Thibodeaux v. Quebodeaux

282 So. 2d 845
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 20, 1973
Docket4226
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 282 So. 2d 845 (Thibodeaux v. Quebodeaux) 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
Thibodeaux v. Quebodeaux, 282 So. 2d 845 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

282 So.2d 845 (1973)

Etienne D. THIBODEAUX and Olive Thibodeaux Comeaux, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Eddie QUEBODEAUX, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 4226.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

August 20, 1973.
Rehearing Denied September 14, 1973.

*847 Edwards, Stefanski & Barousse, by Homer E. Barousse, Jr., Crowley, for defendant-appellant.

Pugh, Buatt, Landry & Pugh, by Kenneth O. Privat, Crowley, for plaintiffsappellees.

Before SAVOY, HOOD and CULPEPPER, JJ.

HOOD, Judge.

This is a petitory action in which plaintiffs, Etienne D. Thibodeaux and Mrs. Olive Thibodeaux Comeaux, seek a judgment recognizing them as owners of an undivided one-third interest (a one-sixth interest each) in a seven acre tract of land in Acadia Parish. The defendant is Eddie Quebodeaux. One of the plaintiffs, Etienne Thibodeaux, died while the suit was pending, and his five surviving children were substituted as party plaintiffs. Judgment on the merits was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiffs, and defendant has appealed.

Two issues are presented. One is whether a document which purports to be an act of sale to defendant's author in title was actually a donation in disguise, with the result that the property became a part of the separate estate of the transferee. The other issue is whether defendant has acquired title to the property in dispute by prescription acquirendi causa of 10 or 30 years.

The pertinent facts are that Josephine Moreau married Theobert Thibodeaux in 1915, and of that union two children were born: Etienne Thibodeaux and Mrs. Olive Thibodeaux Comeaux, the original plaintiffs in this suit. Theobert Thibodeaux died in 1928. His widow, Josephine, then married Homer A. Thibodeaux on February 8, 1938, and she had one child, Mrs. Myrtis Thibodeaux Burleigh, issue of her second marriage.

On April 24, 1939, while Homer and Josephine Thibodeaux were married and were living together, Aurelien Thibodeaux (Homer's father) executed a document which purports to be an act of sale conveying to Homer Thibodeaux a 21.84 acre tract of land in Acadia Parish, but reserving to the vendor during his lifetime the usufruct of that property. The deed contained no stipulation of any kind to the effect that the property was being purchased with the separate funds of the vendee, Homer A. Thibodeaux, or that it was to become a part of his separate estate.

Mrs. Josephine Moreau Thibodeaux died intestate on August 20, 1945, being survived by her husband, Homer, and her three children. We have already pointed out that two of her children, the original plaintiffs in this suit, were issue of her first marriage, and that her third child, Mrs. Burleigh, was born of her marriage to Homer. Josephine's succession has never been opened.

On October 8, 1945, about seven weeks after Josephine's death, Homer Thibodeaux executed a deed purporting to convey to defendant, Eddie Quebodeaux, the east seven acres of the 21.84 acre tract which Homer had acquired from his father. The seven acre tract of land purportedly conveyed to the defendant by that deed is the property which is in dispute here.

Homer Thibodeaux died intestate in September, 1959. He, like Josephine, had been married previously, and at his death he also left three children, one of whom was Mrs. Burleigh, the sole issue of his marriage *848 to Josephine. His other two children were issue of his first marriage. All three of his children accepted his succession unconditionally, and judgment was rendered sending them in possession of the property left by him. None of his children are parties to this suit.

Plaintiffs contend that the 21.84 acre tract of land which Homer acquired from Aurelien Thibodeaux on April 24, 1939, became a part of the community which existed between Homer and Josephine. They take the position that when the community was dissolved by Josephine's death in August, 1945, Homer acquired an undivided one-half interest in that property as his part of the community, but that the remaining one-half interest in said property was inherited by Josephine's three children, two of them being the original plaintiffs in this suit. They argue that since Homer owned only an undivided one-half interest in the property on October 8, 1945, the deed which he executed on that date conveyed to defendant Quebodeaux only an undivided one-half interest in that seven acre tract. Plaintiffs also claim that they, as children and grandchildren of Josephine, are entitled to be recognized as such and sent and put in possession of the undivided interests in such property to which they are entitled.

Defendant Quebodeaux contends that Homer Thibodeaux paid no consideration for the 21.84 acre tract which he acquired from his father, and that the conveyance from Aurelien to Homer Thibodeaux, dated April 24, 1939, was intended by the parties to be a donation. He claims that the transfer was made in the form of a deed rather than a donation because Aurelien wanted to reserve the usufruct, and LSA-C.C. art. 1533 prohibits a donor from reserving the usufruct of property affected by the donation. He argues that the document purporting to be an act of sale from Aurelian to Homer Thibodeaux actually was not a sale, but instead was a donation in disguise, and that the property affected by that conveyance thus became a part of Homer's separate estate. He takes the position that it never belonged to the community, that Homer continued to have full ownership of the property after Josephine's death, and that the act of sale executed by Homer Thibodeaux on October 8, 1945, conveyed full title to the seven acre tract to defendant.

Judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiffs, recognizing Mrs. Olive Thibodeaux Comeaux as owner of an undivided one-sixth interest in the seven acre tract of land in dispute here, and recognizing the five children of Etienne Thibodeaux, deceased, as owners of an undivided one-thirtieth interest each in said property. Defendant has appealed from that judgment.

At the trial defendant produced evidence which establishes that shortly before April 24, 1939, a large tract of land owned by Aurelien Thibodeaux, in Acadia Parish, was subdivided into 11 lots, each comprising slightly more than 21 acres. Aurelien had 11 children, and on the above mentioned date he executed 11 separate documents, each of which purports to be an act of sale conveying one of the above mentioned lots to one of his children. By means of those sales, all of the lots were transferred, and each child received one of them. In each such sale, the vendor reserved to himself the usufruct during his lifetime of the property conveyed.

Homer was one of Aurelien's eleven children, and one of the deeds executed by Aurelien on April 24, 1939, conveyed to Homer Lot 3 of the above mentioned subdivision. That deed recited that the sale was made for a consideration of $1350.00, of which amount $25.00 was paid in cash, receipt of which was acknowledged, and the remainder was represented by 12 promissory notes executed by the purchaser and made payable to the vendor. Ten of those notes were for $50.00 each, payable on demand, one was for $75.00, also payable on demand, and one was for $750.00, payable on or before one year after date. The *849 record shows that on the face of each of the ten $50.00 notes there appears an inscription reading, "Paid 11/18/39 by check to ...," and the name of a different child of Aurelien Thibodeaux was shown as the payee of each such check, except that no such payment is shown to have been made to Homer.

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Bluebook (online)
282 So. 2d 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibodeaux-v-quebodeaux-lactapp-1973.