Fred Monk instituted this suit in 1958' against his former wife, Etta Bell Monk,
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-.seeking to be declared the owner of an undivided half interest in a thirty-acre tract •of land located in Ouachita
Parish
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acquired in the wife’s name during the •existence of the community of acquets and -gains established by the marriage of the -parties in 1924, and dissolved in 1939 by ■their judicial separation.
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The matter is mow before us to review the judgment of '.the appellate court reversing the lower ■court judgment favorable to the plaintiff ■and dismissing his suit on defendant’s plea ■of estoppel. See, Monk v. Costin, La.App.,
The record discloses that during the existence of the community of acquets and .-gains between the parties, plaintiff’s mother, Mrs. Lorinda Monk, on September 28, 1928, -a few days prior to her death, executed a ■deed by authentic act whereby, for a recited •consideration of $300 in cash, she conveyed •the property in question to her then daugh■ter-in-law. This deed contains the stipulation that the' daughter-in-law, Mrs. Etta Monk, was “appearing and purchasing the * * property with her own separate paraphernal funds over which her said Tiusband had no control,” as well as the further stipulation to the effect it was un•derstood the property was not only, pur•chased by Mrs. Monk with her separate funds, but that it would, thenceforth, “be the separate and paraphernal property of the said Mrs. Etta Monk and not the property of the community existing between her and her said husband.”
The evidence establishes the fact that while plaintiff did not himself sign the act, either as the husband acknowledging the verity of its contents or in any other capacity whatsoever, he was instrumental in procuring its preparation, execution, and recordation by causing it to be drawn; engaging the services of a notary public to officiate at its execution; which took place in his presence at his mother’s home; and having it recorded the following day. The record also shows a small house was subsequently built on the property by the husband and that it was used by him, his wife, and their children as the matrimonial domicile until the legal separation in 1939.
The defendant claims that under the circumstances above outlined, and the fact plaintiff claimed no interest in the property from the day the deed was executed until the day this suit was filed—a period of almost 30 years—and signed as a witness a
It has long and firmly been established under the jurisprudence of this court that a husband-who has been a party to an act of purchase, in which it is declared the consideration belonged to the wife .in her, paraphernality and the property is to be such,
either by signing the deed or as a zvitness thereto,
cannot, thereafter, be heard to contradict it. Rousseau v. Rousseau,
The'fact plaintiff signed a mineral lease executed by the defendant on March 24/ 1937, does not aid the defendant’s cause under the above jurisprudence, and for the-further fact that this lease was executed during the existence of the community. Finally, there is no mention whatsoever in the lease that the property involved was defendant’s separate property; indeed, the lease contains a provision to the effect that if she owned “a less interest” than the en- ■ tire undivided fee simple estate, then the-, royalties and rentals provided for would be. paid her only in proportion to that interest..
Significantly, several months later, on. November 15, 1937, and also during the existence of the community, Mrs. Monk,. jointly with Mr. Monk, conveyed a mineral interest in the land to a Dr. Edgar B. Hands, they purportedly appearing therein as the owners of this property and warranting their title. This evidences the fact Mr. - Monk was, at that time, not only asserting his ownership of an interest therein, but also that Mrs. Monk recognized his right' to that interest. It is further significant1 that on April 7, 1945—after the legal sepa-' ration and divorce and long prior to the-expiration of thirty years—the plaintiff, in" his own name, granted a mineral lease affecting the property to The California Company, and, on May 3, 1958, granted' another mineral lease affecting the same' property to the Southwest Natural Production Company. This reflects the plaintiff has,1 consistently from November 15, 1937, during the existence of the community, and, thereafter, üntil this suit was filed on Sep ..tcrnber 17, 1958, treated this property as property in which he owned an interest.
Inasmuch, therefore, as the plaintiff ■ did not sign the deed of 1928 in any capacity whatsoever, and for the further rea.son that defendant failed to allege and prove she was, by acts or inducements of either omission or commission, influenced to act to her harm or prejudice, or that she has been made to rely to her detriment ■or change her position in any way by any misrepresentations made by the plaintiff— ■essential and sacramental elements for the maintenance of such a plea—defendant’s plea of estoppel, as well as the exceptions ■of no right and no cause of action predicated on the same argument, should have been, .and are, hereby, overruled.
