaintiff alleged that defendant for about twelve years prior to her marriage and for a short time thereafter acted as his agent and had exclusive charge of all his business affairs, particularly in the purchase of real estate for his account and the building of dwelling-houses for renting purposes thereon. That in her capacity as his agent she had the almost exclusive right to collect his rents, and that she did collect most of the rents that were due him, and almost on all occasions deposited the collections in bank to his credit. That he had implicit confidence in his daughter and never question *143 ed any of her transactions until about the month of March, 1936 (which was only a 'few months after her marriage to LeBlanc), his suspicions were aroused when his daughter informed him that he was indebted to the Home Builders Supply Company, Inc., in the sum of $887.42: That after discussing the matter with another of his children an investigation was made of the alleged indebtedness, and it was found that he was not indebted to the Home Builders Supply Company, Inc., and that his daughter sought to secure for her own purposes the money alleged to be due that Corporation. That his daughter, acting as his agent, negotiated and purchased for his account the properties of Mateo Scurto, Joseph Piazza and the Estate of A. F. Davidson, which are fully described in the petition, but that she fraudulently had the properties placed in her name, although the entire purchase price thereof was paid by her out of his funds. That he did not become aware of the fact that the properties were in the name of his daughter until he began to investigate the condition of his business affairs after his daughter had attempted to defraud him of the sum of $887.-42 under the pretense of an alleged indebtedness to the Home Builders Supply Company.

The plaintiff attached to his petition seventy-four interrogatories on facts and articles to be answered under oath and categorically by the defendant in open court. The purpose of the interrogatories on facts and articles was to probe the conscience of the defendant as to the truth of the facts alleged. In her answers to the interrogatories, defendant specifically denied that she had negotiated and purchased for plaintiff's account the properties of Mateo Scurto, Joseph Piazza and the Estate of A. F. Davidson, and she expressly stated that she negotiated and purchased for her own account the properties in question and that she paid the purchase price therefor out of her own funds. Defendant further denied that she was guilty of any fraud or deceit towards plaintiff in purchasing the properties. She declared that she informed plaintiff that she was buying the properties for herself; that her own money, and not his money, was used in making the purchases ; and that plaintiff so understood.

After the answers to the interrogatories on facts and articles were concluded, defendant filed an exception of no right or cause of action. Although the exception was argued, it does not appear that any ruling was made thereon. On the contrary, the case was tried on the merits. In the course of the trial, the trial judge, over defendant’s objection, permitted the introduction of parol evidence to contradict defendant’s answers to the interrogatories on facts and articles. After the introduction of evidence was concluded and the argument of counsel was heard, the trial judge rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor, decreeing plaintiff to be the lawful owner of the properties purchased by the defendant from Mateo Scurto and Joseph Piazza and reserving plaintiff the right to demand and receive an accounting of the rents and revenues thereof, subject to such offsets as defendant might properly establish. The judgment is silent regarding the property pur *145 chased by defendant from the Estate of A. F. Davidson, which, we take it, means that as to that particular piece of property plaintiff’s demand Was rejected.

The answers of a party to interrogatories on facts and articles form part of the pleadings, and if they are destructive of plaintiff’s action, an exception of no cause of action will lie. Godwin v. Neustadtl, 42 La.Ann. 735, 7 So. 744. Defendant’s exception should have been sustained. However, the failure of the trial judge to do so is of no consequence, since the same result may be accomplished on the merits of the case by sustaining defendant’s objection to the introduction of parol evidence to contradict her answers to the interrogatories on facts and articles, which objection was erroneously overruled by the trial judge.

It is axiomatic under the law and jurisprudence of this State that parol evidence is inadmissible to create a title in one who never owned the immovable property or to show that the vendee was in reality some other person than the person named in the act of sale. Ceromi v. Harris, 187 La. 701, 175 So. 462, and the authorities therein cited.

And it has been held that the rule finds no exception in the case of a purchase of real estate by an agent with funds alleged to belong to his principal. Hackenburg v. Gartskamp, 30 La.Ann. 898; Perrault v. Perrault, 32 La.Ann. 635 ; Stierle v. Kaiser, 45 La.Ann. 580, 12 So. 839.

Even where real estate is acquired with stolen money the owner of the money does not become the owner of the property. George v. Campbell, 26 La.Ann. 445.

It is also the general rule of our jurisprudence that the verity and reality of authentic sales of immovable property can be assailed only in two ways: “First, by means of a counter letter; second, by the answers of the other party to interrogatories on facts and articles, which stand in lieu of and are equivalent to a counter letter. Godwin v. Neustadtl, 42 La.Ann. 735, 7 So. 744.

When answers to interrogatories on facts and articles are used to supply the place of a counter letter, they are not sub-, ject to contradiction by anything short of a counter letter or other written evidence. Id.

The rule finds its only relaxation where the owner of real estate is influenced by fraud or error to rest his title in another. Le Bleu v. Savoie, 109 La. 680, 33 So. 729; Maskrey v. Johnson, 122 La. 791, 48 So. 266; Cuggy v. Zeller, 132 La. 222, 61 So. 209; Hodge v. Hodge, 151 La. 612, 92 So. 134.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 567, 191 La. 136, 1938 La. LEXIS 1354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scurto-v-le-blanc-la-1938.