Clement v. Oakey
This text of 2 Rob. 90 (Clement v. Oakey) 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.
Opinion
The defendant has taken a devolutive appeal from a judgment discharging a rule to set aside a a order of seizure and sale, obtained by the plaintiff on an act of mortgage importing a confession of judgment. The grounds taken were, in substance, that the proceedings subsequent to the issuing of the order, as regards the seizure, notice, and advertisements, were defective and illegal; that since the execution of the mortgage to the plaintiff, which was made according to the old plan of the suburb Annunci[91]*91ation, the duly constituted authorities of the Second Municipality have changed the arrangement of the property mortgaged, which comprises several squares, altering the names of the streets, the numbers of the squares, and the boundary lines of the squares ; and that the mortgaged property cannot be lawfully sold or occupied, used or enjoyed, by any purchaser, except in accordance with the new plan, so lawfulty made and adopted.
The rule taken by the defendant in the premises was excepted to, on the ground that the order of seizure and sale could only be stayed by an injunction; that it did not specify the particulars wherein the proceedings were illegal; nor show any sufficient ground to set aside the order of sale.
Moephy, J. We cannot say that the judge erred. The Code of Practice points to an injunction as the proper proceeding to arrest the execution of an order of seizure and sale. Art. 738. But admitting that a rule to show cause could be resorted to, no sufficient cause has, in our opinion, been shown to rescind the order of sale. We cannot see that any very serious difficulty could result from selling the mortgaged premises according to the old plan. The changes made by the municipal authorities in the names of the streets, and the numbers and boundary lines of the squares, are, we apprehend, matters of public notoriety; and the purchasers could make no objection on the score of such changes, when, by the description of the property according to the old plan, they were made acquainted with its true extent and situation.
Judgment affirmed.
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2 Rob. 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-oakey-la-1842.