Stoma v. Smith

172 So. 202
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 1937
DocketNo. 5413.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 So. 202 (Stoma v. Smith) 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
Stoma v. Smith, 172 So. 202 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

On the 18th day of March, 1936, John B. Stoma instituted a suit against Oscar Smith, Harry Smith, George Smith, Jr., Frances Lane (née Smith), Daisy Simmons (née Smith), and Chinelle Smith, alleging that on April 30, 1932, he acquired at'judicial partition sale from the above-named defendants their one-half interest in the S. E. % °f S. W. section 10, township 11 north, range 14 west, De Soto parish, La. He alleged he was the highest bidder for the-property, bidding $17.50 per acre or $700 for the whole; that the sheriff, in preparing the procés verbal and deed to said property, erroneously inserted the amount of $50 as the price bid and paid, when it should have been $700. He prayed *203 that the deed be reformed so as to show the true price hid and paid for the property.

All of the impleaded defendants, except Chinelle Smith, answered. The answer sets out that he died in the year 1931. All the allegations of plaintiff’s petition are denied and, in the alternative, they allege that, if plaintiff hid $700 for said property, he only paid $50, which was insufficient to pay the costs of court and was a vile price for the property attempted to be adjudicated and was out of all proportion with the actual value of said property; and that the attempted acquisition by plaintiff for said price was a fraud upon defendants.

Assuming the position of plaintiffs in re-convention, defendants averred that the judgment rendered in the partition proceedings, No. 13439 on the docket of the Eleventh judicial district court in and for De Soto parish, La., styled John B. Stoma v. Oscar Smith et ah, and the pretended sale and adjudication to plaintiff thereunder of defendants’ one-half interest in the property herein involved, was null and void for the following reasons:

“6. If the property was adjudicated to plaintiff in said suit at the price and sum of $50, as shown by the proces verbal of the sheriff in said proceeding and the deed executed by the sheriff pursuant thereto, said attempted adjudication and sale are null and void for the reason that there was in reality no price bid or paid for said property; that the sum of $50 was not sufficient to pay the costs of the attempted adjudication; that said property was well worth the sum of $1000 at the time of said adjudication and that the maintenance of said adjudication would have the effect of depriving these defendants of their property without any compensation whatever.
“7. That if the said John B. Stoma bid for said property the sum of $700, as alleged by him, the attempted adjudication of said property was null and void and no conveyance of said property could be made by the sheriff for the reason that said John B. Stoma did not pay to the said sheriff said amount of $700.
“8. They further show that one of the co-owners of said property, to-wit Chinelle Smith, at the time said partition proceeding was instituted, was a minor of the age of 17 years; that the father of said minor, George Smith, Sr., a resident of DeSoto Parish, Louisiana, had duly qualified as natural tutor of said minor and was the duly qualified and acting tutor of said minor at the time said partition proceeding was instituted; that the said minor was not cited through said tutor in said proceeding and that the appointment of a curator ad hoc to represent said minor was utterly null and void; and that said minor was, therefore, not properly represented in said suit.
“9. That the said Chinelle Smith departed this life in your said Parish and State during the month of August, 1931, and at the time of decedent’s death was of the age of 19 years; that decedent left as sole heirs, George Smith, Sr., father, who inherited one-fourth of the undivided one-twelfth interest owned by said decedent, and that the remaining three-fourth’s interest in the estate of said decedent was inherited by your defendants herein, brothers and sisters of said decedent, in equal shares, and that none of the heirs of the decedent as such were made parties to said partition proceeding.”

And they further allege that, since said pretended adjudication, plaintiff has committed acts of waste on said property; has torn down, removed therefrom, and converted to his own use a six-room dwelling house located thereon, which was of a value of $500, and that he should be condemned to account to defendants for the value thereof. They further allege the interest owned by each of said defendants in said property, that the land has now no improvements on it, and is susceptible of an equitable partition in kind. They pray that plaintiff’s demands be rejected at his cost and for judgment in reconvention decreeing the judgment rendered in suit No. 13439, styled John B. Stoma v. Oscar Smith et al. and the attempted adjudication and sale of the within described property be declared null and void; that the property be decreed to be owned by John B. Stoma and the defendants in the proportions of one-half to Stoma, %io to George Smith, Sr., and %io to each of the other defendants; that the said 40 acres of land be ordered partitioned in kind; and for further judgment in favor of defendants and against John B. Stoma in the sum of $250, being one-half the value of the dwelling removed and converted by the said Stoma, together with 5 per cent, per annum interest thereon from date until paid; for all costs and general relief.

Defendants and plaintiffs in reconvention filed an amended and supplemental answer in which they set. out that through *204 error in the original answer and reconven-tional demand they omitted to show that there were other heirs of the deceased, Chinelle Smith, and averred that George Smith, Sr., after the death of appearers’ mother, married again and of that marriage there were two children, namely, Omega and Buncher Lee Smith, both of whom were living at the time of the death of Chinelle Smith and are still living; and that they inherited from Chinelle %24 interest each in and to the land herein involved. They further allege that Stoma had torn down and removed three additional buildings from said property, all of which were of a value of $600; and further allege:

“* * * ^hat at the time said property was offered by the sheriff there had been obtained from the Clerk of Court his certificate of mortgages, which said certificate showed numerous encumbrances apparently affecting the property in question and which in amount greatly exceeded the sum of $1000, which said mortgage' certificate was read by the sheriff at the time said property was offered for sale.
“4. They further show that in so far as the interest of defendants in said suit was concerned, said property was free of all liens and encumbrances, but that the reading of said mortgage certificate was calculated to deter and did deter bidders from bidding upon said property, and that the plaintiff in said suit had no right to demand that .said property be exposed for sale unless and until by proper proceeding he had caused said mortgages and encumbrances to be erased and, in this respect, petitioner avers that none of the claimants under said inscriptions were made parties to said partition proceedings in any manner.” . ,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 So. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoma-v-smith-lactapp-1937.