Thomas v. Winsey

76 So. 2d 33
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1954
DocketNo. 3901
StatusPublished

This text of 76 So. 2d 33 (Thomas v. Winsey) 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
Thomas v. Winsey, 76 So. 2d 33 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge..,'

: This is an action wherein the plaintiff' seeks to have a certain act of sale of record' in the Parish of East Baton Rouge declared null, and void. ■ ■

" The pleadings and evidence reflect the following: On August 10, 1908, .the plaintiff, Mannie Thomas, • married one' Queen Washington in Adams County, Mississippi. By act of sale dated November 2, 1918, Queen Washington Thomas purchased from Scotland Plantation for the recited sum of $100 cash the following, described property:

“One certain (1) lot of ground in Richniond Park, a Suburb of the City [34]*34of Baton Rouge, situated in the Parish, of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana, and described according to the official plat of said subdivision and made by Marshall P. Robertson, surveyor, on file at the office of the Clerk of Court and ex-officio Recorder of the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, as Lot Number Thirty-eight (38) of Square Number Two (2) of said Richmond Park, said lot having a front of thirty-five (35) feet on Lexington Avenue by a depth of one hundred (100) feet, more or less between parallel lines.”

In the above mentioned act, the purchaser was designated as “Mrs. Queen Thomas, born -, a widow of Manny Thomas, deceased.”

Apparently the taxes for the year 1919-were not paid and the property was sold to one Clive Wetherell Kernan. By act dated September 1, 1920, which was in the nature of a quit claim or redemption, the property was placed in the name of “Queen Thomas, born Washington, wife of Mannie Thomas.”

By act of sale dated March 4, 1947, Queen Thomas sold the property to one of the defendants, Carrie Thomas Winsey, wife of Levell Winsey, for the recited consideration of $800 cash. In this act the vendress designated herself as “Queen Thomas, widow of Mannie Thomas.”

Some five years later, namely on July 29, 1952, Queen Thomas died. And, on February 3, 1953, Mannie Thomas (from whom she had never been divorced or separated from bed and board) instituted this suit seeking to set aside the sale dated March 4, 1947, on the ground that the property was community property having been purchased during the marriage with the result that the wife was therefore without authority to sell same. In the alternative it was pleaded that, the sale was a simulation as no portion of the recited cash consideration had ever been paid.

The defendants first filed exceptions of no right and no cause of action and then answered setting forth that at the time Queen Thomas purchased the property she was living separate and apart from her husband and, as the funds used were earned by her while living separate and apart from him, the property belonged to her separate estate and was therefore subject to disposition by her alone as she saw fit. The answer recites further that certain improvements were placed on the property by both the decedent, Queen Thomas, and the defendant vendee. The prayer of the answer seeks the sum of $1,100 (for improvements made by Queen Thomas) and $2,308.67 (for improvements made by Carrie Thomas Win-sey) in the event the property be found to have belonged to the community.

Following trial on the merits the court below rendered judgment decreeing the subject property as belonging to the community formerly existing between Mannie Thomas and Queen Washington Thomas and annulling the sale thereof to the defendant Carrie Thomas Winsey. It was further ordered that the alternative demands of all litigants be dismissed, with the right being reserved to the defendants to assert, in a proper suit, any claim they might have against the succession of Queen Washington Thomas for improvements placed on the property.

Following the rendition of this judgment the defendants applied for and were granted a new trial and rehearing. Upon the conclusion of the new trial judgment was rendered affirming the original judgment insofar as same decreed to the property as belonging to the community of acquets and gains previously existing between Mannie Thomas and Queen Washington Thomas and annulling the sale thereof to Carrie Thomas Winsey dated March 4, 1947, but setting aside the original judgment by also decreeing the purported sale to the defendant Carrie Thomas Winsey a simulation and thus void and of no effect. Judgment was also rendered in favor of the plaintiff rejecting the demands of the defendants for improvements but reserving to them their right to proceed against the succession of Queen Washington Thomas.

The learned trial judge rendered written reasons in support of the original judgment [35]*35and that rendered after the new trial. In the course of his original reasons, he found as follows:

“On the main demand it is sufficient to say that all property acquired by the husband and wife during the marriage is presumed to belong to the community.
“Where it is claimed that property bought by one of the spouses during the existence of the community is his or her separate property the burden of proof is upon him or her who alleges that the property so acquired is separate property. See Succession of Burke, 107 La. 82, 31 So. 391; Succession of Manning, 107 La. 456, 31 So. 862; De Maupassant v. Clayton, 214 La. 812, 38 So.2d 791; Betz v. Riviere, 211 La. 43, 29 So.2d 465; Block v. Melville, 22 La.Ann. 147; Jordy v. Muir, 51 La.Ann. 55, 25 So. 550.
“A careful reading of the testimony in this case fails to convince me that Queen Washington Thomas and her husband, Mannie Thomas, were, when the aforesaid property was acquired living separate and apart, or that the funds with which the property was bought were earned by the wife while living separate and apart from her husband.
“It is very true that the evidence shows that during the marriage the husband was frequently absent from home, — sometimes for quite a long while, but it also shows that after thus absenting himself he returned to his wife from time to time and that on occasions he gave her money.
“It is worthy of mention that when Queen Washington acquired the property in dispute, she represented herself to be a widow, and again, when she sold it to this defendant the same recitation was made in the deed. Of course, both she and this defendant knew that this recitation was untrue. Just why this was done is beyond my conception or imagination.- Sufficeth to : say it did not suffice as a representation that she was a married woman living separate and apart from her husband and that the funds with which she bought the property were earned by her while living separate and apart from her husband. The facts are that she was not a widow and that she actually lived with the plaintiff both before and after she acquired the property in question.
“I have, for the reasons assigned, concluded that the sale of the property described in the petition by Queen Washington Thomas was and is an absolute nullity and it is so decreed.”

With respect to this same point the trial judge in his secondly rendered reasons for judgment found as follows:

“On the question as to whether .or not the plaintiff and his wife Queen Washington Thomas were married and living separate and apart in the years. 1918 and 1920, the evidence introduced on the new trial is as confusing and unsatisfactory as that originally offered.. There can, be no doubt that after the year 1932, plaintiff and his wife lived separate and apart.

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Related

Robinson v. Marks
30 So. 2d 200 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1947)
Vanzant v. Morgan
181 So. 660 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)
Betz v. Riviere
29 So. 2d 465 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1947)
De Maupassant v. Clayton
38 So. 2d 791 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1949)
Succession of Burke
107 La. 82 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)
Succession of Manning v. Burke
107 La. 456 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)
Block v. Melville
22 La. Ann. 147 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1870)
Jordy v. Muir
25 So. 550 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-winsey-lactapp-1954.