Edwards v. Carr

137 So. 637, 19 La. App. 827, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 400
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1931
DocketNo. 3772
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 137 So. 637 (Edwards v. Carr) 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
Edwards v. Carr, 137 So. 637, 19 La. App. 827, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 400 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CULPEPPER, J.

Plaintiffs bring this action under, the provisions of Act No. 38 of 1908 to test title to the S. E. ½ of N. W. ⅛ of See. 11, T. 12 N., R. 13 West, in the parish of.De Soto. From, an adverse judgment, they have appealed.

David Creswell was the common' author of the titles of both plaintiffs and defendants. His title, which emanated from the govérnment, is admittedly good.

Plaintiffs claim the property under the following chain of title out of David Creswell: [638]*638(1) Deed dated April 1, 1867, duly recorded, from David Creswell to Esther Creswell, (2) Judgment rendered October 18, 1913, in the matter of the succession of Esther Cres-well Robertson, deceased, recognizing William Edwards, Lizzie Clay, Ellen Frazier, and Mary Wheeler, the four named plaintiffs, together with Joe Robertson, as the sole heirs at law of Esther Creswell Robertson, and as such placing them in possession of the above-described 40 acres of land. (3) Deed from Joe Robertson, one of above-named heirs, to Ellen Gates, one of the plaintiffs, under date of December 8, 1928, duly of record. (4) Tax deed from Esther Creswell Robertson in 1916 to Roy Thigpen, and a redemption deed by him to the deceased tax debtor’s heirs above named.

The defendants are the heirs of Joe T. Brown, deceased, except M. S. Roscoe and W. T. Daniels, .which latter named two had cut and removed certain timber from the land under purchase from the Brown heirs. These two have called their codefendants in warranty. The claim of the defendants to the land is based upon the following chain of title descending from David Creswell: (1) An alleged purchase by Julia Creswell from David Creswell at sheriff’s sale on May 2, 1868. (2) Deed from Julia Creswell to Israel Brown, dated December 21, 1869, duly recorded. (3) .Deed from Israel Brown to R. P. Brown, dated December 22, 1871, duly recorded. (4) Deed from R'. P. Brown to Joe R. Brown, dated November 27, 1876. (5) Allegation in answer, which is admitted by plaintiffs, showing defendants to be the heirs and assigns of Joe R. Brown, deceased.

Defendants aver- they have a title superior to that’ of plaintiffs, but (quoting) “in the alternative, respondents aver that by virtue of the facts hereinbefore set out, their title for said property has been perfected by the prescription of ten years, which prescription is herein specially pleaded.”

Plaintiffs’ title deeds on their face appear regular and to have .been timely recorded. In the deed, however, from David Creswell to Esther Creswell in 1867, the vendor was represented by J. D. Wemple, as agent, and no power of attorney appears to have been recorded nor produced in evidence. Nevertheless, such defect as this may have caused to Esther Creswell’s title has been cured by the lapse of twenty years under the decisions of the Supreme Court in Bedford v. Urquhart, 8 La. 248, and Delabigarre v. Second Municipality of New Orleans, 3 La. Ann. 238. Defendants appear not to seriously dispute that plaintiffs have shown an apparently valid title upon its face, but contend that they have also shown in themselves a valid title, and, furthermore, in addition to such a title, they claim their title is supported by actual possession of ten years, and therefore they claim the ten-year prescription provided by law.

As to the sheriff’s sale of the property in May 1868, defendants contend that the proceeding had in that connection divested Esther Creswell’s title to the property and vested same in Julia Creswell. It is contended that this sale was made in the execution of a judgment which recognized Julia Greswell’s tacit mortgage against David Cres-well, her husband; that this tacit mortgage antedated Esther Creswell’s deed from said David Creswell of April 1, 1867; that the mortgage rested against the property at the time Esther Creswell purchased it, and hence Esther Creswell’s title thus incumbered could not stand in the way of Julia Creswell’s foreclosure of her mortgage.

The facts connected with the tacit mortgage referred to, and of its attempted enforcement, are substantially as follows:

On February 28, 1868, -Julia Creswell obtained a judgment in the district court of Caddo parish against her husband, David Creswell, dissolving the community of ac-quéts and gains existing between them and restoring her paraphernal funds used by her husband as far back as 1862 and prior. The judgment recognized Julia Creswell’s preexisting tacit mortgage against her husband’s property, and ordered same enforced. A writ of execution was issued under the judgment to the sheriff of De Soto parish, under which the sheriff seized about 800 acres of land as belonging to David Creswell in said parish, among which was the 40 acres in controversy. On May 2, 1868, after advertisement, these lands, so defendants' contend, were adjudicated to Julia Creswell. There was and is no deed evidencing a sale or adjudication to any one. The only evidence in this connection are the returns upon the writ. These returns, after'setting forth the seizure, advertisement, and offering by the sheriff, read as follows: “⅜ * * Whereupon Julia being the last and highest bidder, became the purchaser for the price and sum of sixteen hundred dollars.”

It is not shown in the record who the name “Julia” used in the returns referred to; whether.to Julia Creswell or some other person of the same Christian name. None of the proceeding had in connection with the obtaining of the judgment, nor of its execution, nor the judgment itself, were ever recorded in De ■Soto parish until December 14, 1869, at which time a copy of the judgment alone was there recorded. At the time this judgment was obtained and the attempted sale of the property in controversy under its execution, Esther Creswell, plaintiffs’ author in title, was the recorded owner thereof under her deed from David Creswell of April 1,1867. David Cres-well was the admitted recorded owner on that date.

[639]*639 It Is contended by defendants tliat, because of tbe existence of Julia Creswell’s tacit mortgage against any and all of David Creswell’s property, including tbe 40 acres in dispute, even tbougb David Creswell bad sold tbis 40, Julia Creswell bad tbe right to bave it sold to satisfy ber judgment subsequently obtained on ber tacit mortgage. • In tbe first place, sucb a mortgage, we think, would not prevent David Creswell from selling tbe property, altbougb tbe mortgage did rest against it at tbe time. And, secondly, for Julia Cres-well to bave proceeded legally against tbis property, since it bad gone into tbe bands of Esther Creswell, a third party with ber recorded title, it would bave been necessary for ber to bave resorted to an hypothecary action. She did not do tbis. Under tbe law then, as now, sucb a course was necessary before Esther Creswell could bave been divested of ber title. Her title certainly could not be divested simply by proceeding against David Creswell after he bad sold the property and placed the title of record. It was then, and is now, tbe law, that only where one bolds a conventional mortgage containing tbe pact de non alienando that tbe bolder of tbe mortgage can ignore tbe sale of tbe property by tbe mortgage debtor and subject tbe property thus burdened by having it sold. Sucb a course was not taken by Julia Creswell; hence we do not think title to tbe property was vested in her. This and tbe other irregularities shown by tbe evidence in tbis connection cannot be construed, we think, to show a divestiture of Esther Creswell’s prior recorded title.

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Bluebook (online)
137 So. 637, 19 La. App. 827, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-carr-lactapp-1931.