Dunlap v. Whitmer

69 So. 189, 137 La. 792, 1914 La. LEXIS 1957
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 16, 1914
DocketNo. 20574
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 69 So. 189 (Dunlap v. Whitmer) 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
Dunlap v. Whitmer, 69 So. 189, 137 La. 792, 1914 La. LEXIS 1957 (La. 1914).

Opinions

SOMMERYILLE, J.

This proceeding is in the nature of a concursus, and is the outgrowth of the case decided by us bearing the same title as does this, and reported in 133 La. 317, 62 South. 938.

A full statement of the case is found in the opinion of the court above referred to. It was for the recovery of certain real- property which had been wrongfully adjudicated to the defendant Whitmer after it had been once adjudicated by the sheriff to me plaintiff, Dunlap. After the decision in that case Dunlap, plaintiff, paid to the sheriff of the parish of St. Landry the amount called for in the writ under which the property had been offered and sold, together with interest, costs, and attorney’s fees, and taxes for the year 1909. There was then left in plaintiff Dunlap’s hands $42,016.75, which amount has been deposited by him in the registry of the court, under the petition in this ease setting forth briefly that there were sundry liqns, mortgages and claims resting on the property, which were in excess of the balance of the amount due by him, and that he was unable to determine to whom the said amount belonged. He accordingly cited the alleged creditors to assert their claims, and prayed for judgment holding said deposit to be the excess of the said Dunlap’s obligation in the premises, and ordering the cancellation and erasure of all mortgages, liens, and privileges against the property on the records of the recorder’s office of the parish of St. Landry, and that a reasonable fee be allowed his attorney for services in provoking the concursus.

The defendants cited, together with other persons asserting claims, appeared and filed answers. Robert F. Whitmer and O. W. Lamar, two of the defendants, in their answer resisted most of the demands of plaintiff. From an adverse judgment they have appealed. The Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company, representing itself to be trustee of certain bondholders whose bonds were secured by a second mortgage on the property involved, claimed the whole fund for the purpose of administering it for the bondholders whom it represented. It also appeal-' ed from an adverse judgment. The other defendants in the cause have not appealed, and their claims are not before us-for review; except in so far as appellants complain of that portion of the judgment appealed from [795]*795which gave to the First National Bank of Defiance, Ohio, judgment for certain coupons which had been previously separated from the bonds to which they had been attached, where the bank was not the holder of the bonds from which the coupons had been detached.

Appellants ask in this court that plaintiff, who provoked this concursus by depositing the fund to be distributed in court, should be condemned to pay interest on said amount from the time that the property Was adjudicated to him, but which was not delivered to him by the sheriff until within a short time before he deposited the amount in court. But appellants did not claim interest on said fund in their answers filed in the trial court, and it cannot be allowed. O. P. arts. 553, 157. Appellants argue that the claim for interest was covered by the prayer for “general relief”; but this is not the law, as has just been pointed out, especially where interest is not the legal consequence of the claim which is being urged.

Defendants Whitmer and Lamar claim certain amounts, with interest, paid by them for delinquent taxes on the property, assessed in the name of the then owners, for the years 1904, 1906, 1907, and 1908. They allege and show that they were second mortgage creditors, who were interested in the preservation of the property which was offered for sale by the state to enforce the collection of said taxes, and that the payments by them of these taxes to the state, which had superior liens and privileges, preserved the property for the benefit of all creditors who had rights upon and against the property. r

The plea of prescription of three years was filed to the claims for the several amounts of said taxes, and it was'sustained.

There is no 'evidence in the record going to show that Mr. Whitmer or Mr. Lamar paid the amount claimed for taxes on the property for the year 1904. The written subrogation on the reverse side of the tax receipt for 1904 shows that the amount was paid by E. W. Sutherlin and F. A. I-Iilley, administrator of the succession of T. W. Holbert. There is found in the record an affidavit made by Benjamin W. Kernan covering the amount paid by him for account of Whitmer for taxes on the property for the-year 1900, in which affiant further states:

“That the said R. F. Whitmer had previously paid to E. W. Sutherlin and the estate of J. W. Holbert the taxes, interest, and penalties on said' property for the year 1904, amounting to the sum of $1,520.79, said property being- then assessed in the name of Latannier Land & Improvement Company, as will appear from the receipt hereunto annexed and as part hereof.”

The testimony of Mr. Kernan on this point is hearsay, and no receipt from Sutherlin and the estate of Holbert was attached to-the affidavit showing that they had received from Whitmer any money whatever. The claim for these taxes was properly rejected.

[1] The plea of prescription of three years to the claims-of all of the liens and privileges for taxes was urged and sustained, under the provision of article 186 of the Constitution which is as follows:

“Tax liens, mortgages, and privileges, shall lapse in three years from the 31st day of December, in the year in which the taxes are levied,” etc.

In paying the taxes of 1906 Mr. Whitmer apparently asked to be subrogated to the rights of the state, and the following appears on the face of the tax receipt:

“Subrogation on reverse of said receipt. Paid by Whitmer, R. L. Wiggins, Tax Coll. 4/29/07.”'

But there is no act of subrogation on the reverse of said tax receipt.

Whitmer made claim April 22, 1910, by the-filing of an intervention and third opposition in the foreclosure proceedings filed by him against C. W- Krotz, the former owner of the property, and asked that the amounts paid by him for the taxes of 1904 and 1906 be paid. [797]*797to him out of the proceeds of the sale of the property. And he now claims that the filing and service of said intervention interrupted the prescription of tax liens and privileges of the state as fixed in article 186 of the Constitution, to which liens and privileges he had heen subrogated. But the intervention was not filed within three years from the 31st day of December in the year in which the taxes were levied; and the liens and privileges for the taxes of 1904 and 1906 had lapsed prior to April 22, 1910, the date of the filing of the intervention claiming the taxes.

There was no attempted interruption of the prescription of the liens and privileges for taxes for the years 1904, 1906, 1907, and 1908 in the petition of intervention; and the judgment thereon did not recognize any. The judgment appealed from will be affirmed on this point.

It is observed that the judgment on the third opposition recites that Whitmer had paid the taxes for the years 1904, 1906, 1907, and 1908, and the sheriff of the parish was ordered to pay the amounts of these taxes out of the proceeds of sale. But no recognition of the liens and privileges of the state for taxes was asked for or allowed. It is also observed that said sheriff, together with defendant Chas. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 So. 189, 137 La. 792, 1914 La. LEXIS 1957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-whitmer-la-1914.