Succession of Farley

18 So. 2d 586, 205 La. 972
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 22, 1944
DocketNo. 37325.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 18 So. 2d 586 (Succession of Farley) 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
Succession of Farley, 18 So. 2d 586, 205 La. 972 (La. 1944).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

On July 17, 1912, Elmer A. Farley borrowed $800 from the Suburban Building and Loan Association and gave as security *975 for the loan a vendor’s lien and special mortgage on a tract of land in the section of New Orleans called Gentilly Terrace. The land was a part of a larger tract which Farley had bought on the 9th day of March 1900 and which he had owned ever since. The transaction by which he secured the loan of $800 consisted of a sale of the part of the land to the building and loan association and a resale by the association, reserving the vendor’s lien and special mortgage to secure the $800, which was called the price. The resale of the property by the building and loan association was made not to Elmer A. Farley alone, but to him and his mother, Elizabeth Koenig Farley, wife of Charles Farley. Fie signed the act of sale to authorize his wife to sign. Elmer A. Farley gave his promissory note for the $800, dated July 17, 1912, and worded “I promise to pay to the order of the Suburban Building and Loan Association”, etc.; but his mother also signed the note as a maker, and her husband signed to authorize her. The note was made payable “on demand” and the interest was payable in weekly installments, “and all in accordance with the charter and by-laws” of the association.

Charles Farley died on August 30, 1940, survived by his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Koenig Farley, and by their son, Elmer A. Farley, and by three daughters, namely, Mrs. Annie Farley Toney, Mrs. Jeanette Farley Wenzel, and Mrs. Bertha Farley Schulingkamp. Mrs. Schulingkamp was the issue of a previous marriage. The two other daughters and the son of Charles Farley are the only issue of his subsequent marriage to Mrs. Elizabeth Koenig Farley.

Charles Farley left a nuncupative will under private signature, dated August 26, 1940, in which he bequeathed all of his property to his widow, and their son, Elmer A. Farley, and to two of the daughters, Mrs. Toney and Mrs. Wenzel. Mrs. Toney was named as executrix of the will and qualified as such. In making an inventory of the property of the succession, the notary included the half interest in the land which Elmer A. Farley had transferred to the building and loan association and which the association had retransferred to him and his mother on July 17, 1912. The property was referred to in the inventory as having been “acquired jointly by Elmer A. Farley and Mrs. Elizabeth Koenig Farley from the Suburban Building and Loan Association as per act before Harry L. Loomis, Jr., Notary Public, dated July 17, 1912”. Elmer A. Farley was present at the making of the inventory and protested against including in the inventory the half interest in the land described as having been bought by him and his mother on July 17, 1912. He stated to the notary public and the statement was recorded in the inventory, that the land with all of its improvements was owned by him, Elmer A. Farley, exclusively; and that his mother’s signing the deed as a joint purchaser from the building and loan association was done only for his convenience. His mother was present also at the making of the inventory and joined her son in the declarations concerning his exclusive ownership of the property.

Thereafter Elmer A. Farley brought this suit against his three sisters to be declared the sole owner of the land which he had *977 transferred to the building and loan association and which the association had re-transferred to him and his mother on July 17, 1912. He had his mother cited also as a defendant in the suit, notwithstanding she disclaimed having any title or interest in the land. In fact she had made an affidavit before a notary public .and two witnesses on November 11, 1941, that in truth and in fact she never intended to acquire and never acquired any interest in the land which was transferred by her son Elmer A. Farley to the Suburban Building and Loan Association, and which was “ostensibly” retransferred by the association to her and her son on July 17, 1912; that the property had been acquired by her son as a part of a larger area on March 9, 1909, by authentic act; that she never intended to pay and never paid any portion of the $800 borrowed by her son from the building and loan association; that her signing the deed as a purchaser was only for the benefit and convenience of her son; that he was the real and exclusive owner of the property and was the only person who intended to pay and who did actually pay with his own funds the $800 borrowed from the building and loan association, and referred to in the deed as the purchase price; that ever since the date of the act purporting to be a sale to her and her son, she and her husband and their daughters, with full knowledge of the transaction, always recognized that the property belonged exclusively to Elmer A. Farley; and that all of the improvements subsequently placed on the land were placed there by Elmer A. Farley and were paid for by him with funds belonging to him exclusively. The mother deposed, finally, that she made these declarations under oath “for the purpose of recording the true facts of the transaction”.

One of the defendants, Mrs. Bertha Farley Schulingkamp, died on February 13, 1943, after the filing of the suit; and on the written motion and appearance of her surviving husband, William J. Schulingkamp, and of their son, Albert T. Schulingkamp, and daughter, Carmel Schulingkamp Buras, wife of Peter Buras, they, the surviving husband and son and daughter of the deceased Mrs. Bertha Farley Schulingkamp, being the sole and only legatees under her will, were recognized as such and were sent into possession as the sole owners of her estate, by a judgment of the civil district court; and they were made parties defendants in this suit, in the place and stead of the deceased, Mrs. Bertha Farley Schulingkamp.

The defendants, in defense of the suit, stood upon the provision in article 2402 of .the Civil Code that property bought in the name of either of the parties to a matrimonial community, during the existence of the community, is community property and therefore belongs jointly to the two spouses. The defendants rely also upon the provision in article 2275 of the Civil Code, requiring that every transfer of immovable property must be in writing, and upon the provision in article 2276 that parol evidence shall not be admitted against or beyond what is contained in an act of transfer of real estate.

On the trial of the case, when the affidavit made by Mrs. Elizabeth Koenig Far *979 ley on November 11, 1941, and referred to by the attorney for the plaintiff as a “counter letter”, was offered in evidence, the attorneys for the defendants objected on the ground that by the transfer of the property by the Suburban Building and Loan Association to Elmer A. Farley and Mrs. Elizabeth Koenig Farley the title for a half interest in the property became vested in the matrimonial community then existing between Charles Farley and his wife; and that the so-called counter letter, signed after the death of Charles Farley, could not have the effect of divesting his estate or the matrimonial community of the title to the half interest in the property. The judge reserved his ruling on the question of admissibility of the document and admitted it in evidence subject to the objection. Mrs. Elizabeth Koenig Farley then, testifying as a witness for her son, and he, testifying in his own behalf, reaffirmed all of the facts stated in her affidavit.

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Bluebook (online)
18 So. 2d 586, 205 La. 972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-farley-la-1944.