Tate v. Tate

180 So. 3d 429, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1481, 2015 WL 4608085
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 31, 2015
DocketNo. 2014 CA 1622
StatusPublished

This text of 180 So. 3d 429 (Tate v. Tate) 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
Tate v. Tate, 180 So. 3d 429, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1481, 2015 WL 4608085 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

GUIDRY, J.

|2A parent, who executed an act of sale with a counter letter to convey property to one of her children, appeals a judgment dismissing her petition to rescind the sale. For the following reasons, we reverse.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On February 15, 2001, Iris Tate executed an act of sale whereby she allegedly sold property to her daughter, Pauline Tate, for the sum of $70,000.00. The property conveyed contained two lots, “L” and “M,” in the Shelly’s Homesites subdivision in Denham Springs. Each lot contained a residence with a separate municipal address. The residence located on Lot M, with a municipal address of 308 Beech Street, was the family home in which Iris resided. The residence located on Lot L, with a municipal address of 236. Beech Street, was a separate apartment home that was occasionally rented out when various family members did nof reside in it. In a counter letter executed contemporaneously with ,the act of sale, the parties to the act of sale, Iris and Pauline, acknowledged that “in fact no sum was paid to Seller [Iris] and further it was and is agreed between Buyer [Pauline] and Seller that Seller may reside on the subject property as long as she so desires.” The act of cash sale was duly recorded in the conveyance records for Livingston Parish on February 15, 2001, but the counter letter was not.

On July 6, 2004, Iris filed a “Petition to Rescind Sale” in which she alleged that Pauline never paid any money for the conveyance of the. property and that her granddaughter, Lisa Duvall (Pauline’s daughter), who claimed to have Pauline’s power of attorney, had been “threatening to transfer ownership of the property to other unnamed individuals.” A notice of Lis Pendens was also filed on the same date as the petition, giving notification that there was litigation pending “affecting and regarding the rightful ownership, and the percentages thereof,” of the |sproperties at issue. Pauline answered the petition and generally denied the allegations contained therein.

On January "24, 2008, Justification, L.L.C., represented by Lisa Duvall1 as the managing member, filed a “Petition to Intervene, For Declaratory Judgment, and Cross-Claim for Damages.”' In the petition, Jústification claimed to be the rightful owner of the property in dispute by virtue of the following transactions:

• an Act of Donation, dated July 6, 2004, wherein Pauline donated “Lot L” to her daughters, Lisa Juban Du-vall and Susan Michelle Lozier.
• an Act of Donation, dated August 5, 2004, wherein Susan donated her interest in Lots L and M2 to Lisa.
[432]*432• An Act of Exchange, dated August 6, 2004, wherein Lisa transferred the properties to Justification.

Justification sought judgment declaring it to be the rightful owner of Lots L and M or alternatively declaring that Iris had no authority to allow one of her grandsons to occupy the apartment on Lot L pending resolution of the ownership dispute. Lastly, Justification named Iris as a defendant in its cross claim, wherein it sought an award of damages for loss of rent, property depreciation, and loss of an opportunity to sell the apartment located on Lot L, allegedly due to Iris’s actions of blocking any efforts to sell the property and the alleged wrongful occupancy of the apartment by Iris’s grandson. Alternatively, in the event Justification was not declared to be the owner of the properties, Justification sought reimbursement for all property taxes it paid on the properties.

Prior to the matter proceeding to trial, the trial court signed a “Judgment on Rule” on May 23, 2008, ordering any occupant of the apartment home to vacate the premises and recognizing Lisa’s “discretion to use said residence as she deems | ^appropriate pending further orders of the court.” Following a trial on the merits, held July 10, 2009, the trial court rendered a judgment in favor of Pauline, finding that Iris failed to carry her burden of proof and dismissed the action by a judgment signed August 13, 2009. Iris appealed.

On appeal, this court recognized that although decreed a directed verdict,3 the judgment of the trial court was actually an involuntary dismissal granted pursuant to La. C.C.P. art. 1672(B). This court then found that the parties’ transaction on February 15, 2001, was a relative simulation whereby the act of sale was really an attempt to donate the properties at issue. In evaluating whether the transactions constituted a valid donation, it appeared that acceptance of the donation had not occurred so as to perfect a valid inter vivos donation of the properties. Nevertheless, citing La. R.S. 9:2721(A),4 this court found that because the counter letter was not recorded, “Justification, L.L.C., the record owner of the property, is protected in its ownership by the failure of the parties to record the [counter letter]” and affirmed the judgment. See Tate v. Tate, 09-2034, p. 6 (La.App. 1st Cir.6/11/10), 42 So.3d 439, 443. Iris then filed an application for a writ of certiorari and/or review to the Louisiana Supreme Court, which vacated the judgments of the lower courts and remanded the matter to the district court for a new trial to consider whether the outcome would be affected by the donations being gratuitous rather than onerous transfers or to consider whether the notice of lis pendens that was filed in the public records affected the subsequent transfers of the property. Tate v. Tate, 10-1964 (La.8/31/11), 68 So.3d 513.

|,■¡On remand, Ms filed a petition for declaratory judgment against Pauline, [433]*433Lisa, Susan, and Justification (hereinafter collectively referred to as “defendants”),5 seeking a decree that the February 15, 2001 cash sale and the subsequent transfers of the property were null and void. An answer to the petition was filed by Lisa in which she denied the allegations of the petition. On March 12, 2014, a trial pursuant to the remand was held, following which the trial’ court rendered judgment holding that the transfer of the property from Iris to Pauline was a remunerative donation and that no fraud was involved in the subsequent transfers of the property. Thus, the trial court again dismissed Iris’s petition to rescind the sale in a judgment signed July 23, 2014. Iris now appeals that judgment.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

In this appeal, Iris alleges that the trial court committed the following errors:

1. The trial court erred when it held that the February 15, 2001 “Cash Sale” was a remunerative donation.
2. The trial court erred when it held that the ordinary services the appellee claims to have rendered to her mother [since] age 13, went beyond the usual parent-child gratuities.
3. The trial court erred when it overruled the appellant’s Exception of No Cause of Action and the Motion to Strike.
4. The trial court erred by failing to follow the dictates of, the Louisiana Supreme Court on remand.

DISCUSSION

In her third assignment of error, Iris asserts that the trial court should have sustained her exception raising the objection of no cause of action and barred the defendants from presenting any evidence to establish their claim that the 2001 act of sale' was a remunerative donation.. We find no merit in this assignment.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 3d 429, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1481, 2015 WL 4608085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-tate-lactapp-2015.