White v. White

233 So. 2d 289, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5457
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 9, 1970
DocketNo. 7882
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 233 So. 2d 289 (White v. White) 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
White v. White, 233 So. 2d 289, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5457 (La. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinions

SARTAIN, Judge.

This is a petitory action in which defendants-appellants appeal from a judgment awarding plaintiffs an undivided 28.-34 per cent interest in title to 75.32 acres of land situated in the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Appellants’ title, acquired from a third party tax sale purchaser, was annulled for fraud. We are of the opinion that the decision of the trial court is correct and should be affirmed.

The facts upon which this matter must be adjudicated are presented primarily through the allegations of the petition, the answer thereto, and a joint stipulation. Green B. White was the undisputed owner of the subject property when he died in 1921. White was married three times and had lawful issue of each marriage. Plaintiffs herein are issue of White’s first and second marriages. The defendants are the wife and issue of the third union.

Annie Smith White and her children resided on the property until sometime after 1927. Taxes on the land were paid by defendant from 1921 to 1926, inclusive. The 1926 taxes were not paid and the property was sold at a tax sale on July 14, 1927, to W. H. Smith for $20.88, representing taxes and costs. W. H. Smith is an uncle of Annie Smith White. On August 1, 1928, he transferred the property to Annie Smith White for the recited consideration of $500.00.

Notice of the tax sale was mailed to Green B. White, then deceased, but was receipted for by Minnie White Dirr (Nichols), daughter of decedent’s second marriage. Defendant and her children were in possession of the property at the time of the tax sale. Within a year of the sale they left the property and remained away for approximately six months. It is stipulated that if Luther White, child of the second marriage and Everett White, a grandchild of the first marriage, were to testify in person, they would state that Minnie White Dirr did not advise them of her receipt of the tax notice which preceded the sale to W. H. Smith. It is also stipulated that Luther White would testify that he gave defendant small amounts of money prior to 1926, because she needed financial assistance, but that defendant did not request aid from him for payment of 1926 taxes. Another stipulation recites that Luther White and Everett White would testify that defendant never notified them that she had obtained or thought she had acquired title through the tax sale to Smith and the subsequent transfer to herself.

Elisha White and Maggie White Browning, children of decedent’s third marriage would, according to the stipulation, testify that to the best of their knowledge, plaintiff, Luther White, never gave defendant any amounts of money. Elisha White would also testify that her mother told Luther White, in Elisha’s presence, that she had purchased the land from her uncle and that conversation took place within a few weeks after defendant had acquired the land from Smith. In August of 1952 the succession of Green B. White was opened and on August 11, 1952 the children of [292]*292decedent’s third marriage were recognized as his heirs at law and as such declared owners of the subject property. This present action was filed on June 23, 1961. On November 4, 1961 Annie Smith White transferred the property in question to Alma Parker Martin, issue of decedent’s marriage to the defendant. The act of transfer recited a cash payment of $10.00 and “other consideration”.

The lawful heirs of Green B. White are: Mary White Byers, daughter of decedent’s first wife; Sarah Kahan, David White, Everett White and Mary Elizabeth White Beard, children of Tom H. White, deceased’s son of his first marriage; Allen White and Curtis White, children of William David White, deceased’s son of the first marriage; James Vernon White, Luther A. White and Minnie White Dirr Nichols, issue of decedent’s marriage to Mary Buckles (Mrs. M. J. Miller); Maggie White Browning, Elisha White, Alma White Martin and Abbie R. White, children of decedent’s marriage to defendant herein.

Plaintiffs in this suit are Everett White, Mary White Beard, Allen White, Curtis White, James Vernon White, Luther A. White, David White, Mary White Byers and Minnie White Nichols.

In plaintiffs’ petition they attack the tax sale to W. H. Smith as having been invalid for (1) improper notice in that the record owner was deceased at the time the tax notice issued and (2) insufficient description to properly identify the property sold for taxes. In addition, plaintiffs urge that defendants’ acquisition was fraudulently obtained through the means of an interposed third party, W. H. Smith. In this latter connection it is argued that the defendant owed a fiduciary duty to preserve the interests of her children in the property and, as their tutrix, she could not adversely acquire their interest therein. The basic argument is that as agent of the minor co-owners defendant’s action amounted to payment of taxes in the minor’s behalf and such payment also redounded to the benefit of plaintiffs as co-owners with the minors. Of these three issues we will first consider the latter one for if the transaction between W. H. Smith and Annie Smith White was indeed a fraudulent one, the first two issues need not be resolved. Further, these first two issues were squarely presented in and determined by a district court, Court of Appeal, and Supreme Court of Louisiana in White v. Lockhart, 229 La. 611, 86 So.2d 397 (1956) and the same case at 129 So.2d 917 (1st La.App., 1961, writs denied, 1961)..

Defendants filed several exceptions; however, we are here concerned with their plea of res judicata. This exception is predicated upon the prior litigation between defendants and the present plaintiff, Luther A. White, and certain other heirs of decedent, Green B. White, in the Lock-hart cases, supra.

We are of the opinion that the Lockhart cases are not res judicata as to the issue of whether or not the transaction between W. H. Smith and Annie Smith White was a fraudulent one because the legal effect of the transaction between W. H. Smith and Annie Smith White was not presented to nor passed upon by either the Supreme Court in the first case or ourselves in the second one.

In White v. Lockhart, supra, plaintiffs therein, issue of decedent’s second marriage, initiated a timber trespass action against defendant, Lockhart, in Livingston Parish because that was the parish of Lockhart’s domicile. The principal demand was for a percentage of the value of timber cut and removed from the subject property. Lockhart defended on the ground that he had acquired title to the timber from Annie Smith White, whom he called in warranty. Warrantor filed exceptions of want of procedural capacity, lack of interest, no cause or right of action, prescription and lack of jurisdiction ratione materiae. The trial court overruled warrantor’s exceptions of want or le[293]*293gal interest and prescription but maintained the remaining exceptions and dismissed plaintiffs’ suit with reservation of the right to bring an appropriate action in East Baton Rouge Parish. The Supreme Court reversed the trial court insofar as it maintained the exceptions of no right or cause of action, want of procedural capacity and lack of jurisdiction, holding that the issue as to whether or not Lockhart was a trespasser must be resolved by determining warrantor’s title on the merits. The matter was therefore remanded to the trial court. On the remand the trial court initially held for plaintiffs but on rehearing reversed itself and rendered judgment for defendants. Plaintiffs’ appeal to the Supreme Court was transferred to this court on authority of Article 7, Section 30, Louisiana Constitution of 1921.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 So. 2d 289, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-white-lactapp-1970.