La Caze v. Boycher

80 So. 2d 583, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 823
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1955
Docket4020
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 So. 2d 583 (La Caze v. Boycher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Caze v. Boycher, 80 So. 2d 583, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 823 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

80 So.2d 583 (1955)

J. G. LA CAZE, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Guy BOYCHER et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 4020.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 27, 1955.

*584 Fraser & Fraser, Many, for appellants.

Kay & Kay, DeRidder, for appellee.

TATE, Judge.

Defendants have appealed from judgment in a petitory suit recognizing plaintiff's title to 7.2 acres of land in Vernon Parish.

This matter was previously before this Court, but was remanded for impleader of an additional party defendant, see 71 So.2d 665. The facts are very fully stated in this prior opinion.

Briefly, plaintiff LaCaze in December 1945, by cash warranty deed acquired title to property in Vernon Parish described as:

Beginning at the southeast corner of NE¼ of NE¼, of Section 10, Township 1 North of Range 9 West and running north along said section line a distance of 444.4 feet to the point of beginning: Thence run north along said section line an additional distance of 444.4 feet; thence west to East side of the Highway 171 right of way; thence south along the east side of said highway 171 right of way a distance of 444.4 feet, thence east to the point of beginning, together with all improvements thereon.

LaCaze purchased from (a) J. H. Taylor, who had purchased from (b) Morris Belaire, who had purchased by two separate sales from (c) Rene Belaire and A. J. Comeaux their respective half-interests in the property. By stipulation, it is admitted that A. J. Comeaux and Rene Belaire had acquired title to the above described property *585 under a complete clain emanating from the U. S. Government.

In none of the deeds is the acreage of this tract indicated. At the suggestion of this Court in its original opinion, a survey was introduced in the supplemental proceedings below which showed the acreage of this tract to be 7.2 acres.

The conflicting claims of the parties arise from two separate tax sales for nonpayment of 1943 taxes made on May 13, 1944.

Assessment number 955 in the name of Morris Belaire contained essentially the description of the property as noted above, with the addition of the following: "2A(cres) Cut over Pine $10. Imprs on City Lots $140." The entire property offered for nonpayment of this tax assessment was purchased by A. L. Jones, who subsequently on March 20, 1946, executed a quitclaim deed to Morris Belaire, vendor in plaintiff's chain of title.

Substantially, the legal question at issue is whether this assessment and the payment of tax liability thereunder by tax sale constituted a tax assessment and tax satisfaction for the entire 7.2 acre tract in question, despite its description as containing only 2 acres.

If so, this satisfaction of the tax liability of the owners of the land renders an absolute nullity of the other tax sale for nonpayment of taxes due for the same year under assessment number 1064 in the name of A. J. Comeaux and Rene Belaire, under which defendants claim.

Assessment 1064 contained essentially the same description of the property as noted above, except that instead of describing the property as having 2 acres of cut-over pine (as in assessment 955), to the description herein was added "7A(cres) Cut Over Pine $30." By tax sale under this assessment, J. W. Mathis purchased the "West 5 acres fronting Highway 171 of the following" (description follows by metes and bounds as noted above). This portion of the property assessed was purchased under the provision that the whole property need not be sold if a bid sufficient to pay the entire unpaid taxes and costs be received for only a portion of the property assessed, in which case only the portion is sold.

J. W. Mathis sold the southern 2½ acres of this tract to Guy and Mamie Boycher, the original defendants herein, but retained the northern 2½ acres thereof; it was for failure to implead co-owner J. W. Mathis that on the original hearing in this Court, the matter was remanded. This was done, and certain additional evidence educed in the supplemental proceeding below.

Plaintiff, purchasing from him who owned the property prior to tax sale, and having redeemed the property assessed to this owner and sold at tax sale, relies upon the principle: "It is the settled jurisprudence that a tax sale of property upon which the taxes have previously been paid is an absolute nullity, not curable by the prescriptive period provided for in the Constitution", Third District Land Co., v. Lassere, 204 La. 451, 15 So.2d 850, at page 852; Chapman-Storm Lumber Co. v. Board of Commissioners, etc., 196 La. 1039, 200 So. 455; and the many authorities cited in both, these cases.

Defendants rely on the validity of the tax sale to J. W. Mathis dated May 13, 1944, under Assessment 1064-Comeaux. Hence, they argue, these proceedings commenced May 30, 1952, are perempted, being filed more than five years after said tax sale.

Cited to us are the following provisions of Article 10, Section 11, LSA-Constitution of the State of Louisiana:

"No sale of property for taxes shall be set aside for any cause, except on proof of payment of the taxes for which the property was sold prior to the date of the sale, unless the proceeding to annul is instituted * * * within five years from the date of the recordation of the tax deed, if no notice is given. The fact that taxes were paid on a part of the property sold, prior to the sale thereof, or that part thereof was not subject to taxation, shall not be cause for annulling the sale as to any part *586 thereof on which the taxes for which it was sold were due and unpaid * * *." (Italics ours.)

To sustain the tax sale to codefendant J. W. Mathis under Assessment 1064-Comeaux, necessarily we must find that the earlier tax sale under Assessment 955-Belaire did not satisfy the 1943 tax liability at least as to the western 5 acres of the 7.2 acre tract.

The District Court found that the tax sale under Assessment 955-Belaire was prior to that under Assessment 1064-Comeaux and Belaire. Although the sheriff's deputy in charge of the tax sale did not remember the order of these specific sales, he testified that the usual custom and procedure of Vernon Parish tax sales was to offer for sale for unpaid taxes the property in numerical order of unpaid assessments, the lower-numbered assessments first. He was corroborated by the former sheriff as of the time of the tax sale, and not contradicted by any testimony. We feel the District Court's finding is correct that the tax sale under Belaire Assessment 955 occurred prior to that under Comeaux Assessment 1064.

Defendants urge, first, that the tax sale under Assessment 955-Belaire is null because the property assessed is impossible to ascertain by its description, the boundaries indicated including 7 acres and the property being described as containing only 2 acres. Defendants say that thus it is impossible to know which two acres of the tract is assessed. However, in the first place, we do not believe the description is so indefinite as to render the tax sale a nullity. The description is by metes and bounds, describing a point of beginning in a certain section, township, and range, thence proceeding north along the section line for 444.4 feet, thence west to Highway 171, thence south along highway right of way 444.4 feet, thence east to point of beginning. This description adequately describes the property so as to identify it unmistakably and is thus more than sufficient for purposes of tax sale description. See Jackson v. Irion, 196 La. 728, 200 So. 18, 133 A.L.R. 566.

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 2d 583, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-caze-v-boycher-lactapp-1955.