Giordano v. MacDonald

729 So. 2d 760, 1999 WL 142120
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1999
Docket98-CA-2035
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 729 So. 2d 760 (Giordano v. MacDonald) 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
Giordano v. MacDonald, 729 So. 2d 760, 1999 WL 142120 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

729 So.2d 760 (1999)

Wayne C. GIORDANO
v.
Elaine Maud Gilderdale, wife of/and Douglas Gordon MacDONALD and Virginia Lee Whitten, wife of/and Andrew Fergus MacDonald.

No. 98-CA-2035.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

March 10, 1999.

Thomas G. Donelon, Metairie, LA, Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellant.

W. Eric Lundin, III, Jerry J. Lobrano, Belle Chasse, LA, Attorneys for Defendant/Appellee.

Court composed of Judge MOON LANDRIEU, Judge PATRICIA RIVET MURRAY, Judge Pro Tempore JAMES A. GRAY, II.

JAMES A. GRAY, II, Judge Pro Tern.

The defendants appeal the trial court's judgment confirming the sale of their property for nonpayment of taxes. We reverse.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On June 5, 1993, property located at 106 Jerry Street in Belle Chasse, Louisiana was sold at a tax sale by the Plaquemines Parish Sheriff for nonpayment of 1992 taxes. The defendants, Andrew MacDonald, his wife Virginia Lee Whitten MacDonald, his father *761 Douglas MacDonald, and his father's wife Elaine Maud Gilderdale MacDonald, were the record owners of the property at the time of the sale. Plaintiff Wayne Giordano was the successful bidder on the property.

On December 23, 1996, after the three-year preemptive period, Giordano filed a petition to quiet and confirm tax title. He alleged in the petition that the defendants [hereinafter "the MacDonalds"] were absentees, and the court appointed a curator to represent them. Through the efforts of the curator, the MacDonalds were located. They retained counsel, who filed on their behalf an answer and reconventional demand seeking to have the tax sale annulled on grounds of improper notice.

The matter was tried on December 10, 1997. On March 25, 1998, the district court rendered judgment confirming plaintiffs title. From this judgment, the MacDonalds have appealed.

FACTS

Douglas MacDonald first came into possession of the property at 106 Jerry Street in 1955 by means of a lease-purchase agreement. As contemplated by that agreement, ownership of the property was transferred to Douglas MacDonald and his son Andrew by act of sale dated September 20, 1984 for a stated price of $11,000.00. At trial, Andrew MacDonald testified that his father and mother lived at 106 Jerry Street from 1955 until his mother died in 1976, and that his father continued to reside there until May of 1988, when he could no longer care for himself due to Altzheimer's disease. He then moved in with Andrew and his wife Virginia, who live in Metairie. Three months later, in July of 1988, Douglas MacDonald died.

Andrew MacDonald testified that when his father moved in with him in May 1988, he submitted a change of address form to the post office in Belle Chasse, and he began receiving his father's mail at his address in Metairie. He also testified that on July 21, 1988, he sent a letter to the Sheriff of Plaquemines Parish informing him of Douglas MacDonald's death and requesting that any parish tax bills or other official correspondence concerning 106 Jerry Street henceforth be sent to Andrew's address at 3020 North Labarre Road in Metairie. Andrew's wife Virginia corroborated this testimony. Plaintiffs counsel objected to the letter, because it was generated from a computer hard drive. The trial judge took the matter under advisement, after assuring defendants' counsel that if he decided the letter was inadmissible, he would allow it to be proffered. However, there is no further mention of the letter in the transcript, and the letter is not in the record, as a proffer or otherwise.

Andrew MacDonald testified that the only communication he ever received from Plaquemines Parish regarding the property was a 1991 property tax bill, addressed to 106 Jerry Street, which he received approximately two months late. Although he did not recall exactly how he got the bill, Andrew remembered clearly that he was upset because it was late. He testified that he paid the 1991 property taxes with a personal check dated April 14, 1992. He also stated he enclosed a note with the check informing the Sheriff that the payment was late because the address on the bill was incorrect, and again giving his address in Metairie as the correct address. The cancelled check, which has the MacDonalds' Metairie address printed on it, was introduced into evidence. Andrew testified that he never received any other property tax bills, either for 1988, 1989, 1990, or any year subsequent to 1991. He said his father had never mentioned paying taxes on the property, and Andrew had recently learned from going through his father's records that his father had a homestead exemption on the property.

Andrew stated that since his father's death, he had periodically rented out the Jerry Street residence, and there had been tenants there off and on. Besides Jerry Street, Andrew said he and his wife do not own any other property except their own residence, and his mortgage company pays the property taxes on that.

Finally, Andrew testified that he has a Louisiana driver's license, that he has been listed in the telephone book at his current Metairie address since 1980, and that he has had an answering machine for that whole *762 time. His wife Virginia corroborated this information.

Monica Nicosia, a senior supervisor in tax collection for the Plaquemines Parish Sheriff, testified that 106 Jerry Street was the address listed for the MacDonalds on the tax assessment rolls. She stated that a delinquent tax notice for the year 1992 was sent to that address and was returned with the notation "Forwarding order expired." The property was then advertised once in the Plaquemines Gazette in a column headed "Unknown Owners." It was again advertised in the Gazette, which is the official journal of Plaquemines Parish, three more times before the tax sale occurred, when it was sold to Wayne Giordano for taxes, costs and fees amounting to $475.93.

According to Ms. Nicosia, if a change of address notice had come in for the property, the new address would have been put into the Sheriff's office computer and then sent to the assessor's office so it could be changed there; if the assessor's office had received such a notice, it would likewise have been sent to the Sheriff's office.

When questioned, Ms. Nicosia stated that it was office policy to check the telephone book (for "whatever area that address is in or the New Orleans area") and to call property owners before their property was sold at a tax sale. She said the Sheriff's office personnel also generally check with the post office to see if the forwarding order was on file. Ms. Nicosia did not remember having personally done any of these things in the instant case, but she said everyone in the office participates in these activities prior to a tax sale. She testified it was not office procedure to check with the driver's license bureau or to physically send someone to the property.

Plaintiff Wayne Giordano testified that after purchasing the property, he recorded the deed on June 25, 1993. He stated that he received and paid the property tax bills for 1993, 1994, 1995 and 1996. Upon filing suit to confirm his title, he had the court appoint a curator to represent the absent property owners. He also paid the curator's costs of $884.82. When questioned, he stated that he had attended the tax sale not to purchase this specific piece of property, but to bid on whatever was going up for sale.

REASONABLENESS OF NOTICE

Appellants seek to have the tax sale annulled on grounds of inadequate notice.

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Bluebook (online)
729 So. 2d 760, 1999 WL 142120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giordano-v-macdonald-lactapp-1999.