Andry v. Pfaff

3 So. 2d 232, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 455
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1941
DocketNo. 17585.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 So. 2d 232 (Andry v. Pfaff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andry v. Pfaff, 3 So. 2d 232, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 455 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Mrs. Adrienne Nunez Andry is the surviving widow in community of L. Fred Andry, who, while domiciled in the Parish of Jefferson, died intestate on February 7, 1920. L. Fred Andry, Jr., and Mrs. Genevieve Andry Gubler are the sole surviving children of the said L. Fred Andry. The three said survivors bring this suit to quiet title to four lots of ground which Andry, on August 30, 1919, is alleged to have acquired at tax sale from the sheriff and ex officio tax collector for the Parish of Jefferson. The land involved is described as follows:

"Four certain lots of ground, situated in the Parish of Jefferson, Louisiana, in that part known as Canal Street Subdivision, said lots are designated by the Numbers Thirty-three, thirty-four, thirty-five and thirty-six of Square Number 45, and measure twenty-five feet front on Lake Shore Drive, by a depth of one hundred and ten feet, between equal and parallel lines."

The defendant is William S. Pfaff, who is alleged to be in possession of the said property and who, according to plaintiffs, is claiming to have a valid title thereto.

The defenses set up are:

(1) That in 1918, one year before the tax sale at which Andry is alleged to have acquired the property the said lots had been adjudicated to the State of Louisiana for unpaid taxes of 1917.

(2) That, because of the earlier tax adjudication to the State of Louisiana, there could have been no legal notice under which the property could have been sold to Andry, and,

(3) That, at the time of the sale at which Andry is alleged to have acquired the property, there was a dual assessment thereof, one in the name of H.P. McGloin, from which assessment the sale to Andry resulted, and one in the name of Home Builders Realty Company, alleged by defendant to be the true owner of the said property.

Defendant claims title through said Home Builders Realty Company, averring that that corporation, in 1920, redeemed the property after the adjudication to the State of Louisiana for the unpaid taxes of 1917.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiffs and defendant has appealed.

The four lots which are involved were part of larger tracts of land which, on July 21, 1914, by act before Felix J. Dreyfous, notary public, the Columbia Land Development Company sold to Home Builders Realty Company (which, by charter amendment, has since changed its name to Liberty Realty Securities Company, Inc.). By this act, in 1914, the Home Builders Realty Company acquired several tracts of land situated in what was known as the "Town of Bath No. 2". Attached to this act is a plan on which is shown Square No. 45 of the Canal Street Subdivision. It is in this square that the four lots here involved are situated.

We shall commence our investigation with the act of 1914, because defendant, as well as plaintiffs, trace title thereto. We start, then, in 1914 with title to these large tracts of land in Home Builders Realty Company.

On August 3, 1916, Home Builders Realty Company, by act under private signature, sold and delivered to H.P. McGloin these four lots which we have already described. This sale was acknowledged before Emile L. Weil, notary public, and was registered on August 7, 1916, in the conveyance records of the Parish of Jefferson in Conveyance Book No. 38, folio 313. For the years 1917 and 1918, this property appeared on the assessment records of Jefferson Parish in the name of H.P. McGloin, the purchaser just above referred to, but the taxes for the year 1918 resulting from the assessment in the name of McGloin were not paid, and accordingly, as authorized by Act 170 of 1898, the sheriff and ex officio tax collector for the Parish of Jefferson sold the property at tax sale to L. Fred Andry and, on September 10, 1919, executed a notarial act evidencing said tax sale. This act was registered on September 24, 1919, in Conveyance Office Book No. 46, folio 140 of the Parish of Jefferson.

From that time up to and including the year 1927, the lots were assessed in the *Page 234 name of Andry and the taxes were regularly paid by Mrs. Andry. During the years 1928 to 1934 the said lots were assessed in the name of Andry and the taxes were likewise paid by Mrs. Andry for those years. However, for the year 1928, taxes on the property were also paid by or on behalf of the present defendant, Pfaff, on an assessment in the name of Jacob S. Garelick, a former owner of the property, and, for the years 1929 to 1934, inclusive, taxes were also paid by or on behalf of Pfaff on assessments in the name of Pfaff. Commencing with the year 1935 the property was assessed in the name of Pfaff only and he paid the taxes for the years 1935 to 1938, both inclusive. In the year 1936, when Mrs. Andry attempted to pay taxes for 1935, she was told that the property did not appear on the assessment rolls and she was told this again in 1937 and, also, in 1938. It was then that she consulted an attorney, who advised her to bring this suit.

It is obvious that the plaintiffs did not know of the dual assessment during the years 1928 to 1934 because the taxes for these years were paid regularly by Mrs. Andry, who, each year, secured a receipt showing only the name "Andry".

Before the sale for taxes of 1918, by which the present plaintiffs claim that Andry acquired title to the four lots in question, there had been an adjudication to the State of Louisiana for taxes for the year 1917, and the controversy here depends for its solution upon a determination of whether this earlier adjudication had included, or could have included, the four lots which the Andry estate claims it acquired at the later tax sale. The adjudication to the state for the 1917 taxes was made on August 20, 1918, and it resulted from an assessment in the name of Home Builders Realty Company and that adjudication involved property described as follows:

"A certain tract of land, etc., situated in the Parish of Jefferson, Louisiana, near Lake Pontchartrain, described as being parts of lots `B', `C', `D' and `F', of the town of Bath. The part `B' measures three hundred and thirty-two feet, eleven inches front on Canal Street, and extends in depth to the line of the property of R.R. Zell; Lots `C', `D' and `F' measure each four hundred and sixty-five feet, ten inches on Canal Street to the line of the property now or formerly owned by R.R. Zell, and being the same property purchased by Home Builders Realty Company from Columbia Land and Development Company, more fully set forth in Conveyance Book 34, folio 270 (Less part sold in the Subdivision known as Canal Street Subdivision)."

Under date of August 18, 1920, there was issued by the State of Louisiana to Home Builders Realty Company a certificate of redemption, showing the redemption by that corporation of the property which had been adjudicated to the State for taxes for 1917 assessed in the name of Home Builders Realty Company. We direct attention particularly to the last sentence in the description of the property adjudicated to the state and redeemed by Home Builders Realty Company, this last sentence reading as follows: "Less part sold in the Subdivision known as Canal Street Subdivision".

We think that the difficulty of defendant results from the failure of those who subsequently acquired the property of the Home Builders Realty Company to notice that, from that larger tract, certain portions had been alienated before the adjudication for taxes for the year 1917.

It is contended on behalf of defendant that the description of the property excepted is so vague as to make it impossible to state with certainty that the four lots which previously had been sold to McGloin were within the contemplation of the exception.

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Bluebook (online)
3 So. 2d 232, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andry-v-pfaff-lactapp-1941.