11 Rob. 270 | La. | 1845
The object of these two actions is to recover of the defendants, who were sued separately, the possession of two distinct lots of ground, with the buildings thereon erected, to which the plaintiff sets up title under a sale executed to him, by authentic act, by the assignee of the insolvent estate of Daniel T. Walden, the former owner thereof. James A. Gasquet, the defendant in one of the suits, having disclaimed any title in himself to the lot sued for, but having alleged that the property was in William A. Gasquet, as whose agent he holds the same, the latter intervened to defend his title to it, and the two suits having been consolidated, they were tried as only one suit against William A. Gasquet, as sole defendant.
The title set up by the plaintiff to the two lots and buildings, is based on the allegations that he acquired them from the as-signee of D. T. Walden, a bankrupt, by an act passed before a notary public, on the 1st February, 1843, in which he, plaintiff, was represented by Auguste Delassus, who had sufficient powers to buy for him the property upon which he, plaintiff, had special mortgages, if the same should be exposed at judicial sales. That the same power of attorney, however, conferred no authority upon said Delassus to sell again property which he might thus acquire for account of said plaintiff; that notwithstanding said want of power, Auguste Delassus did sell, in the name of the petitioner, the said property to the defendant, by an act passed before Wm. Christy, a notary public, on the 10th of the same month; that said defendant was aware of the want of power of Delassus, and that the sale is not binding on the plaintiff.
The answer denies that the plaintiff is owner of the property sued for, and avers that the same was, with other property, purchased by him, defendant, at a sale of the bankrupt Walden’s estate, made by order of the United States District Court, through A. S. Robertson, United States marshal, on the 14th of January, 1843. He further alleges that, as there were mortgages on the property to the plaintiff for the amount of the purchase money thereof, and which Delassus, as the plaintiff’s agent, was au-
This controversy was submitted to a jury, who, after having received the charge of the court, (excepted to by the plaintiff’s counsel,) found a verdict in favor of the defendant, W. A. Gas-quet, and judgment having been rendered thereon by the court a qua, after overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, the latter appealed.
The written evidence establishes these facts: 1st. The pro-cts verbal of the adjudications, made at public auction by the marshal of the United States, of Daniel T. Walden’s property, dated 14th of January, 1843, shows that the lots in controversy were sold and adjudicated to the defendant by the said marshal, for the aggregate amount of $ 12,950, payable one-fifth cash, and the balance on a credit of twelve and eighteen months, for approved endorsed notes, secured by mortgage. It is admitted in the record, that the property in dispute was mortgaged to the plain
That it appears from the written evidence that the property in dispute was duly adjudicated by the United States marshal, to the defendant, at the public sale at auction, of the insolvent estate of D. T. Walden; that the same was not adjudicated to the plaintiff; that the recital in the deed from the assignee to Maearty that the property had been adjudicated to the latter, is incorrect and unfounded; that the defendant had complied with the terms and conditions of the sale as to giving his notes, on the very day of the adjudication; that the sum payable in cash was not by him paid to the assignee, but was paid to Delassus, as mentioned in the acts; that said notes were paid to Delassus, who receipted them as the agent of the plaintiff; that said agent had no power to sell the property by him purchased for his principal, but had a right to receive the money proceeding from the sales made of property mortgaged to his said principal; and that the defendant, in buying the lots from said Delassus, purchased his own property, the title being in him from the day of the adjudication, and there being no written proof of his ever having sold or transferred the same to the plaintiff.
But, in addition to the facts established by the documentary evidence, the defendant introduced parol evidence, and offered to prove by the testimony of divers witnesses, that the transfer of the adjudication made to the defendant, from said defendant
On the question which grows out of this bill of exceptions, it is first proper to premise, that Delassus not being authorised to sell the property of his principal, the sales by him made to the defendant are mere nullities, and are not, as sales, in any manner binding upon Macarty. This, indeed, is the main basis of his action, as he seeks to set aside the sales made in his name by his agent, so as to avail himself of the transfer and conveyance made to him through the same agent, by Walden’s assignee, and thereby to be able to recover the property. It cannot be denied that the defendant has acquired nothing from those sales, and that, therefore, said sales being considered as never having been made, the parties must stand upon their original adverse titles, to wit, the defendant on the adjudication made to him by the marshal, and the plaintiff on the transfer or sale made to him by the assignee; and this will give rise to a question of title, which we shall examine hereafter, without reference to any parol evidence.
