Hoover v. Pennington

160 So. 136, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 1006
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1934
DocketNos. 1300, 1437.
StatusPublished

This text of 160 So. 136 (Hoover v. Pennington) 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
Hoover v. Pennington, 160 So. 136, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 1006 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This is the second appearance of this case before this court. On the former occasion, the status of the mortgage being foreclosed on was before us for consideration, and we held that it affected and bore on the undivided half interest of Mrs. Lucy Lockhart in the property which was property that formerly belonged to the community which existed between her and her deceased husband, Mathew Lockhart. See 19 La. App. 779, 141 So. 517. The decree of the court was that the undivided one-half of the property mortgaged and which belonged to Mrs. ¡Lucy Lockhart be sold at public sale and that the proceeds realized therefrom be applied to the payment of plaintiff’s mortgage.

.From this former opinion, it also appears that there were five children issue of the marriage between Mathew Lockhart and his wife, and that these five children were the owners of the other undivided half of the property in the proportion of an undivided one-fifth each of the said undivided half and which undivided half was not affected by the mortgage. In the course of time, Selby Lock-hart, one of the five children, aquired the rights' and titles of the others and became the sole owner of the undivided half which belonged to all of them, and the property was then owned in indivisión by himself and his mother, Mrs. Lucy Lockhart, in the proportion of an undivided one-half each.

On December 6, 1932, Mrs. Lucy Lockhart and Selby Lockhart voluntarily and amicably partitioned the property between them, in kind, as appears from the authentic act of partition executed on that day before W. A. Rheams, notary public.

*137 On January 11, 1933, Julius A. Hoover, the mortgagee, assuming to act under the decree of this court in the former judgment rendered herein, caused to" be seized and sold an undivided half interest said to belong to Mrs. Lucy Lockhart, in order to satisfy his mortgage debt. Selby Lockhart thereupon intervened in the proceeding, claiming that by virtue of the partition the mortgage became transferred to the separate half of the property of Mrs. Lucy Lockhart and that it no longer bore on or affected his separate and divided half thereof. Erom a judgment in the lower court which sustained that contention and enjoined the sale of an undivided half of the whole property, Hoover, the mortgagee, has appealed.

In considering the proposition that is submitted, the first thought that occurs to us is one regarding the absolute right of a co-owner to demand at any time from his other co-proprietors, á partition of the property he owns in common with them. Such right is provided for by article 1289, Rev. Civ. Code, which reads as follows: “No one can be compelled to hold property with another, unless the contrary has been agreed upon; any one has a right to demand the division of a thing held in common, by the action of partition.”

The Code also, provides (article 1294) that the partition may be voluntary, in which case, of course, it may, as was done in this case, be made by authentic act between the parties and the action of partition mentioned in the quoted article becomes unnecessary. With such a right of ownership being specifically fixed by law, does not the mortgagee who takes a mortgage on one of the co-owner’s undivided interest in the property owned in common take it subject to the rights of the other coproprietors to demand their share of the property whenever they desire to do so, and are not his rights of mortgage subordinate to the rights of the other co-owners to own their portion of the property free of any encumbrance which they have not placed thereon themselves? We think that these are 'questions of importance in determining the issue involved and believe that they should be answered in the affirmative.

In the act of partition, the parties do not acquire any rights of property which they did not already possess. They already owned the property that is being partitioned and by the act which they execute they merely reassert their ownership, declare that they no longer desire to hold the property which they own together in common, and that, availing themselves of the right which the law grants them, they have divided it so that each may go in possession of the portion or share which he already owns. When, therefore, one of -the co-owners had previously mortgaged his undivided interest in the property, he had a perfect right to do so as he was mortgaging something that he owned, but he could not thereby derogate any of the rights of his co-owners, one of which was the right to demand a partition of the property either by Imitation or in kind (and of these two it is well settled that the law favors the latter), and to exercise the absolute right of ownership and possession of his part thereof unhampered and unencumbered. The position of the mortgagee, on the other hand, assuming the partition to have been fair and the division of the property to have been made in equal parts, is not weakened at all- as his security still rests on a half of the property, the only difference being that it is on a 'divided instead of an undivided half.

Aside from the foregoing considerations, however, article 1338, Rev. Civ. Code, specifically provides that: “In all judicial partitions where the property is divided in kind, the mortgages, liens and privileges existing against one of the coproprietors, shall, by the mere fact of the partition, attach to the shares allotted to him by the partition, and cease to attach to the shares allotted to his cop-roprietors.”

This provision of the law is plain and unambiguous and seems to be controlling in the present instance, unless, as urged by counsel for plaintiff, it be restricted to judicial partitions and does not apply in-eases where the partition has been madé voluntarily between the parties. The case of Anglin v. Kilbourne, 131 La. 186, 59 So. 116, 117, may be said to have some bearing on that contention. In that ease, two of nine coproprietors had mortgaged their undivided interests in the property owned in common. The act of mortgage contained á clause to the effect that when the property would be partitioned the mortgage would attach to the respective shares that would fall to the two mortgagors. The ’ co-owners, who were all coheirs, afterwards made an amicable partition of the property and the same two who had granted the mortgage with the clause referred to executed another mortgage in favor of another party upon the-property which had been assigned to them in the partition.' The holder of the first mortgagé foreclosed on the property which had been assigned to the two co-owners in the partition and the second mortgage *138 creditor intervened claiming a superiority of right over the first creditor as to that part of the price representing the part of the property of which the mortgagors were not owners at the time they gave the first mortgage, but of which they became owners only as a result of the partition. The claim of the second mortgage creditor was rejected, the result of the decision, as we view it, being that the mortgage granted by the two coheirs on their undivided interest in the property became transferred to the shares assigned to them by virtue of the amicable partition, and this regardless of the clause contained in the act of mortgage.

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Related

Levy v. Levy
156 So. 181 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1934)
Hoover v. Pennington
141 So. 517 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
Erwin v. Orillion
6 La. 205 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1834)
Bank of Jeanerette v. Stansbury
34 So. 452 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1903)
Anglin v. Kilbourne
59 So. 116 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1912)
Brannin v. Womble
32 La. Ann. 805 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1880)

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160 So. 136, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-pennington-lactapp-1934.