Investors Homestead Ass'n v. Anglada

192 So. 69, 193 La. 596, 1939 La. LEXIS 1215
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 30, 1939
DocketNo. 33972.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 192 So. 69 (Investors Homestead Ass'n v. Anglada) 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
Investors Homestead Ass'n v. Anglada, 192 So. 69, 193 La. 596, 1939 La. LEXIS 1215 (La. 1939).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Plaintiff prosecutes this appeal from a judgment rejecting its demands for a deficiency judgment against Joseph S. Bruno, the husband of Mrs. Eulalie Eleanore Anglada Bruno.

On June 22, 1927, application was made to the Orleans Homestead ■ Association (now the Investors Homestead Association) for a loan of $2,500 on certain real property, located at 2355 N. Villere Street in the City of New Orleans, the application being signed by “Mrs.-J- Bruno and J. S. Bruno”. The application was approved in April, 1928. The property offered as security for the loan belonged to Mrs. Bruno, who had acquired it by inheritance. The loan was consummated on April 26, 1928, according to the rules and regulations adopted by the Homestead Association. Mrs. Bruno sold the property to the Homestead Association, and it in turn transferred it back to her, retaining the vendor’s privilege and special mortgage on the property to secure the note for $2,500, representing the amount of the loan.

A copy of the act of sale and mortgage and a copy of the note are in the record. The act recites that the property is sold “unto Mrs. Eulalie Eleonore Anglada, wife of Joseph S. Bruno, herein authorized and assisted by her said husband”. This act of sale and mortgage is signed as follows :

“J. H. LaBesque, Pres.
“Mrs. J. S. Bruno
“To authorize my wife
“J. S. Bruno”

The note for $2,500 was signed- as follows :

“Mrs. J. S. Bruno
“To Authorize my wife
“J. S. Bruno”

The loan was not paid, and the property was sold under executory process in 1933, for $300, or $2,551.90 less than the amount due.

*699 The' present suit was filed by the Homestead Association on November 15, 1933, against the husband and the wife, to recover the balance due on the note.

Plaintiff alleged that it was the owner of the note which was executed and signed by said parties and paraphed by a notary, “to identify it with an Act of Sale and Chattel Mortgage on April 26th, 1928 wherein your petitioner sold and conveyed certain property to Mrs. Eulalee Eleanore Anglada, wife of Joseph S. Bruno and the said Joseph S. Bruno”.

In a supplemental and amended petition, plaintiff alleged that “said property by reason of the purchase being made during the community was community property, and the debt contracted on account of said purchase price was and is a community debt for which the husband, the said Joseph S. Bruno, is liable in solido with his said wife”.

Judgment went against Mrs. Bruno by default. But Joseph S. Bruno, the husband, filed answer, in which he denied any indebtedness to plaintiff, denied that the property mortgaged to secure the debt became community property by virtue of his wife’s sale thereof to plaintiff and its resale to her, and denied that the amount claimed is a community debt.

The judgment appealed from is correct. There is nothing in the record that shows, or even indicates, that Joseph S. Bruno, the husband, was bound with his wife for the indebtedness to the Homestead Association. True, he signed the act of sale and mortgage and the note, but he did so for the sole purpose of authorizing his wife. This is shown by the instruments themselves. His signature is qualified by the words “To authorize my wife”.

Mr. Bruno testified, and his testimony is not disputed, that the notary before whom the mortgage and the note were executed required him to join in the proceeding to authorize his wife, and that he did so for that purpose alone.

As we have stated, the property mortgaged to secure the loan was the separate property of the wife, 'who acquired it by inheritance. Counsel for the Homestead. Association knew this, and the documents filed in evidence show to our entire satisfaction that the officers of the Homestead Association understood from the beginning, not only that the property belonged to the wife, but that the debt contracted was her debt and not the debt of the husband.

The application for the loan was signed by both the wife and the husband. But underneath their signatures is the iollowing memorandum:

“Q. Age? 35
“Q. Occupation ? Housewife
“Q. Married? Yes”

This indicates very clearly that those who prepared- this document understood that it was the wife who requested the loan.

The act of sale and mortgage recites that the property is sold unto Mrs. Bruno, “wife of Joseph S. Bruno, herein authorized and assisted by her said husband”. In the act of sale, from the beginning to the end of it, there are expressions which *701 show that the property was sold to the wife and that the debt was the wife’s debt. We find such expressions as the following in that instrument:

“Here present, purchasing and accepting for herself, her heirs and assigns” ■ “which the purchaser binds and obligates herself, her heirs and assigns not to sell” “by reason of failure or neglect on her part to pay interest”
“she shall have the right to transfer to the Association her stock”
“binds and obligates herself to keep the buildings * * * insured”
“who moreover binds herself in case”
“said property and appurtenances unto the said purchaser, her heirs and assigns”
“said purchaser binds' and obligates herself to pay punctually”

The pass-book used in connection with the loan was made out in the name of the wife alone. Furthermore, the foreclosure proceeding was against the wife, and not against the wife and the husband. Plaintiff alleged that it was the holder and owner of a certain promissory note “made and subscribed by defendant Mrs. Eulalie Eleanore Anglada, wife of Joseph S. Bruno, a person of the full age of majority”. In Paragraph 2 of the petition, it is alleged that plaintiff had retained a vendor’s lien and that “defendant Mrs. Eulalie Eleanore Anglada, wife of Joseph S. Bruno, granted a special mortgage and vendor’s privilege” on said property. And it is further alleged in Paragraph 3 that, in order to secure still further the purchaser’s said indebtedness, she gave in pledge to said association “all her 25 shares of the capital stock of said Association standing in the purchaser’s name”. The notices of demand to pay and of the seizure of the property were addressed “To Mrs. Eulalie Eleanore Anglada, wife of Joseph S. Bruno”, and according to the sheriff’s returns were served on Mrs. Bruno alone.

Apparently, plaintiff’s effort to hold the husband for this indebtedness was an afterthought and was based upon the assumption that, since the property was transferred to Mrs. Bruno by the Homestead Association during the existence of the community, it became community property and the .debt of $2,500 was a community debt. It was so alleged in plaintiff’s amended petition in the present suit.

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Bluebook (online)
192 So. 69, 193 La. 596, 1939 La. LEXIS 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/investors-homestead-assn-v-anglada-la-1939.