Bonnecaze v. Lieux

52 La. Ann. 285
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1899
DocketNo. 13,059
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 285 (Bonnecaze v. Lieux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonnecaze v. Lieux, 52 La. Ann. 285 (La. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

MoNroe; J.

Jean Pierre Lieux, being the husband, in community, [286]*286of Adeline Samson, acquired certain real estate in New Orleans by purchase in 1864 and 1865. The wife died in 1819, leaving, as the issue of her marriage, six children, the youngest of whom is now about thirty-eight .years of age. She also left an estate consisting of paraphernal property and of her interest in the community. Upon May 18th, 1880, the surviving father effected a settlement with the children with respect to the paraphernal property of their mother, which apipeared to have come into his hands in cash, and the amount of which was fixed at $3,357.09. For the purposes, and as part, of this settlement, he paid to one daughter, her portion, $559.91%, in cash, and to the other five children, he gave his notes, each for $559.91%, dated May 18th, 1880, made payable in five year's, with interest at 8 per cent, from maturity, and secured by mortgage on his undivided half ifiterest iii the real estate hereinbefore mentioned.

Between May 10, 1880, and their maturity, payments were made on account of the notes thus given, so that, in 1885, the aggregate amount due on them had been reduced to something like $2000, or less; and, upon May 28, 1885, August Levis, acting as attorney in fact of Jean Pierre Lieux, borrowed that amount from Emile Bouny, and took them up. In acknowledgment of the debt thus contracted, Levis made a note, in the name of his principal, for $2000, payable in one year, and secured by mortgage executed before Charpentier, Notary, upon the whole of the property, the undivided one-half of which had been. mortgaged the year before. In the last act there inlervened L. P. DeBautte, who presented the outstanding notes issued by Lieux, and they were paid and cancelled, and the notary was authorized to cancel the mortgage by which they were secured, lit on May 21st, 1886, the note given to Bouny having, matured, Lieux borrowed $2000 from the plaintiff, and gave his note therefor, payable in one year, and also secured by mortgage upon the whole property hereinbefore mentioned, the money thus borrowed being used to i ake up the note held by Bouny.

Tt does’not appear that Lieux ever acquired from his children the undivided half interest in the property, thus mortgaged by him, which they had inherited from their mother, or that they ever consented to the mortgage of their interest in said xaroperty, or knew of it, until within a year or two of the institution of the present proceedings. Mr. DeBautte was a traveling salesman who frequently visited Pointe Coupee, where the Lieux family lived, and, about the [287]*287clam of the Oharpentier mortgage, was requested by- the Lieux heirs to bring' the notes, which they had received from their father, to New Orleans, and to present them to Levis, by whom, their father informed them, they would be paid; and DeBautte did this, as a matter of accommodation. Iiis memory is uncertain as to the details of the matter, but there is -nothing in his testimony or in that of the other witnesses, or in his appearance in the act of mortgage (merely-to acknowledge payment of the notes, and grant acquittance) to justify the belief that the owners of-the notes knew that they were to be paid from the proceeds of a mortgage upon property owned by them. From May, 1887, up to the filing -of the suit thereon, interest was paid on the note given to the plaintiff, and it was extended from time to time; and, on more than one occasion, this was done either by F. O. Lieux, or John S. Lieux, two of the heirs, who had, in the meanwhile, come to New Orleans and gone into business with DeBautte. But they appear, from the evidence, to have acted for their father, and in ignorance of the fact that the mortgage securing said note affected their interest in the property. Finally, in 1897, F. J. Drey-fous, in behalf of the plaintiff, as the holder of the said note, addressed a communication to the maker, on the subject of its payment, and received a reply, warning him that the property mortgaged was community property.

In June, 1897, however, the plaintiff sued out executory process and caused the entire property to be seized and advertised, and thereupon, the six children and heirs of Mrs. Lieux injoined; setting up the title, derived from her, to an individual half interest therein, and alleging that said interest had not been mortgaged by them or by their consent. To this the defendant in injunction replied that J. P. Lieux, the mortgagor, was the owner of the whole property, that the proceeds of the mortgage had been used to satisfy the pre-existing mortgage, executed before Oharpentier, the proceeds of which, in turn, had been used to pay the mortgagor’s notes, given to the plaintiffs in injunction, as the purchase price of their interest in the property, seized, and that, having parted with their interest, and received the price therefor, plaintiffs in injunction should be held estopped to make their present claim. Defendant in injunction further alleged that she had been unable to find the act whereby the plaintiffs sold their said interest to their father, and she accordingly annexed to her answer interrogatories on facts and articles, upon [288]*288that, and other matters, which she prayed that they be required to answer. She further alleged that, in any event, the usufruct of the father, was covered by her mortgage, and she prayed for judgment authorizing her to proceed via executiva, and reserving her right to damages.

The sale proceeded as to the undivided interest of Jean Pierre Lieux, and as to his usufruct of the entire property, and both were adjudicated to Mr. Dreyfous. • There was a trial of the injunction suit, and a judgment, recognizing plaintiffs in injunction as naked owners of an undivided half interest in the property seized, subject to the usufruct of their father, as surviving spouse; annulling the mortgage and perpetuating the injunction quoad said interest, and restricting the seizure of the same to the usufruct. Defendant in. injunction appealed and the plaintiffs have answered the appeal with a prayer for an amendment of the judgment in' so far as it holds the usufruct subject to the seizure.

In their argument in this court, the counsel for the plaintiff in the executory proceeding have abandoned the position assumed in their answer to the petition for injunction. They admit, in the brief filed by them, that the evidence fails to show that J. P. Lieux ever acquired the interest, in the property mortgaged, which the plaintiffs in injunction inherited from their mother, and, hence, admit (by necessary deduction) that he had no authority to impose a mortgage upon that interest.

They argue, however, that the debt due by Lieux to his children was a community debt, for which the whole property in controversy, as community property, was bound; and that, as the plaintiffs in injunction were paid that debt from the proceeds of the Oharpentier mortgage, and the Oharpentier mortgage was satisfied from the proceeds of the Dreyfous mortgage, the plaintiffs in injunction should be held estopped from now claiming the property, until they have refunded, to the extent that they have been benefited by it, the money received from the Dreyfous mortgage.

We are of opinion that this argument can not be entertained in the present aspect of the case.

First.

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Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonnecaze-v-lieux-la-1899.