Hunt v. Innis

12 F. Cas. 922, 2 Woods 103
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 12 F. Cas. 922 (Hunt v. Innis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Innis, 12 F. Cas. 922, 2 Woods 103 (circtdla 1875).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

This was a bill to foreclose a mortgage executed on the 17th day of October, 1S42, on a plantation in Bap-ides parish, to secure the sum of §20,000 to be paid in ten equal annual installments, beginning on the first day of January, 1843. The mortgage was duly inscribed in the office of the recorder of mortgages for the parish of Bapides, on the day of its date. In 1851, the mortgagors commenced a suit against the mortgagees, in the Bapides district court, for some relief against a proceeding, by way of seizure and sale, instituted by the mortgagees. In that case a consent order was made, by which it was decreed the injunction granted in the case be dissolved, and that in lieu of damages on the injunction bond, the defendants recover of the obligors in the bond, the sum of §1,000; that the mortgage debt due Hunt and wife, as set forth in the order of seizure and sale obtained by them, and the execution whereof had been enjoined in the ease, should bear interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from June 2, 1801, the date of the injunction, until payment, instead of five per cent, as allowed in the order of seizure; but the plaintiffs in injunction, Elizabeth B. and John Innis, were to be allowed time for the payment of the mortgage debt and interest as follows, to wit: in five equal annual installments of §1.853 each, the first payable on the first day of January, 1853; and it was declared “that this decree is not to operate a no-vation of the original mortgage to Hunt and wife, on which the said order of seizure was obtained, or in any manner affect the validity of the same.” This proceeding and decree, which included a copy of the mortgage, was-recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages on December 5,1851, and also on April 17, 1861. In the year 1864, the court house of the parish of Bapides was burned, with, the records of the recorder’s office, including the original record of this mortgage, and of the decree above mentioned. On February 28,1866, an act of the legislature of Louisiana was approved which provided for supplying the loss of the records destroyed in the said fire, by proceedings to be instituted before-thp district judge of the parish, and by his-judgment and decree. [Laws La. 1866, p. 80.] The seventh section of this act declared “that the recording in the proper book of the office of the parish recorder, of a copy of the judgment rendered under the provisions of this act, establishing any deed, bond, mortgage, judgment, or other writing, shall have the same force and effect as the recording of the original deed, bond, mortgage, judgment, or other writing which was destroyed Pursuant to this statute, a proceeding was instituted before the judge of the district court for the parish of Bapides, to establish the said mortgage, and the said consent decree of 1851, and on June 22, 1866, a decree-was rendered by said judge recognizing, establishing, and confirming the mortgage of 1842, the decree of 1851. and the reinscription of said mortgage and judgment made in the recorder’s office in 1861, and declaring that they have the same force and effect as-when stipulated, granted, confirmed and re-inscribed. The mortgage and judgment so established were recorded in the office of the parish recorder of mortgages on July 1, I860.

The controversy in the case is between the-mortgagees named in the mortgage of 1842, the complainants, and certain defendants,, who have obtained judgments against the mortgagors, which were recorded in the ornee-of the recorder of mortgages for the parish of Bapides, on the 12th of March, 1868. These judgment creditors have answered and have filed a cross-bill in which they claim that their recorded judgments are the first lien upon the property, and that in fact the-complainants have no lien whatever, either as against the mortgagors or any one -else. They base this claim on two grounds;

1. That admitting the reinscription of the-mortgage of complainants in 1861, it has never since that year been reinscribed, and as the ten years allowed for reinscription expired ■ in 1871, under the jurisprudence of this state, the mortgage has become of no effect even as against the mortgagors, and of course is invalid as against any one else. The claim is that the record of the proceedings and decree of the district court of the parish of Bapides, which contains a copy- of the mortgage and the decree of 1851, and the order of the court establishing the same, does not avail as a reinscription. I think this-[924]*924•claim is untenable. The district court for the parish of Rapides re-estaoiished the mort.gage in haec verba, and this decree, containing an accurate copy of the mortgage as found by that court, was in September, 1866, recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages for the parish of Rapides. Now the •claim is that the decree of the court and this registration of its decree only put the parties in the same position as if there had "been no destruction of the records by fire; that the ten years within which the rein-scription had to be made commenced to run in 1861, and this term was not interrupted by the registration of the copy of the mortgage and decree of the court establishing it in 1866. But it seems to me that section 7 of the act to establish the burnt records already quoted does give effect to the record of a re-established deed, bond, mortgage, judgment, or other writing, as of a rein-scription. It says that the recording in the proper' office of any of the documents named shall have the same force and effect as the recording of the original. The recording of the original mortgage would give it effect for ten years. So if we give force to the words of this statute, the recording of the established copy has the same effect In my judgment, the registration of an established copy would accomplish all the purposes of a reinscription of a mortgage. The object of a reinscription is to give notice to all, that the mortgage debt is not ,yet paid and that the mortgagee insists on his lien upon the mortgaged premises! This reinscription must be made every ten years. Now does not the registration of a re-established mortgage, under the act of February 28,1866, give notice that the mortgage is not paid and that the mortgagee insists upon his lien? It seems to me that the registration of the re-established deed is a compliance with the letter as well as spirit of the registration law of this state. The law does not require .a vain and useless thing to be done. A mortgagee can reinscribe his mortgage as often as he pleases; every year if he so elects. Now what end could be subserved by requiring this mortgagee, in case he desired to re-inscribe his mortgage on the day when he had the re-established record recorded, to have the same record again recorded in the same book, in the same office, and on the same day? Yet if he had done that, I infer that the defendants could not claim that such reinscription was not good for ten years. In my judgment, two reinscriptions •on the same day and upon the same record book are unnecessary and one has all the ■effect of two. I hold therefore that the complainants have not lost their lien from any ■failure to reinscribe.

The defendants insist,

2. That the mortgage of complainants was merged in the judgment rendered in 1851, and that unless this judgment was revived within ten years, it became void and of no effect; that no revivor ever took place, and that consequently the lien of the judgment is lost, and that in fact the judgment itself is invalid. This claim is based on the idea that the mortgage was merged in the judgment. But a reference to the decree of the court shows that this was not so.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 922, 2 Woods 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-innis-circtdla-1875.