Lake, Inc. v. Brown

217 So. 2d 212, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4807
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 1968
DocketNo. 3083
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 217 So. 2d 212 (Lake, Inc. v. Brown) 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
Lake, Inc. v. Brown, 217 So. 2d 212, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4807 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinions

BARNETTE, Judge.

The plaintiff, Lake, Inc., brought this suit on December 1, 1966, to quiet its alleged title to Lots 15, 16, 17, 18, Block 4, Clearview Estates, Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. The petition was answered and defended by Joseph E. Brown, Raymond J. Brown and Edward V. Brown, who claimed [213]*213ownership of the lots in question as heirs of Mary Musso Brown, deceased. Judgment was rendered, signed and filed October 27, 1967, dismissing plaintiff’s petition with prejudice at its cost. The judgment specifically decreed that a tax sale to plaintiff’s vendor, York Realty Company, and its purported sale to plaintiff were nul-lities, and Lake was enjoined and prohibited from asserting any claim of ownership. From this judgment Lake, Inc., has appealed.

The question presented is strictly one of law and arises out of the following undisputed sequence of events.

On May 4, 1933, Mutual Investment Co., Inc., sold the lots in question to Mary Musso Brown and the deed of conveyance was duly recorded. Since the record owner of the lots on January 1, 1933, was Mutual Investment Co., Inc., the assessment for that year was made in the name of Mutual. The taxes for that year, 1933, assessed in the name of Mutual, were not paid and the lots in question, along with other property assessed in Mutual’s name, were adjudicated to the State on December 29, 1934, for nonpayment of 1933 taxes. However, subsequently the lots were carried on the assessment rolls in the name of Mrs. Mary Musso Brown and the taxes for 1934 were assessed accordingly.

The 1934 taxes assessed in the name of Mary M. Brown were not paid, and the lots were again adjudicated to the State, December 31, 1935. At this point there were two adjudications to the State of record covering the same lots for two successive years of unpaid taxes. The validity of the second adjudication is one of the questions which has been argued on appeal.

On April 24, 1937, Mrs. Brown redeemed the lots by certificate of redemption under authority of section 53 of Act 170 of 1898, and the act of redemption was properly filed. She paid all State and Parish tax assessments for 1934, 1935, and 1936, evidence of which was required before issuance of the certificate.

Sometime thereafter Mrs. Brown died and her heirs, named above, were recognized as such and placed in legal possession of the four lots in question.

Mutual Investment Co., Inc., made application for redemption of the lots (among other property) adjudicated in 1933, and a certificate of redemption was issued May 30, 1936.1 Mutual failed to make the installment payments for redemption under the provisions of Acts 161 of 1934 and 47 of 1938. Pursuant to the authority of those acts, the property, including the lots in question, was again advertised for tax sale as property assessed to Mutual, the delinquent tax debtor, and sold by the Sheriff of Jefferson Parish to York Realty Company, October 25, 1944.

The plaintiff, Lake, Inc., acquired from York by deed, without warranty, all of York’s right, title and interest in the lots in question along with other described property. The date of this deed was July 18, 1966. It is upon the title thus acquired by Lake that the present suit is founded.

Counsel for the Brown heirs, appellees herein, contend that the redemption by Mrs. Brown in 1937 of the lots adjudicated to the State for nonpayment of the taxes for 1934, when the lots had already been adjudicated to the State for nonpayment of the 1933 taxes, notwithstanding the specific reference to the year 1934, was a divestiture by the State of all its right, title and interest, whether the State acquired its title by the adjudication for 1933 or 1934 taxes, citing Johnston v. Nanney, 244 La. 959, 155 So.2d 196 (1963).

Counsel for Lake, appellant, argues that the adjudication in 1935 for nonpayment [214]*214of 1934 taxes was a nullity for the reason that the State was already vested with title by virtue of the adjudication for the 1933 taxes. From this circumstance it is argued that the purported redemption by Mrs. Brown in 1937 of the invalid adjudication was a nullity and conveyed no title to Mrs. Brown.

Neither counsel, by brief or in oral argument, made a point of the circumstance, which was clarified by the stipulation filed herein upon our request, that the State had divested itself of title acquired by the adjudication for 1933 taxes, by its redemption to Mutual in 1936 which preceded the purported redemption to Mrs. Brown in 1937. Mrs. Brown having acquired the lots by deed from Mutual in 1933, as Mutual’s vendee, became the beneficiary of Mutual’s 1936 redemption of the lots in question along with other property. It appears, therefore, aside from any question of the validity of the purported redemption of 1937, Mrs. Brown was in 1937 the owner of the redeemed property.

The redemption by Mutual in 1936, which inured to the benefit of Mrs. Brown, was under the provisions of Act 161 of 1934, which act provided a special relief to delinquent tax debtors whose property had been adjudicated to the State during the “depression” years. This act provided for redemption by payment of the taxes only for the year of adjudication, and further provided a method of payment in annual installments. That act provided in part as follows:

“ * * * The Register of the State Land Office, or the governing authority of such political subdivision, shall execute and deliver to such persons a certificate of the same in the following manner, which certificate shall be held and taken as evidence of the redemption of such lot or lands in the name of the person who was assessed with the same at the time of adjudication. Such certificate shall be signed by the Register of the State Land Office, or by the Mayor, Chairman, President or corresponding official of the political subdivision involved, and also by the person, firm or corporation redeeming, and shall contain a stipulation for the payment of the said price of redemption in five equal payments, such amount to be paid in annual installments, beginning one year from date of such certificate, and due in one, two, three, four and five years from date, with interest thereon from maturity at five per cent per annum, until paid, and shall further contain a stipulation that a tax lien and mortgage, in favor of the State or the political subdivision involved shall be retained, and that the person, firm or corporation redeeming consents that default in the payment of any installment shall mature all installments remaining unpaid, that should any installment be not promptly paid at maturity, the Tax Collector of the parish or political subdivision involved shall without suit seize, advertise and sell said property in the manner provided for tax sales for the unpaid portion of such installments * * *.
“Section 2. On January 1st after any such certificate of redemption has been issued, the property redeemed shall be assessed in the name of the person, firm or corporation redeeming the same or his successor or assign,

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Related

Lake Inc. v. Brown
219 So. 2d 174 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
217 So. 2d 212, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-inc-v-brown-lactapp-1968.