Union Cent. Life Ins. v. Harp

14 So. 2d 643, 203 La. 805
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 1, 1943
DocketNo. 36737
StatusPublished

This text of 14 So. 2d 643 (Union Cent. Life Ins. v. Harp) 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
Union Cent. Life Ins. v. Harp, 14 So. 2d 643, 203 La. 805 (La. 1943).

Opinions

ODOM, Justice.

This is an interpleader suit. The Union Central Life Insurance Company deposited in the registry of the court of De Soto Parish the sum of $2,500, alleging that it had no 'interest therein but that the amount was claimed by Mrs. Elizabeth Cubberly .Harp and by Mrs. Evelyn Harp Browne, widow of Earle H. Browne, and the four children of Mrs. Browne, issue of her marriage with Earle H. Browne. The life [809]*809insurance company prayed that these parties be cited. They came into court and set up their claims. Mrs. Harp claimed one-half of the amount deposited, and Mrs. Browne and her children claimed the entire amount. There was judgment ordering that one-half the amount be paid to Mrs. Harp and one-half to Mrs. Browne and her children. Mrs. Browne and her children appealed from that judgment.

The facts and circumstances out of which this litigation arose are set forth in detail in an agreed stipulation of facts, which shows that Mrs. Mary A. Harp, who owned a plantation in the Parish of De Soto, borrowed $15,000 from the Union Central Life Insurance Company and to secure the loan executed a mortgage, on her plantation in favor of the life insurance company. Mrs. Mary A. Harp died on August 17, 1931. The balance due on the mortgage in 1936 in principal and in interest amounted to approximately $17,000. At that time several of the notes were past due, and the mortgagee was threatening to foreclose.

On February 29, 1936, Mrs. Elizabeth Cubberly Harp, one of the parties to this litigation, and Earle H. Browne, whose widow and children are the other parties, entered into a contract, which was reduced to writing and signed before a notary public and two witnesses, by which contract they agreed to acquire for their joint account from the life insurance company the past-due mortgage notes and thereafter to foreclose the mortgage and acquire title to the Harp plantation at foreclosure sale. This contract was carried out, and the parties purchased the plantation on January 23, 1937, at foreclosure sale. Thereafter, they owned the property in indivisión until they partitioned it, and their title was encumbered to the extent of the remaining mortgage notes, which were held by the life insurance company, amounting at the time to approximately $13,462. This sum was evidenced by a series of notes, each for the sum of $1,415.90, maturing on March 1 of each year, beginning with the year 1938.

In the life insurance company’s mortgage, it was provided that the main residence on the plantation should be insured against loss by fire in the sum of $2,500, and that the proceeds of the policy in case of loss should be paid to the mortgagee as its interest might appear, and that, in case the mortgagors failed to take out and pay the premiums on the fire policy, the mortgagee was authorized to have the residence insured, to pay the premiums thereon, and to charge the amount of the premiums to the mortgagors, which amount should be added to the principal of the debt and secured by the mortgage.

The mortgagee on two occasions had the dwelling on the plantation insured with the Hartford Fire Insurance Company, each of the policies being for $2,500 and each being for a term of three years. The first policy expired on February 26, 1937, and the second on February 26, 1940. The premium on each of the policies, $144.35, was paid by the mortgagee and charged by it as a part of the mortgage indebtedness against the Harp plantation. The stipulation of facts shows that Mrs. Elizabeth Cubberly Harp refunded to the mortgagee the [811]*811amount of the premium due on the policy which expired on February 26, 1937, and that on March 28, 1938, without consulting Mrs. Harp, Mrs. Evelyn Harp Browne, widow of Earle H. Browne, who had died in the meantime, reimbursed the mortgagee for the premium which it had paid on the policy which expired on February 26, 1940.

The dwelling covered by the fire policy was destroyed by fire in May, 1938. The fire insurance company paid to the life insurance company, the mortgagee, the sum of $2,500, the full amount of the insurance. •This was paid to the mortgagee because the fire policy was held by the mortgagee by virtue of the endorsement on the policy. According to a stipulation in the mortgage, the main residence on the plantation was to be insured against loss by fire as additional security for the loan.

As already stated, the residence was destroyed by fire in May, 1938, at which time, according to the record, Mrs. Elizabeth C. Harp owned no interest therein, she having sold her interest to Earle H. Browne on November 29, 1937.

In order to determine correctly the issues involved, it is necessary to keep in mind certain specific dates. As we have stated, Mrs. Elizabeth C. Harp and Earle H. Browne acquired the entire plantation together with all improvements thereon, including the main residence, on January 23, 1937. On November 1, 1937, they entered into an act of partition, which act recites that they no longer wished to remain owners in indivisión of said property and desired to divide amicably the surface of the same between them, reserving the minerals, including oil and gas, in indivisión. This act of partition was made in accordance with a previous contract entered into by and between these parties prior to the date-on which the property was acquired by them at foreclosure sale, which previous contract- was dated February 29, 1936. By the prior contract it was agreed between the parties .that, if and when they acquired the property, they were to acquire it in indivisión, and that they would, after it was acquired, execute an act of partition dividing the property in the following manner: “An East and West line is to be drawn through said property by a competent surveyor, selected by the parties hereto, at such a point so that there will be an exact and equal number of acres on the North and South side of the said East and West line.”

It was expressly stipulated that Mrs. Elizabeth Cubberly Harp should receive that portion of the property north of said east and west line, and that Earle H. Browne should receive that portion of the plantation south of said east and west line.

It was further stipulated that Mrs. Harp was to receive, and become the owner of, the residence or house on the said property, which she and her husband then occupied as a home, “and if the said house should happen to fall South of the aforesaid line [i. e., on the part of the plantation set apart to Browne], then in that event, she shall have the right to move the same on the property that is North of the aforesaid line, and to off-set this transfer of the aforesaid residence to the said Mrs. Harp, and to adjust whatever difference [813]*813may be in the value of the property on the North and South sides of said line, the said Mrs. Elizabeth Cubberly Harp binds and obligates herself at the time of the execution of the deeds herein contemplated to pay over to said E. H. Browne, in lawful money of the United States, the sum of $1250.00.”

Thus the clear intention of the parties was that Mrs. Harp should become the owner of the entire interest in the residence, but in order to do so she was to pay to Browne the sum of $1,250, one-half the estimated value of the residence.

This agreement was carried out in the act of partition, which was executed on November 1, 1937. The act of partition contains the’following stipulation relating to the residence:

“And, Now, both appearers state that the residence of said Mrs. Harp is situated on the property herein allotted to the said E. H.

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Bluebook (online)
14 So. 2d 643, 203 La. 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-cent-life-ins-v-harp-la-1943.