White v. Batson
This text of 317 So. 2d 205 (White v. Batson) 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.
Opinion
Gordon M. WHITE et al.
v.
Emmett E. BATSON.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*206 Larry D. Book, Baton Rouge, for appellants.
Darrell D. White, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
Before LOTTINGER and COVINGTON, JJ., and BAILES, J. Pro Tem.
BAILES, Judge Pro Tem.
This is an action for specific performance of a contract to buy certain immovable property located in the City of Baton Rouge. The court a quo ordered specific performance. The defendant appealed. We affirm.
On February 7, 1974, the defendant entered into an agreement with the plaintiffs wherein defendant contracted to purchase Lot 4, Square 18 South, Beauregard Town, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, from the plaintiffs for the sum of $50,000. The defendant refused to accept title to the property on the ground that plaintiffs' title is unmerchantable and suggestive of serious future litigation.
The facts are few and free from dispute. Before this Court the sole objection of the defendant to the title of plaintiffs is that the chain of title to subject property includes a deed dated May 23, 1945, from Lillie Bell Knox and James T. Amiss to Carl E. Norder, et al, which was not physically signed by Mrs. Knox. The deed was signed by her co-owner, James T. Amiss, in her presence, at her request and direction, in the presence of three competent witnesses and the notary.
The deed in question contains the following statement by the notary, W. Frank Gladney, before whom the act of sale was passed which fully explains what transpired on that occasion, to-wit:
"At the request of the parties hereto, this Act of Sale with Mortgage was passed at the home of one of the vendors, Mrs. Lillie Bell Knox, at 423 North Boulevard in the City of Baton Rouge, instead of at the office of the notary for the reason that the said Mrs. Knox is now confined to her home. The said Mrs. Lillie Bell Knox, being blind, after having requested that this Act of Sale with Mortgage be read to her and after it was read to her in a clear voice by me, notary, did declare her approval of and satisfaction with the said Act, and did authorize and instruct the above described James T. Amiss to affix her signature hereunder, all having been read, done and signed in the presence of me, notary, and the three undersigned competent witnesses all in fullfillment (sic) of the provisions of Art. 2234 of the Revised Civil Code of Louisiana, as amended."
The trial court in its written reasons for judgment, inter alia, stated:
* * *
"With regard to the instant set of facts, the court regards Mr. Amiss to have been not an agent or mandatary, but simply a helping hand who loaned his arm and eyes to Mrs. Knox so that she, through him, could sign the act of sale. Mr. Amiss was simply an instrumentality *207 for her signature much like the pen and paper are instrumentalities of the signature of a sighted person. Accordingly, the court concludes that because Mr. Amiss was not a mandatary, there was no violation of the rule prohibiting a verbal mandate to sell immovable property. Mrs. Knox's signature through Mr. Amiss is held to be valid and to have divested her of her ownership in the property in question herein. The provisions of Civil Code A Article 2234 (requiring, inter alia, that a blind person execute an authentic act in the presence of three witnesses and which defendant alleges is a statute prohibiting the Amiss signature for Knox) was not violated inasmuch as Mrs. Knox did sign albeit through an amanuensis, in the presence of three witnesses. * * *.
"For the reasons given above, the court rules that the aforesaid sale was valid, that the title in question is merchantable and that it is not suggestive of serious litigation. * * *."
Of the defendant's specification of errors of the trial court, we deem only two of these need be considered. These are:
1. That the trial court erred in holding that the Knox-Norder sale did not contain a verbal power of attorney but instead contained an amanuensis which was effective to transfer an immovable; and
2. The trial court erred in not holding that the title to the subject property was suggestive of serious future litigation.
These two assigned errors by the appellant, suggests two questions for consideration and answer. These are:
I. Does the act of signing the name of a vendor to an act of sale of immovable property by another person in response to the verbal request and direction of the vendor who is present at the signing require a written power of attorney for such act of sale to legally convey title to the vendee named in the act of sale? and,
II. Is the title to the immovable as thus vested in the vendee suggestive of serious future litigation?
We will consider these questions in the order stated:
The main thrust of appellant's argument is that our law requires that a mandate to transfer title to immovable property must be in writing. He cites a long line of jurisprudence to support this argument as well as LSA-C.C. Articles 2275, 2440 and 2992.
Appellees rely on the holding of the courts in the cases of Meyer v. King, 29 La.Ann. 567 (1877) and Elmore v. Butler, 169 So.2d 717 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1964) as being most controlling.
If the request of Mrs. Knox to Mr. Amiss and her direction to him to sign her name to the act of sale was a mandate to transfer title to immovable property then the act of sale is fatally defective for the mandate was not reduced to writing. We acknowledge that a power of attorney to sell immovable property must be in writing. Turner v. Snype, 162 La. 117, 110 So. 109, 110 (1926) and the cases therein cited.
In Meyer v. King, supra, the court, in considering the validity of the confection of a counter-letter and the admissibility of certain testimony of whether the son of a party to the counter-letter had signed his farther's name to the act with his father's consent, held:
"* * * The counter-letter was not the mandate, but the act signed for, in presence and under the instructions of the parent. That authority was delegated for only one object, was not to be exercised out of the interested parties presence, lasted the space of time required to write a name, and expired when the last letter of the principal's name fell from the agent's pen. In such a case, the act itself is the act of the principal, not of the agent."
*208 In Elmore v. Butler, supra, a petitory action, the trial court had ruled that the deed from M. M. Elmore to Georgia Elmore and Novie Elmore was null and void because the signature thereon was found not to be that of M. M. Elmore, the alleged vendor, and there was no statement in the deed as to Elmore's inability, or reason for his failure, to sign. The proof was that on the occasion of the confection of the deed, after two other parties thereto had signed their names, the notary asked M. M. Elmore to sign his name to the deed. When he attempted to comply, his hand was too shaky to write. At that time the notary instructed Elmore to "put your finger on the pen and let me write for you" and that is what he did. After citing and discussing Coats v. Guaranty Bank & Trust Co., 174 La. 503, 141 So. 41 (1932); Waggoner v. Grant Parish Police Jury, 203 La. 1071, 14 So.2d 855 (1943); In re Deshotels' Estate, 153 La. 1096, 97 So.
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