Witson v. Joseph

158 So. 661, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 48
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1935
DocketNo. 1388.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 So. 661 (Witson v. Joseph) 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
Witson v. Joseph, 158 So. 661, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 48 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This is a petitory action in which the plaintiff asks to be recognized as the owner of a certain tract of land situated in the fourth ward of the parish of Iberville, title to which, she avers, was acquired ,by her at public sale when the same was alleged to have been sold •under an order of court in the succession proceedings of Houston L. Staring, in order to pay debts of his estate. In her petition, plaintiff also sets out that John Joseph, who is without any legal title, is in the physical possession of the property, and she prays that he be ordered to deliver the same to her. John Joseph, the only defendant in the cause, is a son of Victor Joseph, deceased, who formerly owned the property.

The defendant first filed an exception of nonjoinder based on the proposition that, as there had been a former judgment rendered in the district court, concerning the same-■property, in which his coheirs were parties defendant, they should also be joined in the same capacity with him in this proceeding. This exception, after a hearing, was overruled by the lower court. Counsel for defendant at the time reserved a bill to the ruling of the court, but makes no reference whatever to the exception in this court, and we take it that it has been abandoned.

*662 Defendant next filed an exception of no canse or right of action. This exception, as we nnderstand from the reasons assigned by the lower court in overruling the same, was grounded on the failure of plaintiff’s petition to have disclosed the entire chain of title under which she claims the property. The court held that, inasmuch as the petition had set forth an acquisition under a deed, which on its face appeared to he an act translative of property, that was sufficient to sustain her cause of action. We note in the extract from the minutes of court of date March 21, 1933, the day on which the exception was overruled, that counsel for defendant again reserved a bill to the ruling of the court, hut in this court he makes no mention of the matter, and seems to have acquiesced therein!- We therefore do not feel called on to review the question brought up by the exception.

The defense on the merits is, first, that plaintiff herself has not a good title to the property, as the deed under which she claims, whilst purporting to have been a sale of the property for cash, by the ‘ executors of the estate of Houston L. Staring, in order to pay debts, was nothing but an indirect attempt on their part to validate a transfer that had been made by them under private sale, which the court had, in a previous suit between the parties, declared null and void, and that in truth and in fact no cash had been paid over to the executors. Secondly, it is urged that the purported title in the estate of Houston D. Staring is invalid, the same having been derived from his father, Joseph Staring, who had acquired the same from Emanuel or Manuel Falcon, an alleged purchaser at tax sale, and which tax sale was in itself null and void for failure of the tax debtors to have received proper notice of tax delinquency and also because of insufficiency of description. The trial court held that the property had been properly sold by the executors of the estate of Houston L. Staring, to pay debts, and that, as to the tax sale of the property through which the title was derived, any defects and irregularities therein have been cured by the constitutional prescription of three years against attacking such sales. These, therefore, are the matters which we have to review on the present appeal.

The history of this litigation takes us back to the month of August, 1902, at which time Victor Joseph and his wife, Charlotte Joseph (father and mother of the defendant end his seven brothers and sisters), appeared before a notary public in the town of Pla-quemine, La., for the purpose of executing a mortgage in order to secure a note of $364. The mortgage was made in favor of Jas. M. Rhorer, but it is not disputed that the latter appeared in the act merely for the purpose of accepting the mortgage for some one else. . The evidence satisfies us that it was being taken for Joseph Staring to secure a store debt that had been contracted with him by Victor Joseph. In describing the property to be mortgaged, however, the notary, apparently through error, described a property which belonged to Antoine Joseph instead of that of Victor Joseph, and so the mortgage remained, as far as this record discloses. The district judge was of the opinion that it had not been sufficiently shown that the property mortgaged did not belong to Victor Joseph, but in this we disagree with him. We think that the testimony of Mr. Charles I. Dupont, Jr., defendant’s attorney, who examined the conveyance records with the purpose of ascertaining if Antoine Victor ever sold the property described in the act of mortgage referred to, to Victor Joseph,-furnishes sufficient proof that he did not, and besides, it would seem a bit singular, if Joseph Staring did have a mortgage on Victor Joseph’s property, that he would not have foreclosed it with the view of acquiring it in that way rather than in the indirect manner he attempted through a tax deed.

About a month or two after the mortgage was executed in August, 1902, Victor Joseph died. His widow and children continued to live on the property and cultivated it. The widow and John; defendant herein, both say that they stayed on it eight years after Victor’s death, at which time the widow remarried and she moved off. They both testify that they made payments to Staring on account of the indebtedness each year. When asked if he had anything to show for those payments, the defendant answers: “Yes; receipts.” His attorney then asked him: '“Are those receipts you refer to, the ones we used during the last trial?” and he answers: “Yes, sir.” The receipts were not offered in evidence in the trial of this case, but we would hardly believe that counsel would have asked that question if they were not actually filed in the suit he had -reference to, and certainly the question as put, to elicit the testimony, would not have gone unchallenged if it were not a fact that the receipts were really there. Their existence positively tends to substantiate the testimony of defendant and his mother on this point. Without the receipts before us, we, of course, are unable to say what the amounts paid on account were, but, if defendant and his mother are to be further believed, they were *663 rather substantial payments, as they always included an amount sufficient to pay the taxes which they intrusted wholly to Mr. Staring.

After -defendant’s mother had married again and moved off of the property, defendant remained on it a year longer, when he left to go swamping. His brothers and sisters had, in the meantime, moved away, and apparently left him in charge of the property. There was still at the time a balance due on the Staring indebtedness, so he arranged-with Mr. Staring that he would take charge of the property and rent it out, and that from the rent money the taxes would be paid and the balance remaining would be applied on the debt. He testified positively as to this arrangement, and so does his mother. He names the several parties who worked the property under that agreement and produced one of' them, Orange Kichard-son, who testified that he was on the property for the three years, 1915, 1916, and 1917, and that he paid Mr. Staring $50 the first of those years, $70 the second, and $90 the third.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 661, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witson-v-joseph-lactapp-1935.