Conservative Homestead Ass'n v. Guglielmo

148 So. 737, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1866
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 12, 1933
DocketNo. 14569.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 So. 737 (Conservative Homestead Ass'n v. Guglielmo) 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
Conservative Homestead Ass'n v. Guglielmo, 148 So. 737, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1866 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This matter comes before us on appeal by the city of New Orleans from a judgment making absolute a rule taken by Conservative Homestead Association, purchaser at foreclosure sale of certain real estate, which rule has as its object the cancellation from the mortgage records of certain paving lien inscriptions.

The homestead association, on October 15, 1927, made to Pasquale Guglielmo a loan secured by vendor’s lien and mortgage. At that time the street on which the mortgaged property is located had been paved, but there had been recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages for the parish of Orleans neither the ordinances under which the said paving had been done nor the statements of assessment showing the amounts charged against the said property, although the ordinances in question — there being two — had been adopted many months before, and although the statements of assessment, of which there were also two, had been dated October 7, 1926, more than one year before the said loan was made.

Attached to the act of mortgage by which the loan was secured are the usual conveyance and mortgage certificates, and, according to the certificate on which paving inscriptions should be shown, there were no paving ordinances and no paving assessments recorded against the said property. In fact, it is admitted that the said ordinances were not recorded- until June 22, 1928, and that the said statements of assessment were not recorded until July 23, 1928.

Guglielmo failed to make payment in accordance with the obligation assumed in the note and the act of mortgage, and, on August 2, 1932, the homestead association instituted foreclosure proceedings, and at the resulting sale purchased the property for an amount less than the amount of the mortgage debt The certificates obtained by the civil sheriff in connection with the sale showed that the two paving ordinances and the two statements of assessment had been recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages long after the said loan had been made, but before the sale at foreclosure.

Thereupon the homestead association, purchaser at the said sale, instituted this rule to compel the erasure of those inscriptions. The contentions of the homestead association are, first, that it is an innocent third party, and cannot bb affected by unrecorded paving liens, and that, since the said liens were *738 not recorded until long after the loan had. been made in reliance upon clear public records, the rights acquired as mortgagee cannot be affected by the subsequent recorda-tions ; and, second, that the paving ordinances in question were adopted and the paving contracts were let -under the authority of the provisions of Act No. 105 of 1921 (Ex. Sess.) p. 225, § 48 of which requires that the city of New Orleans, in order to secure a first lien for paving assessments, must “upon completion of each case of paving” cause the commissioner of public property to issue a statement of assessment, which, within ten days after its issuance, must be furnished to- the commissioner of public property, who, in turn, must, within ten days of its receipt by him, cause it to be recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages for the parish of Orleans; that the provisions of the said section of the said statute are mandatory and not merely directory; and that, consequently, the failure of the city to cause the said statements of assessment to be recorded within the twenty days next following the day on which they were issued by the commissioner of public property renders null and void any liens which the city might otherwise have had.

Thus the contention of the homestead association is two-fold: First, it-maintains that the city has no lien of any rank at all, since its right to any lien depends entirely upon its strict compliance with the requirements of the act; and, second, that, if the city has any lien, such lien cannot in any way affect the claim of the mortgage creditor, who is an innocent third party, because to permit the unrecorded claim of the city to have priority over the duly recorded mortgage would be repugnant to section 19 of article 19 of the Copstitution of the state of Louisiana, in which it is provided that: “No mortgage or privilege on immovable property, or debt for which preference may be granted by law, "shall affect" third persons unless recorded or registered in the parish where the property is situated, in the manner and within the time prescribed by law. * * ■* ”

The city of New Orleans maintains that the provisions of the statute with reference to the time given for the recording of paving liens are directory only and not mandatory, and that wherever such assessment is recorded the lien comes into existence whether the recordation is effected within, the time specified in the act or not, and the city also contends that the homestead association is not a bona fide third party.

We find three, cases in this state bearing closely on the matter at issue: Walker, Jr., v. Spence et al., 16 La. App. 317, 134 So. 271, 273, State ex rel. Wheless Investment Co. v. City of Shreveport et al., 142 So. 641, both decided by the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit, and City of Shreveport v. Urban Land Co., 148 So. 256, 257, decided by the Supreme Court on March 27, 1933, not yet reported [in State report].

In Walker v. Spence, supra, under a statute (Act No. 187 of 1920) similar in many respects to that portion of the act of 1921,. which we have referred to, the municipal authorities of the town of Cedar Grove undertook to pave Caddo avenue in that town. When the work was finished, the necessary ordinance of acceptance was adopted, but from that ordinance, in which the paving assessments were levied against the abutting properties, there was inadvertently omitted the property which was concerned in that suit. A few days later municipal authorities discovered the omission and adopted another ordinance, which ordinance, however, was not recorded until about two and a half years later. In the meantime the mortgage holders — the mortgage having been executed prior to the paving of the street — were forced by the default of the mortgage debtor to accept title to the property, and, when they did so, a title examination showed that "there were no paving liens recorded. Walker acquired the paving claim of the town, and he brought suit against the owners of the property. The owners resisted the claim, asserting that, since the statute had not been complied with, in that the ordinance had not been recorded “within ten days after its passage,” all rights of the town had been lost, and any lien had been rendered null and void because of the failure to record the ordinance within the time specified in the statute. The court said that, when the owners acquired the property, they “were not bound, under the settled jurisprudence of this state, to look beyond the records to ascertain if there were any secret, unrecorded liens resting against it. Const. 1921, art. 19, § 19; McDuffie v. Walker, 125 La. 152, 51 So. 100.” So far as the facts are concerned, we find no difference in principle between that case and this, except that there the owners had, at the time the paving was undertaken, been the holders of the mortgage, whereas, in the case at bar, the homestead association did not become in any way concerned with or interested in the property until after the paving was completed, and therefore it was even more prejudiced by the failure of the city to record its privileges than were the owners in the Walker Case.

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148 So. 737, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservative-homestead-assn-v-guglielmo-lactapp-1933.