There is no rule better known in our system of laws and jurisprudence, than that parol evidence cannot be received against or beyond what is contained in the acts, nor on what may have been said before, at the time of making them, or since. Civil Code, art. 2256. Thus, if parol evidence is offered to alter, vary, modify or contradict any part of the stipulations and recitals of a written act, or to prove agreements or stipulations beyond its contents, it is clear that it ought to be rejected, unless the proof offered has for its object to show a want of consent, and that such consent was given through fraud, error or violence, in those cases in which parol testimony is admitted. Here, no ér-
But Delassus had a right to receive the proceeds of the sales of the property mortgaged to his principal. This was one of the powers conferred upon him. He did receive from the defendant the amount of the prices of the adjudications.made to the latter ; and as this fact of payment is independent of any written act, and has no tendency to weaken or destroy the effect of the parties’ respective titles, particularly after considering the sales from Delassus to the defendant as never having been made, it seems to us that the parol evidence which was received to prove the payment, and the manner in which it was made to the agent, was properly admitted.
With this view of the question of evidence, we shall disregard all that part of the parol testimony which goes to show a change of title from the defendant to the plaintiff, and from said plaintiff to the defendant, or to contradict, vary or modify the contents of these respective deeds ; but we shall enquire into the facts established by such testimony, in relation to the payment of the sum which the written evidence shows has been paid by the defendant to the plaintiff’s agent, and into the legal effect of such payment on the rights of the plaintiff. Hence two prim cipal questions will arise:
1st. Who has the best title to the property in dispute, as based upon the written acts produced by the parties respectively, and without any reference to the parol evidence ?
2nd. How was the payment made by the defendant to Delas-sus, and is it binding upon the plaintiff?
I. It cannot be controverted that the title to the property in dispute vested in the defendant from the very moment of the adjudication. This adjudication was the completion of the sale, Gasquet had become the owner of the lots, (Civil Code, art. 2586. 13 La. 287. 19 lb. 235,) and nothing could divest him of his
II. We have already remarked that the defendant, in compliance with the terms and conditions of the sale, gave his notes, dated the very day of the adjudication; that those notes passed into the hands of Delassus, as Macarty’s agent; that they were paid to him; and that said agent also received the amount which was to be paid in cash. Thus Delassus, who was empowered to receive the amount coming to Macarty from the sale of the property in extinguishment of the mortgage of his principal, was acting within the scope of his authority; and, without its being necessary to enter into any detailed statement of the facts established, it suffices to say, that the parol evidence shows that the object of the transaction between him and the defendant, was altogether for the purpose of his being put in possession of his principal’s money, of preventing its going into the hands of the assignee, and of giving to Gasquet a warranty that it should be reimbursed in case of eviction. He never understood that the amount received should be considered as paid in consideration of the sales made by himself as agent of Macarty, but always had in contemplation that said amount was paid into his hands as proceeding from the adjudication of the property subject to his principal’s mortgage. Without the adjudication, the payment would not have been made. Indeed, the parol evidence establishes this fact positively; and if sales were passed, which must he viewed as made without authority, and consequently with no other or further effect than if they had never been executed, they were clearly the consequence of the defendant’s wish to make a valid payment, and of the modes devised to procure to Macarty the satisfaction, pro tanto, of the mortgage debt due him by the insolvent. But this cannot change the object and nature of the payment; if it was valid without the sales, it must be so with them, since they are without effect. Macarty was not put duriori cam; he had paid nothing for the property, since the funds proceeding from its adjudication to Gasquet,
We must, therefore, conclude, that on the face of the very titles produced by the parties, and without reference to any parol testimony, the plaintiff has no right to claim the property in contest, which had been adjudicated by the marshal to the defendant ; that such adjudication was the completion of the sale; and that the defendant has shown satisfactorily that the payment made to the plaintiff’s agent, was in conformity with his power of attorney, and in compliance with the terms and conditions of the sale.
Judgment affirmed.