Landry v. Hawkins

156 So. 795
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 3, 1934
DocketNo. 1357.
StatusPublished

This text of 156 So. 795 (Landry v. Hawkins) 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
Landry v. Hawkins, 156 So. 795 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Mrs. Leah Landry, widow of Francois V. Comeaux, sold and delivered to Edwin J. Hawkins a certain tract of land with the buildings and improvements thereon. The act of sale bearing date, December 30, 1918, was passed before J. Gilbert St. Julian, notary public, and we will, for the purpose of our decision, assume that it was duly recorded in the mortgage and conveyance books. The price, $1,400, was represented by a note for the amount payable in twenty annual installments of $70 each. The vendor’s privilege and a special mortgage were retained on the property by the seller and granted by the buyer securing the purchase price with interest and attorney’s fees, etc.

On February IS, 1927, Hawkins and Delia; Comeaux, his wife, executed a note ⅜⅛ $5,-500, payable to the order of and by themselves indorsed, and, in order to secure the amount in principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, Hawkins granted a special mortgage by au *796 thentic act on the property he had purchased irom Mrs. Leah Landry, -widow. This note was first held by the Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company, but this bank, with its assets, was taken over by Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company, and in that way the note became the property of the last-named bank.

Hawkins paid the installments due on the note held by Mrs. Landry up to and including the one due on January 2, 1930. In the meantime, the note for $5,500 not having been paid, the bank instituted foreclosure proceedings against Hawkins and seized and offered the several parcels of real estate for sale, which he had mortgaged to secure it, among them the property which he had acquired from Mrs. Leah Landry, widow. But before the day of sale arrived, Mrs. Leah Landry, widow, alleging the foreclosure proceedings instituted by the bank and the failure of Hawkins to pay an installment due on her note representing the frarchase price, instituted suit against Hawkins to have the sale, which she had made- to him, dissolved. The suit to dissolve was filed November 16, 1931. In her petition she prays that the sale be dissolved, and that the mortgage, which Hawkins had imposed on the property to secure the note for $5,500, be canceled.

Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company thereupon offered to pay Mrs. Landry the balance due her by Hawkins, but she refused to receive it. A preliminary default was entered up against ITawkins in favor of Mrs. Landry, widow, but before if could be confirmed, Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company intervened in the suit, opposed the confirmation of the default, again tendered her the balance due by Hawkins, and, upon being again refused, deposited the amount in the registry of the court and prayed for judgment against her and Hawkins compelling her to accept the payment offered and tendered in extinguishment of the debt. Mrs. Landry, widow, appeared and first urged, as an exception against the petition of intervention, a plea of estoppel on the ground that the tender last made had changed the substance of the demand, and as a further exception urged that the petition sot forth no right or cause of action. The intervener amended its petition, upon which the plea of estoppel and' exception of no right or cause of action were overruled.

Mrs. Landry, widow, then answered the petition, denying that the bank was interested in the outcome of the suit between her and Hawkins, but, saving this denial, the aver-ments of fact alleged in the petition but not the conclusions are admitted to be true.

The petition of intervention admits the averments of fact in the petition of Mrs. Landry, widow, against Hawkins, to be true, but not her conclusions. Ilawkins never made any appearance in the case.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of the intervener as prayed for in its petition, ordering Mrs. Landry, widow, to accept the tender made her by the bank in extinguishment of the debt due her by Hawkins without subrogation to her rights, nawkius did not appeal. Mrs. Landry, widow, appealed.

The arduously prepared briefs of the parties have greatly interested and helped us in the examination of the case. Eor convenience and brevity we will refer to Mrs. Leah Landry, widow of Francois V. Comeaux, as Mrs. Comeaux and to Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company, intervener, as the bank. AVhile the case was in the lower court, Jasper S. Brock, state bank commissioner, was substituted as intervener in place of Commercial Bank of Lafayette & Trust Company, with authority to prosecute the suit against Mrs. Comeaux for the benefit of the bank in the same manner as the bank could have done had it not been by him taken in charge. Mr. Brock, state bank commissioner, will also be referred to as the bank. The estoppel filed by Mrs. Comeaux is abandoned in her brief. Hawkins is the son-in-law of Mrs. Comeaux.

The property, which Mrs. Comeaux sold to Hawkins, is described in the act of sale from her to him as follows: “That certain tract of land containing eleven & ¾00 superficial ar-pents with all the buildings and improvements thereon, situated in the 7th ward of the Parish of Lafayette, bounded northerly by a public road, southerly by lands of Clarence Com-eaux and A. Savoie, easterly by public school property, westerly by S. P. R. R. Branch and being lot 13, acquired by vendor in act of partition between heirs of Francois V. Comeaux.” The sale included all the improvements on the land, consisting of fences, residence, dining room, kitchen, cornerib, hay shed, and chicken coops. The act concludes with the following stipulation: “Purchaser declares, that he hereby grants unto vendor the use, usufruct and possession for the term of her natural life of the room presently occupied by lier in the residence sold herein, being a south room next to the dining room and vendor accepts same in express terms.” This stipulation is alleged by Mrs. Comeaux in her petition to dissolve as part of the consideration of the sale.

*797 Mrs. Comeaux insists that the bank, legally speaking, has no interest in the outcome of the suit between her and Hawkins. The indebtedness of Hawkins to the bank on_ account of a note for $5,500, secured by conventional mortgage granted by him on the property purchased by him from her, is established without dispute. By selling him the property, she enabled him to mortgage it to the bank. A mortgage is a species of alienation and constitutes a real right on the property bound for the discharge of the obligation. Civ. Code, arts. 3282, 2012, 2010. “In order to be entitled to intervene, it is enough to have an interest in the success of either of the parties to the suit, or an interest opposed to both.” Code of Practice, art. 390. “One may intervene either before or after issue has been joined in the cause.”- Code of Practice, art. 391. An interest in the bank opposed to both Mrs. Comeaux and E. J. Hawkins appears sufficient to justify the intervention.

Mrs. Comeaux contends that the tender in open court, made on condition that the bank be not subrogated to her rights, operates to change the substance of the demand. We find otherwise. The substance of the demand in our opinion is not changed and the tender in open court having been made in the name of the bank for the discharge of Hawkins on account of the purchase price of the property and on the express condition that the bank be not subrogated to the rights of Mrs. Comeaux. We see no ground for controversy on that subject.

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landry-v-hawkins-lactapp-1934.