Hubbs v. Canova

392 So. 2d 486
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1981
Docket13548
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 392 So. 2d 486 (Hubbs v. Canova) 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
Hubbs v. Canova, 392 So. 2d 486 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

392 So.2d 486 (1980)

Dorothy Lozano HUBBS et al.
v.
Carlo CANOVA et al.

No. 13548.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 6, 1980.
Rehearing Denied December 15, 1980.
Writ Granted February 20, 1981.

Hamlet D. May, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant, Dorothy Lozano Hubbs, et al.

Patrick W. Pendley, Plaquemine, for defendant-appellee, Carl Canova, et al.

Before ELLIS, COLE and WATKINS, JJ.

WATKINS, Judge.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment to set aside a tax sale to defendants on the ground the sale was made improperly. Plaintiffs are the class of taxpayers whose interests in certain land was sold. Defendants filed exceptions of prescription and res judicata, both of which exceptions were sustained. We reverse, holding that both exceptions should have been overruled, and remand.

In 1856 and 1859 Charles Lozano, who was married to and living with Marguerite Breaux Lozano, acquired ownership of the *487 north one-half of Section 52 and the northwest quarter of Section 43, T 8 S, R 11 E, in Iberville Parish, Louisiana, which made one contiguous tract. During his life, he sold three parcels from this tract. Charles Lozano had been previously married, as had Marguerite Breaux. Children were born of Charles Lozano's marriage to Marguerite Breaux Lozano, as well as of their previous marriages. Marguerite Breaux Lozano died in 1862, predeceasing her husband, and her community interest in the property in question descended to her children. No succession proceeding was ever opened for her. After Charles Lozano died, his interest in the tract in question was bought by his son, Louis Lozano, by instrument dated July 6, 1878, and duly recorded. Louis Lozano was the son of Charles Lozano's second marriage. After Louis Lozano died, his 390/672 interest in the tract in question (that interest representing the interest he had acquired from his father and small interests he had inherited from his mother and deceased siblings who had died without issue) was sold to A. Wilbert Sons Lumber and Shingle Co. by estate sale dated March 16, 1905, and duly recorded. A tract of 30 acres in the northwest quarter of Section 52 was excepted from the sale to Wilbert Sons, and sold to Joseph A. Grace at the same estate sale. In 1957, the Aluminum Co. of America obtained mineral leases from the descendants of Marguerite Breaux Lozano, and, also, a lease from Wilbert Sons.

In 1958, the descendants of Marguerite Breaux Lozano, and Wilbert Sons, signed a document styled "Stipulation of Interests" showing the fractional interests owned by each party in the tract in question, which formed the basis of division orders used by Alcoa for distribution of royalties, which instrument was filed of record in Iberville Parish.

In 1968, the Assessor of Iberville Parish entered an assessment on the tax rolls under the following name and description:

"Heyeau, Lester F., et al 128¾ Part NW/4 Section 43; 2663 E. Lee Blvd. Part NE/4 Section 52; New Orleans, LA Part NW/4 Section 52; East of Bayou Gross Tete T. 8 S. R. 11 E. Cut Over Lands 128¾ Ac. 200"

The proper spelling of the name was not "Heyeau", but "Hezeau". Lester F. Hezeau was indeed one of the co-owners of the Lozano interest.

No Lozano heir received any notice or information about the assessment or the tax debt, not even Lester F. Hezeau in whose name the property was assessed.

By instrument dated June 25, 1969, under Sheriff's sale of that date, and recorded on July 14, 1969, the following described property, which had been advertised in the name of Lester F. Heyeau, et al, was sold to Carlo Canova and Patrick Pendley, present defendants, for a price of $19.67:

"Ward 7—Assessment 6392 A

Part NW/4 Section 43; Part NE/4 Section 52; Part NW/4 Section 52; East of Bayou Grosse Tete T. 8 S. R. 11 E. Cut Over Land 128¾ acres 200"

Canova and Pendley petitioned for a monition by petition filed August 19, 1977. The property was described as follows in the petition:

"Part NW/4 Sec. 43, part NE/4 Sec. 52, part NW/4 Sec. 52, E of Bayou Grosse Tete, T-8-S, R-11-E."

Notice of the application for monition was published in the Greater Plaquemine POST on August 25, 1977, and September 29, 1977. On October 31, 1977, a judgment was signed confirming and homologating the sheriff's sale for delinquent taxes.

Defendants base their plea of prescription on the prescriptive or peremptive period of 5 years (if no notice of sale is given) which was provided for by Art. 10, Sec. 11 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1921. (See also Art. 7, Sec. 25, of the present Constitution.)

The prescriptive period provided in the Constitution does not cure a defect in a tax sale which is absolutely null and void. The following language from Gram Realty Co. v. Northern Homes, Inc., 308 So.2d 502 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1975) applies:

"The prescriptions of three and five years cannot cure a defect in a tax sale which is absolutely null and void. Being void, no peremptive or prescriptive period *488 can breathe life into something that never existed. As was said by the Court in Jackson v. Bernstein, 39 So.2d 120 (La. App. 2nd Cir. 1948):
`It was said, and logically so, in the Jackson and Brock cases, supra, and doubtless in others, that where a tax sale is null because the land described could not be identified, the Constitutional peremption has no application.'" (308 So.2d 502, 504, 505)

In the present case, the assessment and subsequent tax sale, we hold, are null and void because the names of all co-owners are not given, as is necessary, and the acreage is given as if it were total acreage, without its being indicated that the interest in the tract in question is an undivided interest.

The following guidelines are set forth for the assessment of property in Russell v. Lang, 50 La.Ann. 36, 23 So. 113 (1898):

"There are two ways of legally assessing real property held by two or more parties in indivision. One and the better way is to assess to each his undivided interest; the other, to assess the property as belonging jointly to the parties, giving the name of each individual owner, followed by the description of the property. Or, if a firm or business company, corporation, or association owns the property, it may be legally assessed in the name of such firm, company, corporation, or association. And in placing the names of taxpayers on the assessment rolls, while it is better to give the Christian or baptismal names, it suffices to use the initials, followed by the family or surname, thus, `J. R. Russell.' This designation of the name of the owner, followed by a correct description of the property, fulfills the requirements of the law. Douglas v. Dakin, 46 Cal. [49] 51. And if there be two joint owners, and the name of one only is used, followed by an accurate description of the property, this suffices to bind the interest of the one whose name is used, for his share of the taxes, but, of course, cannot bind the other individual owner whose name is not used, nor his interest in the property. The cases of Thibodaux v. Keller, 29 La.Ann. [508] 509, and Hayes v. Viator, 33 La.Ann. [1162] 1164, cited in opposition to this view, do not sustain the pretension."

(23 So. 113, 115, 116)

Here, no co-owner's name was listed but that of Lester F. Hezeau, and it was misspelled. The quotation from

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392 So. 2d 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbs-v-canova-lactapp-1981.