Willis v. Gordon

143 So. 2d 798, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2196
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 23, 1962
DocketNo. 5537
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 143 So. 2d 798 (Willis v. Gordon) 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
Willis v. Gordon, 143 So. 2d 798, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2196 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

MILLER, Judge pro tern.

Lillian Gordon Willis brought this suit against Daisy Sanders Gordon, the executrix and sole legatee of the Succession of defendant’s deceased husband, Charles J. Gordon, to set aside a cash sale of property dated February 13, 1947, whereby Mrs. Willis conveyed the property which is the subject of this dispute to her natural father, the said Charles J. Gordon. Mr. Gordon died on June 25, 1954. The grounds for setting aside the sale were that her father fraudulently obtained her signature to the instrument and that she signed the instrument of sale through error.

The first suit seeking to have this sale to Charles Gordon decreed null and void was filed by plaintiff’s husband twenty-six months after the demise of Charles Gordon. It was then brought on the grounds that the property sold was community property and that plaintiff’s husband did not sign the act of sale. We affirmed the trial court’s holding that plaintiff’s husband was estopped to attack the sale on such ground, as in the act of sale wherein his wife, plaintiff herein, acquired the property, the husband acknowledged that the property was acquired by his wife for her separate estate, with her separate funds, under her separate administration. Willis v. Gordon, La.App., 94 So.2d 99.

This matter was next before this court when in this very suit we overruled an exception of no right of action, which had been maintained by the trial court. See Willis v. Gordon, La.App., 114 So.2d 85. The case has now been tried on the merits and the learned trial judge concluded that since the evidence preponderated in favor of the allegations of the petition, and since this court had reversed the holding sustaining the exception of no right of action, that therefore judgment must be rendered for the plaintiff. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff decreeing the act of sale of February 13, 1947 null and void and further ordering the defendant to pay to plaintiff “the full amount of all rentals [800]*800received by said defendant from the property described in the above deed since the death of Charles J. Gordon,” From this judgment, defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff’s original suit filed December 11, 1956 sought to have the February 13, 1947 sale decreed null and void on grounds other than the fraud and error, alleging that :

(a) The statement in the deed whereby she acquired the property declaring the property purchased for her separate estate with her separate funds was incorrect; and that the property was actually community property.

(b) The statement in the February 13, 1947 act of sale that she was paid $250.00 as consideration was not true; and that she received no consideration.

(c) The February 13, 1947 sale shows that it was executed before a notary and two witnesses, but plaintiff alleged:

“petitioner executed said fictitious sale in her own home, and out of the presence of either witnesses or a Notary Public.”

(d) She never intended to deed the property to her father, as—

“she merely signed said fictitious sale in order to assist him (her father) in borrowing some money * * *; that said fictitious sale was made for convenience sake only and it was a simulation * *

(e) That her husband, as head and master of the community did not sign the February 13, 1947 sale. Therefore the property belonged to the community, and the sale by her alone was not valid.

To this petition, defendant filed, on December 18, 1956, an exception of no cause or right of action which was overruled by the learned trial judge for the written reasons assigned on January 10, 1957, holding that the plaintiff could not attack the February 13, 1947 sale by parol evidence, on the grounds alleged, but could only propound interrogatories to the defendant, or allege a counter letter (LSA-C.C. art. 2275). However, the exception was overruled for the stated reason that the proper way to enforce the parol evidence rule was to object to the introduction of parol evidence, and not through an exception of no right or cause of action. Plaintiff did nothing further in the suit until June 17, 1958, when she filed an amended and supplemental petition alleging for the first time fraud and error, as follows:

“That said (February 13, 1947) deed was obtained by fraud and was signed through error as she was informed by her father, Charles J. Gordon, that she was signing a mortgage or some instrument permitting her father to borrow $250.00 and that she never knew that she had signed a purported deed until after his death.” (emphasis added)

Thereafter, the trial judge sustained the original exception of no right of action levelled at plaintiff’s right to contend that the sale was null and void because the property was community property, holding that this was a cause of action which belonged to the husband alone. It was this holding which was overruled by this court in Willis v. Gordon, 114 So.2d 85, where we held that plaintiff should have her day in court to prove if she could, that the February 13, 1947 deed “could be held null on account of fraud or other grounds.”

All of the parties who signed the February 13, 1947 deed, excepting the plaintiff, died prior to the trial of this case. The record does not show the dates of death of the notary public and the two witnesses. On the same date that the deed was executed, plaintiff’s father mortgaged the same property by executing a mortgage before the same notary and two witnesses. This mortgage was recorded at the same time that the deed which is the subject of this dispute was recorded and bears the next filing number in the records of East Baton [801]*801Rouge Parish. Notwithstanding this fact, the plaintiff did not know about this mortgage until it was filed in evidence by the defendant near the close of the trial.

In his written reasons for judgment, the distinguished trial judge found:

“Counsel for defendant urges that plaintiff admitted she knew she was signing a deed to the property. Of course she knows that now. Some of her testimony taken on the trial and in her deposition is to the effect that she knew it then. However, considering her testimony as a whole, she has steadfastly maintained that she signed papers only to assist her father in borrowing money.”

The finding that “she signed papers <?nly to assist her father in borrowing money” is not a finding that her father fraudulently represented the deed to be a mortgage, and does not mean that plaintiff was induced to sign the sale because her father told her it was a mortgage. That finding of fact is not a finding of fraud itself.

A review of her testimony, since hers is the only voice not stilled by death, is in order. On direct examination, plaintiff testified :

“Q. Lillian, on or around February 13, 1947, did you sign any paper for your father at his request ?
“A. Yes I did.
“Q. Where were you when you signed this ?
“A. At home in my kitchen, just me and Daddy.
“Q. Did you subsequent, or after that date, go before a notary and acknowledge this deed?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. No witnesses to the — ■
“A. No witnesses, and honestly I did not read the paper that I signed.

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Related

Ridgedell v. Succession of Kuyrkendall
740 So. 2d 173 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1999)
Matter of Succession of Vice
385 So. 2d 554 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
Succession of Broussard
306 So. 2d 399 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 So. 2d 798, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-gordon-lactapp-1962.