Hogan v. Turnipseed

79 So. 3d 343, 10 La.App. 5 Cir. 1065, 2011 WL 3826181, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1007
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 30, 2011
DocketNo. 10-CA-1065
StatusPublished

This text of 79 So. 3d 343 (Hogan v. Turnipseed) 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
Hogan v. Turnipseed, 79 So. 3d 343, 10 La.App. 5 Cir. 1065, 2011 WL 3826181, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1007 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

HILLARY J. CRAIN, Judge Pro Tem.

12This case involves the respective rights of a mortgage holder on an immovable and those of a third party possessor and owner of the property when it has been seized by the sheriff preparatory to its sale under a writ of fien facias.

The facts of this litigation are as follows. Charles Hogan, plaintiff, sold the house and lot at issue here to John Turnipseed and his wife Juana, and held a mortgage on the property. When the Turnipseeds failed to make the required payments, Hogan sued them on the note. A judgment in his favor was rendered on August 27, 2003, in the amount of $64,433.35, with interest at 8.75% from September 1, 2001, until January 1, 2014, and with legal interest thereafter, plus 25% of the principal and interest as attorney fees. Sometime in the fall of 2009, Hogan began proceedings to have the property seized and sold at public auction. The total amount owed at that time was alleged to be almost $130,000. There is no explanation of record as to why there was a six year gap in these proceedings.

During these six years several other events affecting the property occurred. In 2004, the Parish of St. John the Baptist sued the Turnipseeds alleging that the | ¡¡house on the property was in such disrepair that it should be demolished. A judgment ordering demolition was entered on July 7, 2004. On that same date, by an authentic act of cash sale, the Turnipseeds sold the property to the Broussard-Balo-ney Law Firm, APC, for $10,000. The law firm rebuilt the building and was using it commercially when Hogan commenced proceedings to have the property seized and sold.

The law firm intervened in this proceeding seeking to enjoin the sale under the provisions of La. C.C.P. Art. 2703. That article sets forth the rights of third party possessors who have not assumed payment of any debt secured by a mortgage on property to be seized and sold at a sheriffs sale. A hearing on the intervention was held on January 29, 2010, and a judgment was signed on May 6, 2010. In that judgment, the district judge found that the house no longer existed, and that the mortgage on that portion of the property was extinguished. She held that Hogan still had a valid mortgage on the lot, and determined that the lot had a value at the time of the hearing of $22,500. She further found that the 25% attorney fees specified in Hogan’s note from the Turnipseeds was excessive and that a proper amount was $5,500. She also found that the new building was valued at $186,000, and that 5% of the materials from the original house had been used in its construction, and at this rate had a value of $9,300. Finally, she determined that interest on Hogan’s mortgage should be at the legal rate commencing in 2003, but not to exceed 8.75%. The judgment ordered the law firm to pay these amounts to Hogan, or alternatively the sheriffs sale would not be enjoined. Both parties now appeal.

Broussard-Baloney Law Firm, APC asserts that the judgment is in error as to the amount of Hogan’s judgment which is secured by the mortgage on the lot, and that the firm is being improperly cast in [345]*345judgment for the enhancement of the value 14of the property occasioned by its own endeavors. Hogan argues to the contrary that the judgment in effect improperly reduces the final judgment which he obtained when he sued the Turnipseeds on the note. He also urges that the law firm did not establish that it owns the property.

As to ownership of the property, the law firm introduced an authentic act of cash sale establishing that it purchased the property in 2004. Hogan, for his part, introduced a list of assets filed in a bankruptcy proceeding in 2008 by Mrs. Turnip-seed listing the property as being owned by her. This latter document is not competent evidence to challenge the authentic act, and we therefore reject this argument.

We do determine, however, that the trial judge did not correctly apply the rights applicable to third party possessors of mortgaged property when the mortgagee forecloses on that property. Those rights and remedies are provided for in La. C.C.P. Art. 2703 as follows:

Rights of third possessor
When property sold or otherwise alienated by the original debtor or his legal successor has been seized and is about to be sold under executory process, a person who has acquired the property subject to the mortgage or privilege thereon and who has not assumed the payment of the indebtedness secured thereby may:
(1) Pay the balance due on the indebtedness, in principal, interest, attorney’s fees, and costs;
(2) Arrest the seizure and sale on any of the grounds mentioned in Article 2751, or on the ground that the mortgage or privilege was not recorded, or that the inscription of the recordation thereof had preempted; or,
(3) Intervene in the executory proceeding to assert any claim which he has to the enhanced value of the property due to improvements placed on the property by him, or by any prior third possessor through whom he claims ownership of the property. This intervention shall be a summary proceeding initiated by a petition complying with Article 891.

1 ¡¡The law firm did not opt to pay the mortgage as per Art. 2703(1), and that provision is thus inapplicable to this case.

A seizure and sale may also be enjoined under Art. 2703(2) for the reasons specifically listed there, as well as on the grounds mentioned in La. C.C.P. Art. 2751. That latter article provides for enjoining the sale because of extinguishment, but it is for extinguishment of the debt supporting the mortgage, not the extin-guishment of the mortgaged property itself. Intervenors cite La. C.C. Art. 3319(1) as grounds for a third party possessor to enjoin a sale because of partial extinguishment of the mortgage on the property, citing Coen v. Gobert, 154 So.2d 443 (La.App. 2nd Cir.1963) as support for that proposition. However, Art. 2703(2) refers only to Art. 2751 and that article makes no reference to anything but extin-guishment of the debt. Additionally, Coen involves an attempt to enforce a mortgage on a piece of property not subject to the mortgage to which a building had been moved from the mortgaged property. The court held that the mortgagee renounced the mortgage on the building by agreeing for it to be moved. Here, even though the building on the mortgaged property was substantially replaced by another building also on the mortgaged property, we find no authority for the proposition that the mortgage was partially extinguished. Rather this case falls under the general rule that improvements placed on the mortgaged property are subject to the [346]*346mortgage on the property. Federal Land Bank v. Cook, 155 So. 249, 179 La. 857 (La.1934).1

LWe conclude that the third party possessor herein must assert its rights under La. C.C.P., Art. 2703(3), which is for the enhanced value of the property due to the improvement placed thereon. We further conclude that Glass v. Ives, 126 So. 69, 169 La. 809 (La.1929) furnishes guidance for applying that article. In Glass, the court determined that Ives had purchased the property from Hammond subject to judgments against Hammond. Ives reconfigured an old bank building into one that could be rented to several tenants, thus enhancing the value of the property.

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Related

Glass v. Ives
126 So. 69 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1929)
Federal Land Bank v. Cook
155 So. 249 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1934)
Coen v. Gobert
154 So. 2d 443 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 3d 343, 10 La.App. 5 Cir. 1065, 2011 WL 3826181, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-turnipseed-lactapp-2011.