Koehl v. Solari

17 So. 464, 47 La. Ann. 890, 1895 La. LEXIS 529
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 6, 1895
DocketNo. 11,775
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 So. 464 (Koehl v. Solari) 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
Koehl v. Solari, 17 So. 464, 47 La. Ann. 890, 1895 La. LEXIS 529 (La. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

The decree appealed from in this case makes absolute a rule taken by the plaintiff to coerce Fritz Jahncke to accept title to certain real estate situated in the city of New Orleans, which was adjudicated to him at public auction, conformably to a judicial decree directing and requiring a partition thereof by licitation.

It directed and required the said defendant in rule to pay the purchase price in compliance with the terms of the adjudication, and ordered that the portion thereof coming to Mrs. Bryant, individually and as tutrix, be deposited in the registry of the court, [892]*892and directed the cancellation of the legal mortgage of the minors resting against the property.

Questioning the effectualness and legal efficacy of such decree, and the contemplated cancellation of the aforesaid mortgage, the defendant in rule has prosecuted this appeal in order to procure an adjudication of this court upon the question.

For, as counsel suggest in their brief, if the decree be literally carried out, the purchaser may find himself in possession of an encumbered undivided portion of the property.

For, supposing the share of the proceeds coming to the minors be not invested in real estate, .or in mortgages on real estate, but remain uninvested in the registry of the court, would not their mortgage remain in force upon their share in the property the respondent acquired at partition sale?

• This postulate rests upon the theory that the minor’s mortgage remains upon the property until the reinvestment of the funds is actually made.

On the other hand, it is contended that, inasmuch as a judicial partition can be lawfully made contradictorily with the minors having an undivided interest in real estate, it necessarily results .that a partition sale extinguishes the minor’s mortgage and transfers it to the proceeds of sale, and that a different construction of the law would result in an embargo on the right of co-owner to have a partition of the common property.

The subjoined statement of facts will sufficiently illustrate the question of .aw that is propounded, viz.:

On the 30th of April, 1890, Angelo M. and J. Solari, brothers, jointly acquired by purchase in equal shares the property which is the subject of the present partition proceedings. Angelo M. Solari was at the time married to Georgiana Bryant. He subsequently died intestate, leaving surviving him his widow, Mrs. Georgiana Bryant, and six minor children, issue of his marriage with Miss Bryant. Joseph Solari departed this life on January 2, 1893. In his last will he bequeathed 8-21 parts of his one undivided one-half interest in the property to his sister, Mrs. Widow Catherine Koehl, and the remaining 13-21 parts he devised to the sis; minor children of his brother, Angelo M. Solari. The title to the property thus became vested in indivisión in Mrs. Georgiana Bryant Solari, as widow in community of Angelo M. Solari; in Mrs. Widow Catherine [893]*893Koehl by virtue of and as one of the legatees under Joseph Solari’s will, and in the minor children of Angelo M. Solari as heirs of their deceased father and as legatees of their uncle, Joseph Solari.

On January 2, 1894, Mrs. Koehl filed a petition in the Civil District Court for the parish of Orleans, alleging the common ownership of ' the property, and she prayed for its partition and for the appoint- ■ ment of experts to report whether it could be conveniently divided in kind. Mrs. Georgiana Bryant Solari, both individually and in her capacity as tutrix of her minor children, was duly made the party defendant to the suit. Mrs. Solari, née Bryant, filed an answer to the petition, pleading the general issue, and'praying that should the court decree a partition and sale the portion of the proceeds coming to her individually and as tutrix be paid over to her. The experts appointed having reported that the property could not be conveniently divided in kind, a family meeting, duly convened before N. B. Trist, notary public, unanimously recommended its sale at public auction, and fixed the terms of sale. The deliberation of the family meeting having been homologated, the learned judge of the lower court, after hearing the evidence, decreed a partition and sale at auction in accordance with the recommendations of the family meeting. After proper advertisement the property was adjudicated for the price and upon the terms fixed by the family meeting to one Fritz Jahncke. The latter refused to take the title to the property and to pay the purchase price thereof, claiming that the general mortgage in favor of Mrs. Solari’s minor children resting upon her interest in the property sold had not been extinguished, by the mere fact of the sale, and that, therefore, the title was encumbered, and not such as he could be compelled to accept. The plaintiff, Mrs. Koehl, then took a rule against Fritz Jahncke, the recorder of mortgages, and Mrs. Georgiana Bryant Solari, individually and as tutrix, to show cause why the minors’ mortgage should not be erased and annulled and canceled and referred to the proceeds of sale, and why Fritz Jahncke, adjudicatee and purchaser, should not be condemned to accept the title to the property.

Subsequently a supplemental rule was filed by Mrs. Koehl, ordering the defendants in the original rule to show cause why the portion of the proceeds of sale coming and belonging to Mrs. Bryant,individually and as tutrix, should not be deposited in the registry of the Civil District Court, to be thereafter invested in real property [894]*894upon the advice of a family meeting, to be convened for that purpose and upon order of court.

The under-tutor of the minor children of Mrs. Georgiana Bryant Solari, James A. Koehl, was served with a copy of this supplemental as well as the original rule, and was made a party defendant thereto, and upon final trial of both rules he duly appeared. The learned judge a quo made the rule absolute, decreed the cancellation of the minor’s mortgage, condemned Pritz Jahncke to accept the title to the property and to pay the purchase price in compliance with the terms of the adjudication, and ordered the portion of the price belonging to Mrs. Bryant;, individually and as tutrix, to be deposited in the registry of the court in accordance with the prayer of the supplemental rule.

. Simplified, the question is, whether the decree of the court a qua,. requiring the cancellation of the minor’s mortgage upon the purchaser making a deposit in the registry of the court, of “ the portion of the proceeds of sale coming and belonging to Mrs. Bryant, individually and as tutrix,” should be affirmed, as fully relieving the property of said incumbrance.

The foregoing statement discloses this to be the case of a judicial partition of incumbered property, held in common by heirs, some of whom are minors. It is property in which the mother and natural tutrix has an interest in common with her minor children, with their legal mortgage resting on the joint interest owned by the natural tutrix.

The brothers A. M. and J. Solari acquired the property in their names jointly; and at the death of the former, his six minor children inherited his one undivided half interest in the property of the community, that is to say one-fourth in the whole property. Another fourth interest devolved upon his surviving widow, Georgiana Bryant.

At the death of J.

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Bluebook (online)
17 So. 464, 47 La. Ann. 890, 1895 La. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koehl-v-solari-la-1895.