Boland v. Roussel

495 So. 2d 318
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 12, 1986
DocketCA-4142
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 495 So. 2d 318 (Boland v. Roussel) 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
Boland v. Roussel, 495 So. 2d 318 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

495 So.2d 318 (1986)

Diane Lingle BOLAND and Gary L. Boland, Tutor of the Minors, Ysonde and Kurt Boland
v.
Lucy Cocchiara, Wife of/and Louis J. ROUSSEL.

No. CA-4142.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

September 12, 1986.
Writ Denied November 21, 1986.

Charles E. McHale, Jr., New Orleans, for appellants.

Peter J. Butler, Aubrey B. Hirsch, Jr., Butler, Heebe & Hirsch, New Orleans, for appellees.

Before CIACCIO, BYRNES and WILLIAMS, JJ.

CIACCIO, Judge.

Diane Lingle Boland and Gary Boland, acting as tutor for his minor children, Ysonde and Kurt, filed suit to redeem the property located at 701 Bourbon Street in New Orleans, from tax sale or to annul the tax sale. The purchasers at the 1975 and 1976 tax sales, Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Roussel, filed a peremptory exception of prescription. The trial judge granted the exception and dismissed the plaintiffs' action.[1] The plaintiffs appeal the judgment of the district court and we reverse and remand.

The issues presented on appeal are: May the three year redemptive period of La.R.S. 47:2221 be interrupted by the possession of the tax debtors? Did the debtors in possession bring the action to annul the tax sale within the five year period allowed by the Louisiana Constitution of 1974, Article 7 Section 25?

According to the pleadings, the following facts exist:

*319 Diane S. Lingle and George E. Lingle acquired the property from Mr. and Mrs. Milo Cox (nee Margaret Cox) by act of sale dated July 15, 1948. George E. Lingle then transferred his interest to his mother, Mrs. Lillian Bonquois Lingle, who subsequently died. George and Diane Lingle, as her sole heirs, acquired her one-half interest in the Succession of Mrs. Lillian Bonquois Lingle, proceedings No. 549-335 of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, by virtue of the judgment of recognition and possession dated June 27, 1975.

George E. Lingle sold his undivided one-fourth interest to Ysonde and Kurt Boland, minor children of Diane Lingle, wife of/and Gary L. Boland, by act dated April 15, 1976.

Plaintiff, Diane Lingle Boland, claims an undivided three-fourths ownership interest and the minors, Ysonde and Kurt Boland, claim the remaining undivided one-fourth ownership interest in the subject property.

In 1975 and 1976 the assessments, the required notices mailed by the City of New Orleans to the delinquent tax debtors, the required advertisement of the property, and the tax sales that were issued to Roussel were all in the name of "Mrs. Margaret Cox". Margaret Cox had divested herself of all record interest in the subject property as of July 15, 1948.

The plaintiff tax debtors contend that they did not receive any notice of the tax sale. The property was sold, for taxes, at the 1975 and 1976 City of New Orleans tax sales to the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Roussel. The 1975 City tax sale was recorded on June 19, 1977. The 1976 City tax sale was recorded on April 4, 1978. Plaintiffs filed suit to annul and/or redeem on July 7, 1983.

Plaintiffs allege that they were in full, open, notorious and corporeal possession of the property at 701 Bourbon Street during this entire period of time and that such corporeal possession interrupted and suspended both the three year redemptive period allowed for the redemption of tax sales and the five year prescriptive period provided by law for the institution of suits to annul tax sales on the basis of a fatal defect (in this case, lack of notice.)

Article 10 Section 11 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1921 provided, amongst other matters, for the collection of taxes, tax sales, and the quieting of tax titles. These provisions were reenacted almost verbatim in the Louisiana Constitution of 1974, in Article 7 Section 25.

The Revised Statutes of 1950, Title 47 Section 2221, as originally enacted, read as follows:

Section 2221, Right to redeem

Property sold at a tax sale shall be redeemable in accordance with Section 11 of Article X of the Louisiana Constitution.

La.R.S. 47:2221 remained unchanged until its amendment by Act 557 of 1978 to provide as follows:

Section 2221. Right to redeem

Property sold at a tax sale shall be redeemable in accordance with Section 25 of Article VII of the constitution of 1974. Nothing in this Section shall be construed so as to affect in any way, the principle that as to a tax debtor-owner in possession, prescription does not begin against him and in favor of the tax title purchaser until such tax debtor-owner has been first dispossessed. (Emphasis Supplied)

Subsequent to the enactment of Act. 557 of 1978 the Louisiana Supreme Court decided the case of Securities Mortgage Company, Inc. v. Triplett, 374 So.2d 1226 at 1231 (La., 1979). Although the court held that the physical possession of the property by the owner did not interrupt the running of the three year redemption period, it did so without applying La.R.S. 47:2221 subsequent to the 1978 amendment, stating in footnote 4:

In 1972, R.S. 47:2221 appeared as follows:

"Property sold at a tax sale shall be redeemable in accordance with Section 11 of Article X of the Louisiana Constitution."

*320 In 1978, the statute was amended and now states:

"Property sold at a tax sale shall be redeemable in accordance with Section 25 of Article VII of the constitution of 1974. Nothing in this Section shall be construed so as to affect in any way, the principle that as to a tax debtor-owner in possession, prescription does not begin against him and in favor of the tax title purchaser until such tax debtor-owner has been first dispossessed."
"Whatever effect the amendment may have on the constitutional and statutory scheme in the future concerning redemption, annulment of tax sales, and quieting tax titles, it does not affect the present case. All the facts of this case arose prior to the amendment."

Since the enactment of the 1978 amendment no appellate court has interpreted this amendment's effect upon the three year redemptive period. In the recent case of Landry v. Beaugh, 452 So.2d 400 (La. App., 3d Cir.1984), writ denied, 458 So.2d 121 (La.1984), the trial court found that Section 1 of Act 557 of 1978 effectively overruled the prior jurisprudential rule that physical possession of the property by the tax debtor did not interrupt the three-year prescriptive period for redemption. However, the appellate court declined to address the issue, as it found that the tax sale was null because of the inadequate notice of delinquency.

In this case the issue of the effect of the amendment to La.R.S. 47:2221 upon the three year redemptive period is ripe for decision as the tax sales were recorded in June, 1977 and April, 1978, and the amendment to La.R.S. 47:2221 took place before the three year redemptive period had run.

The harsh results that flowed in many tax sale cases were adverted to by the 1974 constitutional convention. See: Vol. VIII, Records of the Louisiana Constitutional Convention of 1973: Convention Transcripts at pp 2141-2151. Despite the necessity of laws providing for tax sales to facilitate the collection of delinquent taxes by various governing authorities, the legislature has demonstrated a continuing concern for those tax debtors who were subject to losing their homes and properties because of mistake or neglect, and, in many cases, for relatively insignificant sums of money. See: Act 636 of 1985 amending R.S. 47:2180 and R.S. 47:2180(D).

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Related

Harris v. Estate of Fuller
532 So. 2d 1367 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1988)
Harris v. Estate of Fuller
521 So. 2d 736 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1988)
Boland v. Cocchiara
497 So. 2d 313 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1986)
Nicolaides v. Roussel
495 So. 2d 323 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
495 So. 2d 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boland-v-roussel-lactapp-1986.