Brown v. Penn

1 McGl. 265
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketNo. 92
StatusPublished

This text of 1 McGl. 265 (Brown v. Penn) 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
Brown v. Penn, 1 McGl. 265 (La. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinions

Rogers, J.

On the 29tb of December, 1877, Mrs. Ellen J. Decker, wife of Henry B. Mills, purported, by public act before F. J. Laiser, notary public, to convey to Mrs. Sarah. Magdalina Phister, wife of A. H. Brown, certain real estate in this city. As required by law, application was made to D. B. Penn, Kegister of Conveyances, for the certificate of non-alienation by the vendor, Mills’ wife, and the said register furnished a certificate declaring, as provided bylaw, that it did not appear from the records of the conveyance office; that the said Mrs. Mills had ever alienated the said property. This certificate was untrue; it should have declared that the said Mrs. Mills had, by an act before W. B. Kleinpeter, a notary, dated 29th March, 1876, sold, by a “ vente a, réméréf this identical property to one Mrs. Snowden; that that sale was duly registered in the conveyance office, book 108, folio 367, and that said registry existed on December 29, 1877, when the improper certificate was furnished Laiser, the notary, who executed the act of sale to these plaintiffs. This error is imputed by defendant’s counsel to either “the press of business, or inad' vertence or ignorance of some deputy clerk.”

[267]*267Under the conditions of the sale to Mrs. Snowden, vendors were granted the right of redemption, i. e., within one year, on the payment of $220.00; within two years for $240.06 ; within three years for $266.20 $ within four years for $292.80, and within five years for $322.10; so that at the date of the purported sale to these plaintiffs, their vendor, Mrs. Mills, had not lost her right.to redeem on payment of a sum of $266.20.

The price of sale agreed upon between plaintiffs and their vendor was $450. Three hundred and seventy-five dollars in cash and the balance, seventy-five dollars, to be paid • within twelve months, with eight per cent interest, and represented by a promissory note identified with the act of sale. ■

Almost immediately thereafter plaintiffs took possession of this property and commenced reparations; a few days thereafter Mrs. Snowden notified them of her title by letter, and several notes of an indefinite character were sent in reply by a clerk in the office of the Begister of Conveyances ; the date of these notes is the 9th ; the repairs were begun on the 5th, and about 17th January the plaintiffs moved in. On 9th February following, legal proceedings were instituted by Mrs. Snowden, and in the month of June judgment was rendered in favor of Mrs. Snowden, dispossessing these plaintiffs.

The amount in damages claimed is $992.13, representing as a total the following items:

1 — The purchase price.........................$450 00

2 — The cost of improvements...........1....... 75 00

3 — The cost of repairs......................... 54 95

4 — Insurance................................. 7 88

5 — Bemoval to new house...................... 8 00

6 — Notary’s fees............................... 10 00

7 — Costs incurred in defending title............. 85 80

8 — Sheriff ’s costs.................................. 20 50

9 — Counsel fees................................... 50 00

10 — Curator ad hoc.............................. 25 00

11 — Copy of act of sale......................... 5 00

-12 — Loss of time, etc., attending court.............. 200 00

[268]*268There was judgment against defendants for the sum of six hundred and ninety-seven dollars and eighteen cents, with legal interest from judicial demand.

The defenses upon which we are called to pass are—

1st. The prescription of one year.

2nd. That there was no plaintiff in court with a cause of action j because there was no capacity shown in the wife to sue, the debt being due to the community of acquets and gains.

3rd. That the damages, if any, must be restricted to the purchase price actually paid or the amount required for the redemption, under the conditions of the act of sale to Mrs. Snowden; and

4th. It is urged on appeal that the judgment a quo should be set aside as ultra, joetitionem, being in favor of Brown and his uife, when it should have been as prayed for, in favor of the wife only.

Damages resulting from a failure of official duty, with reference to the specific performance of a particular act required of the officer, and which the law authorizes him to perform, do not arise ex delicto; the relations which grow out of the em: ployment and the nature of the service to be performed by an officer charged by law with the duty of preserving evidences of title and certifying truthfully in connection therewith whenever called upon, as required in this case, by a peremptory law, are in the nature of contracts: for a fee imposed by law, the register agrees to certify the facts as they appear of record in his office, whenever legally required to do so.

“ Certain obligations are contracted without any agreement. * * * * * Some are imposed by the sole authority of the laws.” La. Rev. C. C. 2292.

Chief Justice Marshall, in Ogden vs. Saunders, 12 Wheat., p. 341, says: “ A great mass of human transactions depend upon implied contracts, which are not written, but grow out of the acts of the parties.”

In Brigham, Curator, v. Bussey, 26 La. An. 677, a suit against [269]*269the recorder of the parish of Morehouse for a failure iu not reinscribing a judgment within the proper time, as specially-instructed to do, the court says :

"In our opinion, the action is one ex contractu * * * the law made it his duty to reinscribe the judgment when duly called on to do so. * * * * We concur in the opinion that Marcadé has developed the distinction between damages ex delicto and damages ex contractu with his usual brevity and felicity; the former flow from a violation of a general duty, the latter from a breach of a special obligation.’ It was the general duty of the recorder to do right — not to discharge the duties of his office in a violent or oppressive manner to obey the precepts of the law; but it was his special duty, imposed by the law, to reinscribe the judgment in question when required by a party in interest to do so.”

The plea of prescription of one year was properly overruled.

During the trial in the lower court, Albert H. Brown was sworn as a witness, and defendants objected on the grounds that, as the judgment sought was for his wife, under allegations that she had suffered damages by the unlawful act of defendant; Penn, the husband was not a competent witness in her behalf. The court permitted the witness to show, on suggestion of counsel, that the claim set up was a community claim., Subsequently, it was admitted by counsel for both [270]*270parties that the claim set up was one belonging to the community.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 McGl. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-penn-lactapp-1881.