Lacour v. Crais

367 So. 2d 1203, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 3092
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 1978
DocketNo. 9744
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 367 So. 2d 1203 (Lacour v. Crais) 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
Lacour v. Crais, 367 So. 2d 1203, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 3092 (La. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

SAMUEL, Judge.

Plaintiff, Lurry D. Lacour, filed a posses-sory action against defendant, Alvin B. Crais, alleging the continued existence in the Jefferson Parish conveyance records of a sale by Ford Investment Corporation to defendant of five lots of ground in Kenner, Louisiana constituted a disturbance in law of plaintiff’s possession of the property. The lots in suit are designated as Nos. 44, 45, 46, 47 and 48 of Square No. 40 in Highway Park Subdivision, Kenner, Louisiana. Defendant answered, denied plaintiff’s allegations, and reconvened alleging 10 year acquisitive prescription in his favor and praying for judgment declaring him the actual and legal owner of the property in question. Plaintiff answered the reconven-tional demand and affirmatively asserted res judicata and judicial estoppel.

After a trial on the merits, judgment was rendered overruling Lacour’s exceptions but nevertheless declaring him the owner of the property. From that judgment, defendant appealed.1

In 1954 plaintiff and George D. Williams acquired from Pierre Laroux certain immovable property, including the lots in suit, in Highway Park Subdivision, Kenner, Louisiana. On August 7, 1956 plaintiff and Williams sold this property by act of credit sale to Ford Investment Corporation. The consideration for the sale was $10,000 cash, together with a promissory note for $40,000 secured by mortgage on the property. The note was held by plaintiff.

In March, 1957 representatives of Ford Investment Corporation asked plaintiff to execute a partial release of mortgage covering some of the lots (including the lots in suit) secured by the $40,000 mortgage. The stated purpose for the partial release was to allow Ford Investment Corporation to sell those lots to a third person.

At the appointed time, plaintiff appeared before a notary and two witnesses and executed, in triplicate, that partial release of mortgage. The alleged purchaser did not appear for the closing and plaintiff departed from the office where the closing was to take place to attend another meeting. Plaintiff left the executed releases in the possession of an officer of Ford Investment Corporation. Before leaving the area, he telephoned the office and was advised the purchasers had not yet arrived. Plaintiff did not then go to the office and retrieve the executed partial releases.

Later, plaintiff contacted Ford’s officer regarding the passage of the act of sale, and eventually requested return of his partial release. Approximately one week after the release was executed, one of Ford’s representatives delivered to plaintiff a sealed envelope, which plaintiff believed contained the three executed copies of the partial release of mortgage. Plaintiff did not open the envelope, but instead placed it in his safe. He stated he assumed the proposed sale had never taken place, since he did not receive any compensation for executing the act of partial release and did not present Ford’s promissory note to be paraphed for identification therewith.

On April 3,1957, Ford Investment Corporation sold the property in suit to defendant by act of credit sale before the same notary who had passed the act of partial release. Plaintiff had no knowledge of this sale. On May 23,1958, Ford also sold the other lots it had acquired from plaintiff and Williams (other than the property now in dispute) to American Cigarette Service. That sale was passed by one of Ford’s corporate officers. The certificates attached to this sale did not show plaintiff’s mortgage because shortly before the certificates were dated the partial mortgage release was filed with the Clerk of Court evidencing plaintiff’s release of his mortgage on the lots sold to American Cigarette Service and the lots in suit.

Several months after plaintiff received the envelope purportedly containing his partial release, he discovered construction in progress on lots he and Williams had sold [1206]*1206to Ford on which he had not executed a release. Examination of the public records by his attorney revealed his mortgage had been cancelled in part.

On January 3, 1961, plaintiff filed a petition for executory process against Ford Investment Corporation, seeking to foreclose on the mortgage securing the promissory note given him as partial consideration for the sale to Ford. An order directing the issuance of executory process was signed by the court, and a notice of seizure was recorded in the public records of Jefferson Parish on July 17, 1961. Subsequently, plaintiff obtained court authority to annex to the original petition for executory process the resolution of the board of directors of Ford Investment Corporation authorizing the mortgage sought to be foreclosed. Plaintiff also obtained court permission to serve notice of demand and seizure on the Secretary of State because service could not be made on Ford’s registered agents and the whereabouts of that corporation and its officers were otherwise unknown.

Plaintiff’s attorneys advised the court they would not sell any of the property subject to the order of executory process until all interested parties had an opportunity to intervene and be heard. Subsequently, numerous interventions were filed in the foreclosure proceeding by various persons. Some intervenors alleged plaintiff’s mortgage had been cancelled and extinguished as to the property owned by them, and others alleged the property was subject to their own mortgages.

In addition, the trial judge determined certain property owners whose title would be affected by plaintiff’s foreclosure proceeding had not appeared to assert their rights in the property and, accordingly, he appointed an attorney to represent their interests as curator ad hoc. The curator filed a petition of intervention on behalf of all owners whose property might be subject to the plaintiff’s vendor’s lien and mortgage except those property owners who otherwise appeared in person or through counsel. The curator attached to his intervention, as an exhibit, a list of the names of the various owners who appeared to own property subject to the foreclosure proceeding, together with the acquisition date for each such owner. Defendant and his acquisition were listed in this exhibit. Plaintiff did not furnish defendant’s address to the curator because, while he had previously met defendant, defendant’s whereabouts were unknown to him. Moreover, defendant was not listed in the telephone directory for either Orleans or Jefferson Parishes.

On August 31, 1963, a hearing was held to determine whether injunctive relief should be granted intervenors. During the course of this proceeding plaintiff agreed to amend his pleading in return for certain consideration, and to dismiss the foreclosure as to those lots on which a claim had been asserted by intervenors. During this same proceeding the curator advised the court the property at issue in this proceeding was still affected by the executory process and further stated he did not know the whereabouts or existence of Mr. “Craig”. On January 25, 1965, another hearing was held on the claims asserted by intervention not previously compromised. In due course, the court ruled in favor of the intervenors, and plaintiff appealed to this court.

This court reversed the trial judge’s decision and, only as to lots fraudulently added to the release after its execution, held persons purchasing immovable property on which a mortgage had been fraudulently released were not entitled to rely on the public records.2 The Supreme Court granted writs but the matter was compromised.

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Related

Succession of Ruppert
602 So. 2d 157 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1992)
Lacour v. Crais
369 So. 2d 141 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
367 So. 2d 1203, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 3092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacour-v-crais-lactapp-1978.