18 So. 2d 633 | La. | 1944
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *3 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *4 John C. Whitman died at his home in Beauregard Parish on December 26, 1929, *5 leaving as his heirs two sons and seven daughters. The daughters were married and they and the sons were all of the age of majority. In March 1934 one of the daughters, Mrs. Ada Whitman Snyder, died, leaving as her heirs a son and daughter of the age of majority and four minor children. Their father, D. W. Snyder, qualified as natural tutor of the minor children.
John C. Whitman was survived also by his wife, Martha Ann Whitman. He owned at the time of his death 10 acres of land on which he resided, described as the SE1/4 of NW1/4 of NE1/4 of Section 15, T.16 S., R.13 W. The property belonged to his separate estate, having been donated to him by his father. At the time of the death of John C. Whitman, his younger son, Fren B. Whitman, was yet residing with his aged parents in the humble home on the 10 acres of land. They were the only remaining occupants of the old homestead, and, being very poor, eked out a living by cultivating the four or five acres of cleared land, and by Fren's working on the public highway.
On July 9, 1932, the elder of the two sons and the seven daughters transferred their eight-ninths interest in the farm to their brother Fren B. Whitman, by an instrument which they, as plaintiffs in this suit, call a donation inter vivos. The act was not a gratuitous donation, if in fact it was a donation at all, but was made in consideration for the transferee's promise to take care of his mother to the end of her life. He had been taking care of her on the *6 farm from the time of his father's death, — more than two and a half years before the transfer of the property was made. In fact his father had been feeble and dependent upon the son for some time before the father's death. The old couple and their son were the only persons occupying the homestead for several years before the father died; and the mother and son were the only occupants from that time until the homestead was deeded to the son. We mention these circumstances because they cast some light upon the meaning of the terms expressing the consideration in the act of transfer, and indicate that, if the transfer was a donation in any sense, it was not only an onerous donation but also, to some extent, a remunerative donation. The instrument was made as an act under private signature but was acknowledged by the parties in the presence of a notary public and two witnesses. The mother, Martha Ann Whitman, joined her older son and her seven daughters as one of the transferors, probably not understanding that the property belonged to the separate estate of her deceased husband and hence that she had no proprietary interest in it. The pertinent provisions in the deed are as follows:
"Be it known: That we [naming the mother and elder son and seven daughters], * * * for and in consideration, as hereinafter explained, have granted, sold and conveyed and by these presents do grant, sell and convey, with full subrogation to all our rights of action and warranty against all former owners and vendors, unto Fren B. Whitman, whose post office address is *7 Merryville, La., all and singular the following described real property situated in the said Parish of Beauregard, State of Louisiana, to-wit:
"The consideration for which this transfer is made is understood to be, and hereby accepted as such by thevendors herein, as follows: The providing a home, clothing and feeding and in fact maintaining and supporting by thepurchaser herein, the vendor, Mrs. Martha Ann Whitman, mother of the said vendee, Fren B. Whitman, so long as said vendor may live. [The italics are ours.]
"In witness whereof we have hereunto affixed our signatures", etc.
In describing the 10 acres of land intended to be conveyed the notary public who prepared the deed, and who was not a lawyer, wrote NE1/4 where he intended to write NW1/4, and by that mistake wrote the description SE1/4 of NE1/4 of NE1/4, intending to write SE1/4 of NW1/4 of NE1/4. It is admitted that the only land that John *8 C. Whitman owned at the time of his death was the 10-acre tract described as SE1/4 of NW1/4 of NE1/4 of Section 15, T.6 S., R.13 W. Nor is it denied that it was that 10-acre tract that all of the parties intended and believed was being transferred to Fren B. Whitman.
On March 1, 1933, Fren B. Whitman sold the 10 acres of land to Mrs. J. S. Smith, a sister of the deceased John C. Whitman, for $100 cash; and, as the notary public copied the description of the land from the instrument of conveyance by which Fren B. Whitman had acquired the land from his brother and sisters, the error of calling the SE1/4 of NW1/4 of NE1/4 the SE1/4 ofNE1/4 of NE1/4 of Section 15 was repeated.
