Hughes v. Edson

57 So. 154, 129 La. 866, 1911 La. LEXIS 848
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 11, 1911
DocketNo. 18,692
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 57 So. 154 (Hughes v. Edson) 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
Hughes v. Edson, 57 So. 154, 129 La. 866, 1911 La. LEXIS 848 (La. 1911).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This was a jactitation suit, which has been converted into a petitory action by the defendant’s alleging title to the tract of land in controversy, to wit, the N. W. % of S. E. 14, section 15, township 20, range 15 W., in the parish of Caddo.

The plaintiffs and defendants trace their titles to Heilperin and Leonard, who made two conveyances of the tract in dispute, one to Tom Thomas in October, 1902, and the other to Benjamin F. Shaver in January, 1904.

Tom Thomas purchased the E. y% of N. E. and N. W. 14 of S. E. 14, section 15, township 20 N., range 15 W., for $3,288, represented by eight notes maturing respectively, on December 1, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909, and 1910.

All of these notes were acquired by the Merchants’ & Farmers’ Bank & Trust Company, of Shreveport, which foreclosed on them in the year 1908. The property was adjudicated to Charles Ellerbe, who subsequently sold to the defendants Edson, Etchison, and Hicks.

Shaver sold to Browne in December, 1904, and Browne in 1907 conveyed an undivided two-third interest in the property to Wm. J. Hughes and W. Clarke Hughes.

The judge a quo held that the sheriff’s sale to Ellerbe was null and void because made for cash, contrary to the order of the court directing a sale for cash to pay the notes due, and on terms of credit to pay the notes to become due.

Defendants have appealed from a judgment rejecting their demands. Plaintiffs have answered the appeal, and prayed that the judgment below be amended by recognizing them as the owners of the property in dispute.

The order for executory process directed the sheriff to seize and sell the mortgaged premises for cash without the benefit of appraisement to pay the amounts due, and on terms of credit to pay the amounts to become due on December 1, 1908, 1909, and 1910, with all costs, interest, and attorney fees. The notice, writ, and advertisement of sale were all in accordance with the terms of the decree of foreclosure.

The return of W. R. Thomas, deputy sheriff, of even date with the sale, recited that he had received the writ on May 21, 1908, and had proceeded to execute the same by seizing the property described therein, by serving notice of seizure on the defendant, by advertising, for 30 clear days, in a certain public newspaper, that he would offer said property for sale at public auction, on the terms specified in said writ, at the courthouse between the legal hours of sale on Saturday, July 11, 1908; and the said return further recited as follows, to wit:

“And after complying with all the requirements of law, I on said day and at said place of sale and between the legal hours for sales, after reading_ the writ, advertisement and mortgage certificate, and announcing the terms and conditions of sale, did offer said property at public outcry, and at such offering the sum of two hundred dollars (the same being two-thirds or more of the appraised value) was bid by Clarence Ellerbe, which being the highest and best bid, said property was adjudicated to the said Clarence Ellerbe for the said sum of $200.00, which amount was paid and applied as follows:
Total amount o£ sale........................... $200 00
Paid slieriH ............................. $11 86
Clerk ...................'................. 5 20
Curator ................................. 10 00
Advertising ............................. 9 00 36 Off
$163 94
“Wherefore I return this writ satisfied as above shown on this the 11th day of July, 1908.”

On the back of the writ appears the receipt of the attorneys for the plaintiff in execution, for $163.94.

On the same day the sheriff executed a deed, containing, among others, the following recitals:

“And at said time and place, within legal hours for sales, and after the writ, the advertisement and the mortgage certificate (a copy of which is annexed to and made part hereof) having been read aloud by me, and after complying with all the requirements of law, I [869]*869exposed said property for sale at public auction, for cash, according to law, and at said offering Clarence Ellerbe, of the parish of Caddo, and state of ■ Louisiana, bid for said property two hundred dollars, and that this bid being -the highest and best bid, the before described property was adjudicated to the said Ellerbe for the said sum, * * * which said sum was applied as shown by my return and the receipt on the back of the writ of seizure and sale.”

Article 698 of the Code of Practice reads:

“This act thus recorded and delivered to the purchaser, shall be held as full proof of which it contains, in all the courts of this state, ,in the same manner as an act before a notary would be.”

Article 693 of the Code of Practice declares that such acts must make mention:

“Of the nature of the object sold, with a description of it, as well as of the price and conditions on which it has been adjudged,” and
“Of the manner in which the purchaser has paid the price, or bound himself to discharge it.”

' Article 686 of the Code of Practice provides that, where some of the installments are not due, the creditor “may demand that the whole property be sold for the payment of the whole debt, provided it be on such terms of credit as are granted to the debtor by the original contract for the payment of such installments as are not due.”

The sheriff’s deed recites that he “exposed said property for sale at public auction for cash according to law.” The purchaser paid the whole amount of his bid in cash, which was applied in part by the sheriff to the payment of costs, and the residue paid to the attorneys of the seizing creditor. The sale throughout was treated by the sheriff, the purchaser, and the plaintiff in execution as a cash sale. This fact rebuts any inference that might be deduced from the language of the return that the adjudication was partly on terms of credit.

In Carroll v. Scheen, 34 La. Ann. 423, it was held that, in case of a variance in the sheriff’s deed and his return on the writ, as to the identity of the adjudicatee, the deed will prevail. In McCall v. Irion, 41 La. Ann. 1126, 6 South. 845, the doctrine of Carroll v. Scheen was reaffirmed, and applied to a variance in the sheriff’s deed and his return as to the payment of the price of adjudication. These cases have never been overruled. In Chaffe v. Minden Lumber Co., 118 La. 753, 43 South. 397, there was ambiguity in the deed as to the description of the property, and it was properly held that the procés verbal and other proceedings might be consulted to determine what property was really intended to be conveyed.

[1] Assuming that, in the case at bar, the property was offered for cash, instead of part cash and part on terms, it does not appear that the defendant in execution thereby suffered any pecuniary injury, and it is doubtful whether he could have annulled the judicial sale on that ground. But, assuming that he could have done so, it does not follow that the plaintiffs, occupying the- position of defendants in a petitory action, can-urge such informality or illegality.

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Bluebook (online)
57 So. 154, 129 La. 866, 1911 La. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-edson-la-1911.