Small v. McNeely

195 So. 649, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 33
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1940
DocketNo. 6078.
StatusPublished

This text of 195 So. 649 (Small v. McNeely) 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
Small v. McNeely, 195 So. 649, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 33 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff alleged he was the owner of the following described property situated in the City of Shreveport, Caddo Parish, Louisiana : An undivided one-half interest in and to the Southeast 145 feet of Lot 15, Block 2 of Ten-acre Lot 19; as per plat thereof duly recorded in Book L, page 362, of the records of Caddo Parish, Louisiana, and all improvements thereon.

Plaintiff further alleged that he acquired his interest in the following manner:

That the property was acquired during the existence of the community of acquets and gains between him and his first wife, Mrs. Bernice Ziegler Small; that said community acquired the property on November 5, 1919, from Florence lies and that title was taken in the name of the wife; that he has never sold his interest in said property and that his title has not been otherwise divested; that Arthur Mc-Neely is in actual physical possession of said property and claims title to same under the following instruments:

1. Myrtle O’Donnell, administrator of the estate of Myrtle O’Donnell, deceased, to Arthur McNeely, as per deed dated October 16, 1937, and duly recorded;

2. Judgment dated January 8, 1934, Succession of Bernice Small, in which judgment Myrtle O’Donnell was recognized as sole heir of deceased and sent into possession of the property described; and

3. Deed from Mrs. Florence lies to Mrs. Bernice Small, dated November 5, 1919.

Plaintiff further alleged that Mrs. Florence lies acquired said property by deed from Fannie Plammond Trezevant on March 14, 1916; that Florence lies is the common author of both plaintiff and defendant’s title and the latter is estopped to question the title of their common author.

Plaintiff alleged that the rental value of the said property is $35 per month and that he should have judgment for one-half the rental value from the date of the beginning of possession by defendant, Arthur Mc-Neely, which was October 16, 1937. He further alleged the property was not susceptible of being divided in kind and prayed for a partition by licitation.

Defendant in answer denied that plaintiff owned any part of said property or that he was entitled to any of the rental value. He admits he is in possession of the property as owner and under a good and valid title to same. Further answering, defendant averred that the property in question was acquired by Mrs. Bernice Small with her separate and paraphernal funds under her separate administration and control, being a reinvestment of her separate funds, same having been acquired and earned by her before her marriage to plaintiff and by her after her marriage to him, but while living separate and apart from him, and by inheritance from a deceased relative and that the deed of acquisition, as shown by the certified copy made a part of plaintiff’s petition, so recited.

Further answering, defendant shows that he acquired said property at the Succession Sale referred to in plaintiff’s petition; that he had no knowledge whatsoever of plaintiff’s pretended claim; that plaintiff insti *650 tuted suit for divorce from his wife, Mrs. Bernice Small, in December, 1919, and obtained a judgment of divorce in January, 1920; that neither in said divorce proceedings nor otherwise did plaintiff ever claim or pretend to claim that the property herein described was community or that he had a claim to any part thereof; that in the year 1933, the said Mrs. Small died and her succession was opened, and that the plaintiff did not at that time appear or make any claim to any portion of the property in question here, but allowed her daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Small, to be recognized as sole heir of her mother's succession and, as such, placed in possession of all property, including that described herein; that plaintiff has allowed 19 years to elapse without questioning or challenging the sole right and title of Mrs. Myrtle Small and her successors in title to said property in its entirety; that petitioner acquired said property upon the faith of the public record and of the instruments and proceedings hereinabove referred to and that, by reason of his silence and laches, plaintiff is now estopped from claiming any right, title and interest in and to said property, and defendant especially pleads this estoppel.

Defendant avers further that his predecessor in title, Mrs. Bernice Small, acquired said property in its entirety, in good faith and by a just title on November 5,, 1919, and immediately went into possession thereof and that she exercised and enjoyed continuous, uninterrupted, peaceable, public, and unequivocal possession of said property for mqre than 13 years to. the date of her death; that after, her death, her said daughter exercised and enjoyed the same character of.posses-, sion until her death in 1937, and that defendant has likewise enjoyed the same character of possession since his acquisition at Succession Sale, as aforesaid, until the present date. That plaintiff is barred by the prescription of ten years from making any claim to any part of said property, and defendant especially pleads the prescription of ten years as a bar to' plaintiff’s suit..

On these issues, the case was tried, resulting in judgment rejecting the demands of plaintiff. From that judgment he is prosecuting this appeal. '

* On November S, 1919, Bernice Small,' wife of S. O. Small, acquired the property in dispute by deed from Florence lies, the consideration being $2500 cash. ; The deed recites, — “the vendee herein purchases with her own separate and para-phernal funds and to form no part of the community of acquests and gains existing between her and her husband.” "The following month plaintiff instituted divorce proceedings against, his ' wife, Bernice Small, and was granted a divorce in January, 1920, In that.proceeding he did not make any claims to t'he property he is now claiming.

In the year 1933,. Bernice Small died and her Succession was opened, her daughter, Myrtle O’Donnell, being put into possession of the property as the sole and only heir .of Bernice Small. No claim of any kind was advanced at that time by plaintiff. Myrtle O’Donnell possessed the property as owner until 1937 when she died. Her estate was administered on and the property . sold at administrator’s sale and purchased by the present possessor and defendant in this suit. At that time plaintiff made no claim to the property and it was not until September 23, 1938, when this suit was filed, that plaintiff ever made any claim to an interest in the property.

Based "on the above facts, coupled with the testimony of defendant that he purchased the property on the faith of the public records and had no' knowledge of any claim of interest by plaintiff until this suit was filed, defendant pleaded es-toppel against plaintiff’s claim.

It must be borne in mind that this suit was not filed until after the, lips of Bernice Small arid her daughter were both silent in death and could no longer defend the claim now being made by plaintiff.

• There is much merit in the plea of es-toppel, under • the authority of the following cases: Wooters v. Feeny, 12 La.Ann. 449; Reinach v. Levy, 47 La.Ann. 963, 17 So. 426; Hammon v. Sentell, 160 La. 589, 107 So. 437; Marshall v. Smedley, 166 La. 364, 117 So.

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Related

Hammon v. Sentell
107 So. 437 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1926)
Marshall v. Smedley
117 So. 323 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1928)
Houghton v. Hall
148 So. 37 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1933)
Wooters v. Feeny
12 La. Ann. 449 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1857)
Reinach v. Levy
17 So. 426 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 649, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-mcneely-lactapp-1940.