In October 1936 Mrs. J. S. Smith negotiated to sell the 10 acres of land to her son-in-law, Clyde Franks, and in the negotiations it was discovered that the notary public who had prepared the act of conveyance by which Fren B. Whitman had acquired the land made the mistake of describing the SE1/4 ofNW1/4 of NE1/4 as the SE1/4 of NE1/4 of NE1/4 of Section 15. And at the same time it was discovered that the notary public, who was the same notary who prepared the deed by which Fren B. Whitman sold the 10 acres to Mrs. J. S. Smith, repeated the error in the description of the land. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Smith and Clyde Franks, therefore, took the deed, by which the 10 acres had been transferred to Fren B. Whitman, to the notary public who had prepared it, and had him change the letter E into a W, so as to *9 make the description read SE1/4 of NW1/4 of NE1/4 instead of SE1/4 of NE1/4 of NE1/4 of Section 15. The correction was made on or about October 17, 1936. The elder brother and the seven sisters of Fren B. Whitman were not informed of the discovery of the error, or of the correcting of it. The correction was made therefore without their knowledge or consent and without the knowledge or consent of the mother, Mrs. Martha Ann Whitman. It is not denied, however, that the correction of the error was made in good faith on the part of the notary public and of Fren B. Whitman and of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Smith and of Clyde Franks. The deed had not been filed for record in the recorder's office. In fact it was when the deed was brought to the recorder's office for registry on or about October 17, 1936, that the error was discovered. And it was on the suggestion of the recorder, as we understand, that the correction was made. On October 19, 1936, Fren B. Whitman, in order to correct the error in the description in the sale which he had made on March 1, 1933, to Mrs. J. S. Smith, signed an act of sale to her containing the correct description, SE1/4 of NW1/4 of NE1/4 of Section 15, T.6 S., R.13 W. The consideration stated in this correction deed was $100 cash, which was the price which Mrs. Smith had paid to Fren B. Whitman on March 1, 1933, as stated in the deed of that date.
On October 24, 1936, Mrs. J. S. Smith sold the 10 acres of land under the correct description to Clyde Franks for $100 cash.
In May 1939 the mother and the elder brother and the six surviving sisters of *10 Fren B. Whitman, and the major son and daughter of D. W. Snyder, and he as tutor of his four minor children, brought this suit against Fren B. Whitman and against Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Smith and Clyde Franks, to annul the so-called donation which the plaintiffs had made to Fren B. Whitman on July 9, 1932, and to recover the eight-ninths interest in the 10 acres described as SE1/4 of NW1/4 of NE1/4 of Section 15, T.6 S., R.13 W. The judge, after hearing the evidence, rejected the plaintiffs' demands. They are appealing from the judgment.
The causes for which the appellants are suing to annul the so-called donation are as follows:
(1) That the changing of the description of the 10 acres of land, by the notary public, on October 17, 1936, was a material alteration and therefore had the effect of annulling the transfer.
(2) That the so-called donation divested the donors of all of the property that they owned and was therefore null under the provisions of article
(3) That the consideration stipulated in the act, — that the donee should provide a home for his mother and should support and maintain her to the end of her life, — was not a valid consideration for an onerous donation, or other contract, because the obligation to support his mother was already imposed by law upon Fren B. Whitman. *11
(4) That the donee did not comply with the terms or conditions on which the donation was made, as an onerous donation.
The plaintiffs charged also in their petition that the instrument of conveyance was not valid as a gratuitous donation because it was not made in the form of an authentic act. But that cause of nullity is not stressed by the appellants because they concede now that the instrument which they seek to annul was not a gratuitous donation. They contend that it was an onerous donation. Article
The plaintiffs' complaint that the change made by the notary public in the description of the 10 acres of land was made without their consent or knowledge, and was a material alteration of the instrument, might be a serious complaint but for the fact that the alteration merely substituted the 10-acre *12 tract which the transferors intended to transfer for the 10-acre tract which was described by mistake. The alteration would have served no purpose if a third party had acquired previously a title from the transferors to the 10 acres which they intended to convey to Fren B. Whitman. But no such right or title was acquired by any third party. And it is not denied — and is proven beyond doubt — that the alteration in the description of the 10-acre tract had no other purpose or effect than to make the instrument express the true intention of all of the parties to it. The correction was not valid until it was validated by the judgment rendered in this case, — even though Fren B. Whitman or his transferee had the right, upon discovering the error in the description of the land intended to be conveyed, to compel the transferors by a suit against them to correct the description so as to conform with the intention of the parties to the instrument.
