E. McIlhenny's Sons v. Couvillon

2 La. App. 734, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 248
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1925
DocketNo. 2187
StatusPublished

This text of 2 La. App. 734 (E. McIlhenny's Sons v. Couvillon) 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
E. McIlhenny's Sons v. Couvillon, 2 La. App. 734, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 248 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CARVER, J.

Plaintiff sues W. F. Couvillon and Arthur Lemoine to annul a tax sale alleged to have been made by Amet Guillott, Tax Collector of Avoyelles Parish, on August 21, 1921, for taxes, of 1920 assessed to E. O. Dupuis.

Plaintiff alleges that the deed was made to Couvillon but that an instrument was afterwards filed, signed by Couvillon and by Guillott, not as sheriff but personally, reciting that it should have been made to Lemoine and consenting'that'Lemoine’s name be inserted' therein instead of Couvillon’s.

The deed is alleged to describe the property thus:

“A certain tract or parcel of land situated and being in the Second Ward of the Parish of Avoyelles, Louisiana, containing 33 acres, more of less, being W% of 72 from Mcllhenny Tract.”

Plaintiff further alleges that by virtue of said deed Lemoine is claiming a part and under another like deed is claiming the remainder of a tract of land sold by it on July 25, 1918, on partial terms of credit to E. O. Dupuis and Armand Dupuis in indivisión, on which it reserved and still has a mortgage and vendor’s privilege, to secure' the credit portion of the -price, which land is still owned in indivisión by E. O', and Armand Dupuis and is described' as follows:

A certain tract or parcel of land sit-' uated in Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana, located about two miles north of the town of Marksville, and containing seventy-three and 70-100 arpents, being lots 10, 11, 12 and 13 of a plat of survey of the sub-division of what is known as the Mcllhenny plat, made by W. F. Messick, and on file in the recorder’s office of Avoyelles parish; bounded north by lands of C. F. Bordelon, on the south by lots 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 of said Mcllhenny tract, and on the east by land of * » * and on the west by. public road.

And that said Lemoine is seeking by virtue of said tax deeds to dispossess said E. O. and Armand Dupuis from the' property covered by its mortgage and vendor’s privilege.

Plaintiff also alleges that within less than twelve months after the instrument substituting Lemoine for Couvillon as the tax purchaser he made a tender to Lemoine to redeem the property and that Lemoine had agreed to accept the tender and drop the proceedings which he had commenced, but that upon the tender being made he refused it, which action is alleged to constitute a fraud ,upon petitioner.

The grounds of ’ nullity alleged against the tax sale involved in this case are hereafter mentioned.

Defendant filed an exception of no cause or right of action and afterwards a plea of six months’ prescription.

The district judge sustained the exception of no cause of action and signed a judgment dismissing the suit upon that express ground.

From the minutes it would ■ appear that he has also sustained the plea of prescription, but the judgment as signed is' sileiit ■ as to this.

[736]*736In the. able brief filed by defendants’ counsel in this court he discusses some of the various grounds alleged as nullities as follows:

1.

Insufficient description of the property sold.

He refers to the following cases as holding that the description is sufficient if it serves to identify the property, namely:

Schwartzenburg vs. Schwartzenburg, 138 La. 294, 70 South. 230.

Weber vs. Martinez, 125 La. 663, 51 South. 679.

Coaux vs. Beaulieu, 123 La. 684, 49 South. 285.

Board of Commissioners vs. Concordia Land Co., 141 La. 247, 74 South. 921.

In our opinion, none of these cases meet the issue as presented at present. It may be that after trial on the merits it will appear that the description in the tax deed is sufficient to identify the property; but we cannot say that it appears to be such on the face of the papers, and plaintiff’s counsel allege that it is not sufficient.

It is true the description in the deed locates the land in the Second Ward of Avoyelles parish, but presumably this- ward contains many square miles so that this part of the description means little in the way of identifying any particular 33 acres.

It is true also that it says the 33 acres, more or less, is the west half of the Mcllhenny tract. We cannot surmise whether this means lot 72 of the Mellhenny tract or 72 acres of the Mellhenny tract.

It is conceivable, too, that the Mellhenny tract may comprise a great many acres of land. If so, and the “72” means acres, it would be, in our opinion, a very insufficient description, because an undefined 72 acres to be taken out of a larger tract might be taken anywhere in the tract.

2.

That the tax collector did not sign the deed.

Counsel says that this is refuted by the -deed attached to the petition in another suit. Neither this deed, though, nor the petition in the other suit was filed in this suit, and there is nothing in this suit to show that the deed was signed by the tax collector but, per contra, the petition herein alleges that the deed was not signed by the tax collector, which allegation, on trying an exception of no cause of action, must be taken as true.

3 and 4.

That the Police Jury failed to adopt a budget for the year 1920 as a basis for the levy of parochial taxes.

Revised Statutes, 2745, provides:

“The police jury of the several parishes of the State, before they shall fix and decide on the amount of taxes to be assessed for the current year, shall cause ,to be made out an estimate, exhibiting the various items of expenditures required; and cause the same to be published in the official newspaper published of the parish, or in parishes where an official newspaper is not published, then by posting up written statements of said estimates in at least three of the most public places in such parishes, at least thirty days before their meeting to fix and decide on the amount of taxes to be assessed as aforesaid.”

In the case of Waggoner vs. Maumus, 112 La. 229, 36 South. 332, the court held that the failure to comply with this section of the Revised Statutes was fatal to the validity of the tax sale.

Counsel for defendants cite the case of Duffy vs. Peneguy, 148 La. 414, 87 South. 25, in which the court says:

“In a large number of cases this court has held that a tax sale is equivalent to a sheriff’s sale in execution, and that, where [737]*737a part of the taxes for which the sale is made, although actually levied by the proper authority, is illegal, and the owner of the property allows it to be sold for taxes, he cannot, after the sale has been consummated, set the sale aside for that reason, any more than the owner of property sold under a writ based on a judgment, where part of the debt is not due, can set aside a sheriff’s sale for that reason.”

Citing various authorities.

In. our opinion, though, this case does not overrule the Waggoner case, above cited, nor do we find any other decision overruling it.

The facts in the Duffy case were that both parties were claiming under tax sales based upon the same kind of taxes.

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Related

W. T. Adams Machine Co. v. Newman
107 La. 702 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)
Waggoner v. Maumus
36 So. 332 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1904)
Gouaux v. Beaullieu
49 So. 285 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1909)
Heirs v. Martinez
51 So. 679 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1910)
Schwartzenberg v. Schwartzenberg
70 So. 230 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1915)
Board of Com'rs v. Concordia Land & Timber Co.
74 So. 921 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1916)
State ex rel. Curtis v. Ross
81 So. 386 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1919)
Duffy v. Peneguy
87 So. 25 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1920)
Cooley v. Broad
29 La. Ann. 345 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1877)

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Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 734, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-mcilhennys-sons-v-couvillon-lactapp-1925.