Nick v. Hall
Nick v. Hall
Opinion of the Court
This was a suit to compel specific performance of a contract of promise of sale of real estate; acceptance of title, as tendered, being objected to gel the ground that a portion of the property is owned not by the plaintiff but by a minor who has likewise a legal mortgage on another portion.
Prom a judgment rejecting plaintiff’s petition he prosecutes this appeal. The facts, about which there is no dispute, are, that the American Brewing Company being the holder and owner of the certain notes executed by Reinhardt Martin and which were secured by mortgage on the property in question, placed same in the hands of its regular attorney, Mr. Gustave Lemle, for suit, vho, without consulting Mr. Urban Kotn instead of in the name of the American Brewing Co. At the public offering of the property it was bid in by Mr. Lemle for account of ¡Urban Koen as the last and highest bidder.
This counter letter was not recorded until September 14r 1904, long after the Sheriff’s adjudication and about three months prior to plaintiff’s purchase of this property from the American Brewing Co.
Subsequently, to-wit: On the 1st of October, 1906, the contract of promise of sale was entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant Hall. At the time of the adjudication to Koen his wife was living and the community of acquets and gains still existed between, them. She subsequently died, but her demise was some nine months prior to the sale of the property by the Brewing Company to plaintiff and some twelve months prior to the registry of the counter letter. She left as her sole heirs the issue of her marriage with Koen, three in number, two of whom were minors. Urban Koen and his three children, the issue of his marriage aforesaid, are made parties to this suit.
He and the major heir and one of the former minors, now duly emancipated, make answer and say that: “Neither the father, Urban Koen, nor the community of acquets and gains
The minor, U. B. Koen, by the duly appointed tutor ad hoc files simply a general denial. His contention, however, is that as the property was acquired by Koen during the marriage it fell into the community and that, as a consequence, the minor, eo instanti the death of his mother, became the owner of the undivided one-sixth thereof, his legal mortgage likewise attaching to the share and portion of the property falling to his father. If in point of fact the property whilst it stood on the records in the name of Urban Koen ’had ever belonged to him, or if he had consented or agreed to take title in his name and had assumed ownership over it, or if the actual owner, the American Brewing Co. had itself placed or had duly authorized the placing of the title to the property in Koen’s name and then permit it to stand on the record in his name, the contention of the tutor ad hoc would have much force. But as we have stated, the property never belonged to Koen; he never consented to be the owner of it or to incur the liability on his part which would have resulted had he become the adjudicatee at the judicial sale; he had never assumed ownership over it, but on the contrary in the only instrument connecting him with the title he had recognized the property to. belong to the American Brewing Co.; nor had the actual and true owner, the American Brewing Co., placed the title in Koen’s name or authorized any one to so place it. As admitted by all parties, Mr. Lemle brought the suit in the name of Koen who had no interest in the transaction of any kind whatsoever, from beginning to end, and had the property adjudicated to him on his, Mr. Lemle’s own motion, without the authority of either the Brewing Co. or Koen, though in so doing he was acting in good faith and for his client’s interest. This case presents all the exceptional state of facts and exceptional conditions which -were .present in Succession of
The exceptional state of facts and conditions in that case, with which the instant case is similar, coupled with the additional fact that “neither this minor, nor any one acting in her behalf has dealt with” (the parent) “on strength of the records showing the latter to be the ostensible owner of the property,” impelled the Court to .hold that “it would be unjust and inequitable under the circumstances developed by the evidence to hold this property to have ever been affected by the minor’s mortgage. ’ ’
There is no difference, in principle, in denying the right of ownership in the minor to a portion of the property and in denying his right of mortgage on another portion of it.
The instant case is distinguished from that of McGovern vs. McGovern, IV Court of Appeal Reports p. 28, recently decided by us, in that no exceptional facts or conditions were developed by the record in that case. There the property was put in the name of another with the consent of the real owner and of the person substituted, the latter signing the act of sale and assumed ownership.
Our conclusion is that the minor, IJ. B. Koen, has no right title or interest in the property in question, or any part or portion thereof, whther of ownership or of mortgage; that the title tendered is good and perfect and that specific performance of the contract of promise of sale must be ordered.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be and the same is hereby set aside, annulled and reversed, and it is further ordered, adjudged and
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.