90 So. 252 | La. | 1921
This suit was originally instituted by- William II. Moore alone, claiming a third interest in a tract of land sold by his mother, individually and as natural tutrix of her three minor children, issue of her marriage with William H. Moore, Sr., now deceased. The two other children of the marriage, who were living when the suit was filed, were Stewart R. Moore and Bliss Frances Bloore, who is now the wife of J. B. Thomas. Stewart R.. Bloore filed a petition of intervention in the suit, assuming the position of coplaintiff and claiming also a third interest in the property. The interest which BIrs. Frances Bloore Thomas might have claimed when the suit was filed is not in contest.
Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant in possession of the land, and the plaintiff, William H. Moore, appealed. The intervener, Stewart R. Bloore, who, with his brother, had enlisted in the American Expeditionary Forces, was drowned at sea soon after the judgment was’ rendered; and his mother and sister then became parties to the suit, and, with his brother, appealed from the judgment affecting the interest which they inherited from the deceased.
Appellants William ÍI. Bloore and Blrs. Francos Bloore Thomas contend that the property belonged to the separate estate of their deceased father, not to the marital community between him and their mother. She, of course, is estopped' from claiming that the property belonged to her husband’s separate estate, because she sold it as community property and thereby disposed of whatever interest she had in it.
The defendant Pitre bought the property from James II. Jordan on the 19th of November, 1909; Jordan bought from B. H. Lyons on the 28th of June, 1905; and Lyons bought from plaintiff’s ihother, then BIrs. Fannie E. Bloore, acting individually and as natural tutrix of her minor, children, on the 28th of June, 1905 — that is, on the day on which he sold the property to Jordan. The defendant Pitre called Jordan in warranty to .defend the suit; and the latter answered, adopting the defenses urged by Jordan, and calling Lyons in warranty to defend the suit. The latter did not make an appearance in the case, and it does not appear that a preliminary judgment by default was taken against him.
It is not necessary to decide whether, if the primary object of the sale had really been to effect a partition of the property, the fact that the sale was made “for the further purpose of raising funds for the support and education of the minors” would have prevented a valid sale being made by private or conventional act. Eor there is no doubt that the only object or purpose of the sale was for the tutrix to get hold of the price. The statement that one of the objects was to effect a partition of the property "was a mere subterfuge.
Our opinion is that the defendant, possesá
The judgment appealed from is annulled; and it is now ordered, adjudged, and decreed that plaintiff, William IT. Moore, is the owner of = V23 6 interest in the property described in his petition, being S. E. % of N. W. Vt of Sec. 26, in T. 2 N., R. 9 W., containing 40 acres, less s/io of an acre held by the K. C. S. & G. Railway Co., and that appellant Mrs. Frances Mooi-e Thomas is the owner of 15/256 interest in said property, reserving whatever claim she may have had previous to the death of her brother Stewart R. Moore. The claim of the appellant Mrs. W. II. Pugh, formerly Mrs. Fannie E. Moore, is rejected. It is ordered that this case be remanded to the district court for further trial and for an adjudication on the question of defendant’s liability for rents or revenues of the property, and on the question of compensation due him for improvements made and taxes paid on the property, all on the basis of his having been a possessor in good faith, and for an adjudication on the liability of James II. Jordan as warrantor, and on the liability of B. IT. Lyons as warrantor, if he should answer the suit or if a judgment by default be taken against him. The defendant is to pay all costs incurred to date; and the liability for the costs that may be incurred hereafter shall depend upon the final judgment.