With respect to the purported long silence of the plaintiff and his failure to sooner assert in judicial proceedings his alleged interest in this property, the facts just set out not only refute this, but “It has long been a fundamental principle deeply embedded in our law and jurisprudence
In order to establish the paraphernality of property acquired by deed during the community in her own name, a wife must prove “(1) the paraphernality of the funds used for the purchase; (2) her individual administration of the property; and (3) that the money was invested by her. In the event the purchase is made on credit, she has the further burden of establishing (4) that she not only made the down payment out of her separate and paraphernal funds, but that she had sufficient separate revenues and funds to make the purchase with reasonable certainty of being able to meet the deferred payments.” Betz v. Riviere,
A study and analysis of the evidence, in our opinion, clearly sustains the trial judge’s conclusion that the defendant signally failed to bear the great burden that was hers in this respect. The only evi
dence in the record to this effect is her uncorroborated testimony she received $200 of the consideration paid from the sale of her father’s succession property, and a manual gift of $100 from her brother in 1925, she, during the interval until the purchase in 1928 keeping this $300 either about her person or buried in a container near the various residences to which the family moved in continuous financial hardship. Moreover, with respect to the item of $200 she is impeached, both by her sister and her former husband, who testified her share of the proceeds of her father’s property was between $60 and $65, or, as the sister said, $62.50, and, according to the plaintiff, most of this was almost immediately spent for badly needed supplies and clothing. As to the $100, purportedly a manual gift from the brother, she failed to produce him as a witness, or to explain why he was not present. Consequently, the presumption is his testimony on this phase of the case would have been adverse to her cause. See, Perez v. Meraux,
It necessarily follows, therefore,, that the property fell into the community of acquets and gains under Articles 2402 and'. 2405 of the Revised Civil Code, and that when the community was dissolved by the-judgment of separation in 1939, the plaintiff, on that day, became an owner of am undivided half interest in and to this property. Article 2406 of the Revised Civil Code.
The plea of prescription of ten' years acquirendi causa is equally without merit, for before this prescription can effectively aid in the acquisition of property,, the party invoking it must hold under a deed translative of title, and have possessed the-property, purportedly transferred, in good! faith for a period of more than ten years.. During the existence of the marriage the-defendant was possessing this property under a community deed, and, therefore, for
The prescription of ten years pleaded' under Article 2221 of the Revised Civil Code must also fall, for this prescription applies to the time limit within which an agreement may be annulled or rescinded, and the husband is not here endeavoring to set aside a deed, but merely to.be declared an owner of an undivided half interest in the property under the deed whereby his former wife acquired the property in 1928, during the existence of the community, and the community nature of which has not been disproved. :
In argument—stressed particularly in a supplemental brief-—it is contended the plaintiff enlarged his pleadings by his testimony to the effect no consideration had been given by defendant at the time the deed was executed, and, as thus enlarged, plaintiff has made it possible, by his admissions, for defendant to be declared the owner of the property as a donation to her, which, under the provisions of Article 2334 of the Revised Civil Code, made it her separate property.
This argument lacks merit because the pleadings are not enlarged by the introduction of admissible evidence (Phillips v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.,
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit is reversed and the judgment in favor of the plaintiff rendered by the district court, declaring him to be the owner of an undivided half interest in the property in controversy, is reinstated and affirmed. The defendant is to pay all costs.
Notes
. Although the plaintiff’s suit is entitled Fred Monk v. Mrs. Etta Bell Monk, wife of John Costin, Jr., and the citation of the appellate court decision gives the case- as Monk v. Costin, during the trial defendant admitted site had never, in fact, been legally married to Costin.
. This property is described as the E/2 of the NE/4 of SW/4; and E/2 of W/2 of NE/4 of SW/4 of Section 31, T. 18 N„ E. 1 E., Ouachita Parish.
. In the judgments for separation and divorce, there is no mention whatever about property of any kind.
. Counsel representing defendant having confined the argument on this point to the pleadings, does not contend the conveyance was in fact a donation, and we are not called upon to decide whether parol evidence could be considered to vary or contradict such a contract in order "to substitute in its place a contract of an entirely different nature. Nor need we decide whether defendant, having sought unsuccessfully to establish the conveyance was a sale to her, can now be heard to impeach her own testimony and maintain the conveyance was not a sale at all.
