Heath v. Suburban Building & Loan Ass'n

163 So. 546
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 1935
DocketNo. 15036.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 163 So. 546 (Heath v. Suburban Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Heath v. Suburban Building & Loan Ass'n, 163 So. 546 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LECHE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Jennie Layrisson Heath, is a married woman living with her husband. She sustained injuries in two accidents, each of which, she alleges, resulted from the defective condition of the house in which she and her husband resided. In her original petition she avers that she and her husband leased the premises on February 10, 1933, from the then owner, L. R. Terrio, that, as the result of foreclosure proceedings, the property was, on May 4, 1933, adjudicated at sheriff’s sale to Suburban Building & Loan Association, and that on May 17, 1933, the Suburban Building & Loan Association accepted title to the said property and that the sheriff’s deed was dated on that day. She alleges that in the meantime the two accidents referred to had occurred, one on May 10th and one on May 11th, and that,' as the result of the adjudication, Suburban Building & Loan Association had on May 4th become the owner of the property, and is therefore liable to her for the damage sustained as a result of the two said injuries, which injuries she maintains resulted from the defective condition of the premises.

The contention of Suburban Building & Loan Association, which is the sole defendant remaining in the case, is that on May 10th and on May 11th, when the accidents occurred, it was not the owner of the said premises, and Mrs. Heath was not its tenant, and that therefore it is not liable to her because the accidents could not have resulted from negligence on its part, the defects in the premises, if there were defects, resulting from the negligence of the former owner, and being defects which it (Suburban Building & Loan Association) could not have remedied because it had not at that time obtained possession of the property.

In the district court there was judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit; the judge a quo having reached the conclusion that the first accident resulted from contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff and that at the time of the second accident defendant Suburban Building & Loan Association “did not have control of the property because title had. not passed.”

A review of the pleadings is important. In the original petition, as we have stated, plaintiff alleged that she and her husband were originally tenants of the former owner, and she further alleged that, by reason of the adjudication, Suburban Building & Loan Association became the owner and lessor, and that therefore she and her husband automatically became lessees of said Suburban Building & Loan Association. In the original petition judgment was prayed for against both Terrio, the original owner, and the building and loan association. To this petition the building and loan association filed exceptions of misjoinder and of no cause of action. Terrio, the other defendant, filed similar exceptions. The exception of no cause of action filed by Terrio was sustained, and the suit was dismissed as against him, and there has been no appeal. Thus he is entirely out of the case. Both exceptions filed by the building and loan association were sustained and the suit ordered dismissed as to it, but a rule for a new trial was made absolute and a new trial granted as against the building and loan association. Thereupon the court again undertook to pass upon the exceptions of misjoinder and of no cause of action; and rendered judgment overruling the exception of misjoinder and sustaining the exception of no cause of action, with leave, however, in petitioner to amend so that she might set forth her true status, whether as tenant of the building and loan association or as licensee. In a supplemental petition plaintiff enlarged somewhat the allegations of her original petition as to her status, and finally made the averment that she and her husband “were the licensees of the said Suburban Building & Loan Association.”

However, since the supplemental petition contained other allegations which might have been considered as^ inconsistent with this and which might have been construed *548 as averments that she and her husband were the tenants of the said association, a further exception was filed through which it was sought to force the said plaintiff to declare unequivocally whether she intended to proceed as a licensee of the building and loan association or as its tenant, and thereupon, by interlineation, petitioner was permitted to amend her petition by adding the following words: “Petitioner is claiming solely as a licensee.”

Since both accidents occurred between May 4th, the day on which the property was adjudicated, and May 17th, the day on which the sheriff’s deed was executed and registered, we see no reason to investigate the facts as to either accident, unless we shall first determine that during that period the status of the defendant association was such as to render it liable to petitioner in any event and however defective the premises may have been during that period.

Counsel for both parties devote much thought to the question of whether a purchaser at judicial sale becomes vested with title at the moment of adjudication. It is the contention of plaintiff that title passes at that moment, and, in support of this view, we find cited several codal articles and many adjudicated cases. Civil Code, art. 2608, reads as follows: “This adjudication is the completion of the sale; the purchaser becomes the owner of the article adjudged, and the contract is, from that time, subjected to the same rules which govern the ordinary contract of sale.”

The article of the Code of Practice which is in point is 690. We find it there provided that: “The adjudication thus made has, of itself alone, the effect of transferring to the purchaser all the rights and claims which the party in whose hands it was seized might have had to the thing adjudged.”

It is further required that the sheriff shall execute a deed, but by article 695 of the Code of Practice it is provided that: “This act of sale adds nothing to the force and effect of the adjudication, but is only intended to afford the proof of it. Consequently, if the sheriff has omitted any of the formalities above prescribed, the adjudication shall not be void' on that account, if it otherwise appear that it was made by virtue of a legal authority, and with all the forms requisite for its validity.”

The adjudicated cases are numerous. In King v. Hacket, 7 Orleans App. 497, this court said: “The rights of the parties are fixed by the adjudication at public auction and not by the notarial act of sale subsequently passed in confirmation of the adjudication.”

In Interdiction of Onorato, 46 La. Ann. 73, 14 So. 299, the Supreme Court said: “The adjudication of property at a judicial sale is itself a complete title, which cannot be divested unless the purchaser refuses to comply with the terms.”

There are many others to the same effect. It is also well settled that the fruits of the property belong to the purchaser from the moment of adjudication. Frank v. Magee, 50 La. Ann. 1066, 23 So. 939; Colligan v. Benoit, 13 La. App. 612, 128 So. 688; Shreveport Long Leaf Lumber Co. v. T. R. Hughes, 1 La. App. 706.

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Bluebook (online)
163 So. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-v-suburban-building-loan-assn-lactapp-1935.