Keller v. Summers

187 So. 69, 192 La. 103, 1939 La. LEXIS 1063
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 34541.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 187 So. 69 (Keller v. Summers) 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
Keller v. Summers, 187 So. 69, 192 La. 103, 1939 La. LEXIS 1063 (La. 1939).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice.

This is a petitory action instituted by Felicien W. Keller and the heirs of his deceased wife, to recover a certain lot of realty, with improvements, in the town of Abbeville, Louisiana. Coupled with this suit is an action of nullity to set aside a constable sale of the property to L. H. Summers, dated December 2, 1922, and the subsequent mesne conveyances thereof by the adjudicatee Summers to Richard LeBlanc by warranty deed dated March 8, 1924, and by LeBlanc to his divorced wife in an act of partition dated March 20, 1925, and also for damages at the rate of $25 a month for the use and occupancy of the property of which they have been deprived, beginning from the date of the adjudication.

The basis of plaintiffs’ action is the nullity of the adjudication of the 'property at the constable sale because the bid was for an amount less than the aggregate amount of the outstanding mortgages affecting the property.

Defendants, in bar of plaintiffs’ suit, filed exceptions of no cause and no right of action and pleas of prescription of five and ten years. The plea of prescription of ten years was maintained by the trial judge and plaintiffs have appealed. Defendants answered the appeal, praying that the judgment of the trial court be affirmed and that their exceptions of no right and no cause of action, and their plea of prescription of five years, be maintained.

The record shows, that Felicien W. Keller, one of the plaintiffs, purchased, in 1907, from Adolph Brasseux, the property in controversy, described as lot No. 18 in Nixon’s addition to the town of Abbeville. On October 30, 1917, L. H. Summers obtained a judgment against Keller in the third ward justice court, for the sum of $59.95 for materials furnished the debtor for the construction of a bakery shop, with interest, attorney’s fees, and costs, and, pursuant to a writ of fieri facias issued *107 thereunder, on November 6, 1922, the constable for the said ward seized the property and, after due advertisement, offered the property for sale, but, there being no one who offered to purchase the property, it was readvertised and was adjudicated at the second sale on December 2, 1922, to the defendant L. H. Summers, seizing creditor, for the price of his bid, $150. Summers sold the property to LeBlanc by warranty deed dated March 8, 1924 for a cash consideration of $2,500. At that time LeBlanc was married to and living with Dora Choate, from whom he was subsequently divorced, and, by an act of amicable partition of the community, dated March 20, 1925, the defendant Dora Choate acquired the property in controversy.

At the time of the adjudication of the property at the constable sale, there were, as shown by the mortgage certificate which was read at the sale and is annexed thereto, the following mortgages: (1) A special mortgage in favor of Anaise Hebert in the sum of $800, recorded December 13, 1910; (2) a special mortgage in favor of the holder or holders in the sum of $1,000, recorded June 13, 1914; and (3) a special mortgage in favor of Elias Hebert in the sum of $50, recorded October 29, 1914.

When the plaintiff Keller acquired the property from Adolph Brasseux, he was married to and living with Anaise Hebert, who died intestate in October of 1921 and left as her sole heirs two daughters, Frances and Eurney Keller, the 'other plaintiffs here, who were placed in possession, by judgment dated October 17, 1925, of an undivided one-half interest in the property in controversy, and also of the $800 mortgage in favor of their mother.

Thus it may be seen that the bid by the seizing creditor at the constable sale was insufficient to discharge the privileges' and mortgages existing on the property, as required by Article 684 of the Code of Practice. But in the instant case, according to plaintiffs’ own allegations, L. H. Summers, seizing creditor, took immediate possession of the property when it was adjudicated to him at the constable sale and sold the same on March 8, 1924, by warranty deed, to Richard LeBlanc, who, together with his wife, Dora Choate, immediately took physical possession thereof, and, from the date of their amicable partition of the property following their divorce, March 20, 1925, the defendant Dora Choate continued her uninterrupted possession of the property until this suit was filed on December 7, 1935 — •“thirteen years after Summers’ acquisition, nearly twelve years •after LeBlanc’s acquisition and nearly eleven years after Choate’s.”

The moral good faith of LeBlanc is not disputed. He paid a substantial amount for the lot in controversy; expended a considerable sum on its improvement; paid the accruing taxes; and occupied the property continuously and openly as his residence “long before he could have relied upon any plea of prescription or statute of repose.” But counsel for plaintiffs contend that the trial judge was in error in maintaining the plea of prescription acquirendi causa of ten years, under Article 3478, Civ.Code, because in the deed from Summers to LeBlanc is contained the fol *109 lowing clause, which is also contained in the act of partition, which constituted notice of their ancestor’s title, and that they are, therefore, in bad faith:

“ * * * this being the same property purchased at Constable Sale Judgment 3rd Ward Justice Court, Suit No. 168 Records J. S. Lyons, Justice of the Peace, by L. H. Summers on December 2nd, 1922 and of record in Vol. 77 of Conveyances, page 344 et seq Records of Vermilion Parish, La.”

Plaintiffs, in support of their contentions, cite as authority the following: Lee v. Long, 166 La. 1084, 118 So. 320; Templet v. Baker, 12 La.Ann. 658; McDade et al. v. Bossier Levee Board, 109 La. 625, 33 So. 628; State v. F. B. Williams Cypress Co., 131 La. 62, 58 So. 1033; Jackson v. Harris, 18 La.App. 484, 136 So. 166, 137 So. 655; Industrial Lumber Co. v. Farque et al., 162 La. 793, 111 So. 166; Wells et al. v. Blackman, 121 La. 394, 46 So. 437; Gerrold v. Barnhart, 128 La. 1099, 55 So. 688; Victoria Lumber Co. v. Dawson, 159 La. 848, 106 So. 327; Lawler v. Bradford, 113 La. 415, 37 So. 12; Sabatier v. Bowie Lumber Co., 129 La. 658, 56 So. 628; Tennent v. Caffery, 170 La. 680, 129 So. 128; Tyson v. Spearman, 190 La. 871, 183 So. 201; and 27 R.C.L. 710.

An analysis of these cases reveals that they go no further than to hold that “Where reference is made in an act of sale of real estate to the title under which the vendor holds, both acts should be consulted, and taken together, to ascertain the true description of the property.” (Italics ours.) In the case at bar we are not dealing with a question of the description of the property, but with the title thereof, and, as the sole question for our consideration is the good faith of defendants, the cases are not applicable.

“The prescription acquirendi causa of ten years is based on Article 3478 of the Revised Civil Code, as amended by Act No. 161 of 1920 and Act No. 64 of 1924, which, provides that ‘he who acquires an immovable in good faith and by just title prescribes for it in ten years. * * * ’

“ ‘The good faith, spoken of in the preceding article, is defined in the chapter which treats of possession,’ (Art.

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 69, 192 La. 103, 1939 La. LEXIS 1063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-summers-la-1939.