In fact the evidence leaves no doubt — and it is not disputed — that if the error in the description had been discovered at any time before Fren B. Whitman sold the property, and if he had requested the transferors then to have the description corrected, they would have consented to make the correction. They say now that they would not have consented to make the correction at the time when or after it was discovered, on or about October 17, 1936, because they contend that at that time Fren B. Whitman had ceased carrying out his obligation to provide a home for and to support his mother. The plaintiffs say that if Fren B. Whitman had sued them to correct *13 the error in the description of the property at the time when or after the error was discovered, October 17, 1936, they would have defended the suit on the ground that he had violated the terms and conditions of the transfer by failing to provide a home for and to support his mother. But that defense would have presented a separate and distinct issue, not connected in any way with the question whether Fren B. Whitman would have been entitled to a correction of the description of the property so as to express truly the intention of the parties to the deed.
In this instance the instrument purporting to convey the 10 acres of land to Fren B. Whitman was an absolute nullity before the correction in the description of the land was made, because the transferors did not own the property described in the act of conveyance, and, according to article
In the case of Munn v. Hoyt,
An alteration made in an instrument of conveyance for the purpose only — and having the effect only — of correcting an error so as to make the instrument express the true intention of the parties is not a "material alteration" in the meaning of the law which gives to a party to an instrument of conveyance a right of action *15
to annul it if a material alteration is made in it without his knowledge or consent. Barrabine v. Bradshears, 5 Mart., O.S., 190; Smith v. Bratsos,
In the case of Barrabine v. Bradshears, 5 Mart., O.S., 190, decided in 1817, the trial judge sustained an objection to the introduction in evidence of a sheriff's deed, on the ground that an interlineation of the words "in front", which was made in the description of the property after the deed was signed, was a material alteration. But this court reversed the ruling on the ground that the interlineation served merely to complete or perfect the description, and hence was not a material alteration. The description written originally in the deed was "a tract of land of twenty arpens, more or less, with the ordinary depth, on or near bayou Yokely, in the parish of St. Mary". The words "in front" were interpolated after the words "twenty arpens". The court said that the expression, "with the ordinary depth", when applied to a Spanish land grant or survey, meant a depth of forty arpents, — and was so understood by "those in the least acquainted with the manner in which the Spanish government laid out the land of the public domain."
In Burnham v. Ayer,
Our conclusion is that the alteration made in the description of the ten acres of land in the instrument of conveyance, in this instance, although made without the consent or knowledge of the plaintiffs in this suit, would not be a just cause for annulling the instrument.
The second ground on which the plaintiffs sue to annul the donation which they made to their brother is founded upon article
There is another reason, however, why article
In the case of Ackerman v. Larner,
The author of the opinion in Ackerman v. Larner was the author also of the opinion in Hearsey v. Craig,
The third ground on which the appellants seek to annul the donation is that the consideration stipulated in the act, that the donee should provide a home for and support his mother to the end of her life, was not a valid consideration for an onerous donation, or other contract, because the obligation was already imposed by law upon the donee. It is true that the obligation was imposed by law upon the donee, but it was imposed also upon all of the donors, as a solidary obligation. When two or more persons are under a solidary obligation in favor of a third party the assuming of the entire obligation by one of the obligors is a valid consideration for a contract between him and the other obligor or obligors.
The fourth ground on which the appellants seek to annul the donation is that the donee did not fulfill the obligation stipulated in the act, to provide a home for and support his mother to the end of her life. The answer to this complaint is that if the act of conveyance of the donors' eight-ninths interest in the property was a donation at all it was not a gratuitous donation but an onerous donation and to *22
some extent a remunerative donation. As we have pointed out, according to article
There was no prohibition in the act of conveyance to Fren B. Whitman dated July 9, 1932, against his selling the property transferred to him. The obligation, as stipulated in the act, was merely that he *24 should provide a home for and maintain and support his mother as long as she might live. The circumstances under which the onerous donation was made might justify the inference that the parties intended that the donee should maintain and support his mother in the home in which she and he then lived. But that was not such an implied condition as to forbid him to sell the property when it became absolutely necessary to do so in order to obtain the employment necessary to enable him to provide a home for and to support his mother.
The defendants filed pleas of prescription in this court, but our conclusion that the judgment appealed from is correct on its merits makes it unnecessary to consider the pleas of prescription.
In explanation of our having jurisdiction over this case, in which the value of the property in dispute was only eight-ninths of about $150 at the crucial or decisive date, be it said that a short time before the suit was filed an oil well was drilled and oil was produced therefrom in paying quantities at a distance less than a thousand feet from this property; in consequence of which the value of the eight-ninths of the 10 acres of land in contest had a speculative value exceeding $2,000 at the time when the suit was filed.
The judgment is affirmed. *25