Gumpert v. Signal

156 So. 174, 180 La. 59, 1934 La. LEXIS 1490
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 21, 1934
DocketNo. 32772.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 156 So. 174 (Gumpert v. Signal) 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
Gumpert v. Signal, 156 So. 174, 180 La. 59, 1934 La. LEXIS 1490 (La. 1934).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

On March 2,1923, Solomon Signal, who was married to Mary Lazard, mortgaged for $463 a piece of real estate belonging to the matrimonial community. Signal died intestate on September 20, 1923, leaving his widow, Mary Lazard Signal, and six children, five of whom were minors. Mrs. Signal opened the succession of her deceased husband and qualified as natural tutrix of her minor children. The entire estate, consisting of community property, was appraised in the inventory at $1,300, and the minors’ general mortgage against their tutrix was recorded on that appraisement. On February 24, 1926, the mortgagee foreclosed his mortgage via executiva, and the demand for payment and notice of seizure were served on the proper parties. In this situation, Mrs. Signal, in her own behalf and on behalf of her minor children, filed a petition in the mortua-ry proceeding, setting forth that the property owned in indivisión by her and her children was about to be sold under executory process; that she was unable to pay the long past Sue mortgage debt, but she had an opportunity of obtaining a new loan secured by mortgage for an amount sufficient to discharge the debt, and it was to the interest of her minor co-owners she be allowed to mortgage the common property for that purpose. The undertutor acquiesced in the petition and recommended petitioner’s prayer be granted, dispensing with the advice of a family meeting as provided by Act No. 110 of 1920, which was in force at the time. On the petition, the court entered the following order, viz.;

“It is ordered by the court that the recommendation of the natural tutrix and the concurrence thereto of the undertutor of the minors, be and the same are hereby approved and homologated; and, accordingly, let the petitioner, Mrs. Mary Lazard, widow of Solomon Signal, natural tutrix of the said minors, be authorized and she be hereby empowered to mortgage the property owned by the minors herein and described in the foregoing petition, said mortgage, to be in the sum of Seven Hundred Fifty Hollars ($750.00) and bearing eight per cent. 8%, interest from date until paid, with all usual security clauses.”
“And it is further ordered that the general mortgage in favor of the said minors, recorded in M. O. B. 1258, Folio 224 of the Parish of Orleans, be ineffective insofar as the mortgage herein being authorized by the court.”

On the court’s order, under date of April 7, 1926, George R. Gumpert lent the natural tutrix $750 on a new mortgage containing the usual clauses, including the pact de non alienando and waiver of appraisement. The mortgage was duly recorded. The funds realized from the loan were used to liquidate *64 the prior mortgage, which was canceled on the mortgage records. The Gumpert mortgage was not discharged, and the mortgagee was compelled to pay the taxes assessed against the mortgaged property. Therefore, on October 25, 1932, Mr. Gumpert foreclosed his mortgage,- and the mortgaged property was seized and adjudicated to him for $100, which amount, as well as all fees and costs, he deposited with the civil sheriff.

The general mortgage in favor of the Signal minors appeared on the mortgage certificate obtained by the civil sheriff, and he ruled the minors into court, through their natural tutrix, to show cause why their general mortgage should not be canceled so far as it affected the property sold by him and their rights referred to the proceeds of the sale. The tutrix interposed no defense to the rule, but the recorder of mortgages for the parish of Orleans, who was made a party to the proceeding, joined issue with the mover, contending that the tutrix, undertutor, and judge of the district court were not authorized to waive the benefit of appraisement in granting the mortgage to Mr. Gumpert; that their attempt to subordinate the minors’ general mortgage to the conventional mortgage was without effect; and that, if the representatives of the minors were authorized legally to partially cancel the-minors’ general mortgage, the tutrix in granting the Gumpert mortgage exceeded her powers as set forth in the order of court authorizing the mortgage.

The judgment of the civil district court was against the recorder of mortgages, and he appealed to the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans, which on the original hearing reversed the judgment. But on rehearing the Court of Appeal set aside its- former decree and reinstated the judgment of the district court. The case is before us on a writ of review.

The first question raised by the recorder of mortgages in his defense to the civil sheriff’s rule finds its answer in the case of Martin v. Lake, 37 La. Ann. 763, where this court held, as shown by the syllabus, that; “Article 342 of the Civil Code, which prohibits the sale of a minor’s property for less than its appraised value mentioned in the inventory, applies only to sales provoked by his tutor, during the course of his administration, and not to sales under execution, either of judgments, or by executory process for the foreclosure of a mortgage executed by the tutor with the authorization of a competent court, under the advice of a family meeting.” And a family meeting may now be dispensed with under the provisions of Act No. 319 of 1926, amending Act No. 110 of 1920. “In such a mortgage it is competent in law for the tutor to waive the benefit of appraisement in case of execution, and to agree to pay attorney’s fees in case of suit for collection.”

The second question raised by the recorder of mortgages to the rule of the civil sheriff does not appear to involve the validity of the Gumpert mortgage. The question, as we understand it, addresses itself solely to the ranking of that mortgage as against the minors’ general mortgage. The recorder of mortgages contends the general mortgage enjoys priority over the conventional mortgage, because there are only two ways in which a minor’s general mortgage can be released: namely, by the substitution of a special mortgage, or by furnishing a tutor’s bond.

*66 There can be no question it has been held that the release of the minor’s mortgage to permit the sale of property for the minor’s necessities is not permissible. Lyman v. Stroudbach, 47 La. Ann. 71, 16 So. 662; Barton v. Hickson, 134 La. 278, 63 So. 902, and cases therein cited. But, on the other hand, this court has expressly approved, the subordination of the minor’s. general mortgage to a conventional mortgage where it was absolutely necessary to do so in order to protect the minor’s interest. Fontenette v. Veazey, 1 La. Ann. 236; Beauregard v. Leveau, 30 La. Ann. 302; Life Association of America v. Hall, 33 La. Ann. 49.

In Eontenette v. Veazey, the court sanctioned the sale of the property of an impecunious tutrix free of the minors’ mortgage, in order to raise the funds necessary to repair the house in which she resided with her minor children.

In Fleetwood v. Bordis, 19 La. Ann. 55, the court held that the only method provided by law for the cancellation of a minor’s mortgage was by substituting a special mortgage therefor. The court stated that Fontenette v. Veazey, to which its attention was directed, was an exceptional case not 'applicable to cases of ordinary occurrence.

But in Beauregard v.

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156 So. 174, 180 La. 59, 1934 La. LEXIS 1490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumpert-v-signal-la-1934.