Lawton v. Smith

146 So. 361, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 124
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1933
DocketNo. 4505.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 146 So. 361 (Lawton v. Smith) 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
Lawton v. Smith, 146 So. 361, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 124 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

G. Percy Smith, was the owner of the following described two lots in the city of Nat-chitoches, La., to wit:

(1) That certain tract or parcel of ground in the city of Natchitoches, Natchitoches parish, La., on the west side of New Second street, having a front on said street of 46 feet, with a depth of 236 feet, being bounded on the north by G. Percy Smith, south by Dezendorf, west by G. Percy Smith, and east by New Second street. On this property there is located an apartment house; and

(2) That certain lot of ground situated in the city of Natchitoches, bounded on the north by Mrs. Annie Freeman, on the south •by G. Percy Smith, on the east by New Second street, and on the west by the L. & N. W. right of way, on which property there is located a dwelling house, or residence. The two pieces of property are contiguous, as is shown by the following plat:

On December 28, 1926, G. Percy Smith executed a mortgage in favor of himself for the sum of $1,250, with 7 per cent, interest from date, and indorsed the note and transferred same to Dr. Lawton. The property described in the mortgage is as follows: “That certain house and lot situated on the west side of New Second street, bounded north by Mrs. Annie Freeman, south by E. L. Dezendorf, east by New Second street, and west by right-of-way of old L. & N. W. Railroad, being the same property acquired by G. Percy Smith from Mrs. Mena Johnson.”

On June 19, 1926, he executed a mortgage on the property on which the apartment house is located (and hereafter spoken of *362 as apartment house property) in favor of himself for $2,000, with 7 per cent, interest from date, indorsed the note, and transferred it to Dr. Dawton.

On March 31, 1928, he executed another mortgage on the apartment house property for the sum of $2,000, in favor of himself, and indorsed the note and transferred it to Dr. Lawton.

On March 22, 1929, G. Percy Smith executed a mortgage for the sum of $4,150 against the property known as the dwelling house or residence property. The mortgage was made “to myself,” and the note indorsed and transferred to the De Soto Securities Company.

On January 24,1931, Dr. Lawton instituted foreclosure proceedings hy ordinary process on the three mortgages held hy him, as above described. The mortgagor, G. Percy Smith, answered the suit and alleged error in the description of $1,250 mortgage, alleged that it was the intention of all parties for this mortgage to cover only the apartment house property and not the residence property, and prayed for judgment correcting the description contained in the mortgage and releasing the residence property from the execution of said mortgage. There was judgment for plaintiff, Dr. Lawton, for the amount sued "for, and recognizing the special mortgages against said property as follows:

The two $2,000 mortgages to be recognized and enforced against the property known as “apartment house property”; and the $1,250 mortgage to be recognized and enforced against the property known as the “residence property.” This judgment was signed February 25, 1931, and no appeal was taken therefrom. A fieri facias was issued on April 2, 1931, and the property was seized and advertised for sale to take place on Saturday, May 16, 1931.

On the day of the sale, the De Soto Securities Company filed an intervention and third opposition and secured an order from the district judge to the sheriff to appraise and sell separately, each from the other, the two described properties, and to retain in his hands, pending further orders of the court, the proceeds from the sale of the property known as the residence property. The sale was held, as advertised, and the two properties sold separately. The apartment house property was bid in by Dr. Lawton for the sum of $5,000 and the residence property by the De Soto Securities for $4,000. On the apartment house property, the taxes and cost of sale, amounting to $263.26, were paid by Dr. Lawton, and the balance of $4,736.74 was retained by Dr. Lawton to discharge prior paving liens and to apply pro tanto > on his judgment recognizing his mortgage against .this property. The amount he retained was insufficient to discharge the amount, due under "the two mortgages against this property, of $2,000 each, together with interest- and attorney’s fees, after paying the prior paving liens.

On the residence property, the De Soto Securities Company paid to the sheriff the amount of the principal, interest, and attorney’s fees on Dr. Lawton’s mortgage for $1,-250, which was recognized in the judgment, amounting to $1,508.14, plus the amount of taxes, and cost of sale, amounting to $335.25, or a total of $1,843.39, and retained in his hands the sum of $2,156.61, for the purpose of discharging prior paving liens and to be credited pro -tanto on its mortgage and note in the sum of $4,150.

There is no contest now over the taxes and cost in the sum of $335.25 paid by the De Soto Securities Company to the sheriff. The only contest is over the distribution of the sum of $1,508.14, the amount of principal, interest, and attorney’s fees of the $1,250 mortgage held by Dr. Lawton.

Third opponent alleged it was the holder and owner of the mortgage note above described in the amount of $4,150. It alleged that G. Percy Smith, at the time he executed the $1,250 mortgage to Dr. Lawton, was a married man with children, that said mortgage did not contain a homestead waiver, and that the mortgage held by it did contain a homestead waiver, and that it is entitled to be paid $2,000 out of the sale price of the residence property before any part of the $1,250 mortgage is paid. However, this question has passed out of the case; it being admitted that the $2,000 claimed under the homestead waiver was retained by third opponent when settling with the sheriff for the purchase price of the residence property.

Third opponent further objected to the items of taxes, insurance, etc., claimed by Dr. Law-ton in his original suit. However, the objections are not urged here and have been abandoned. Third opponent alleged that the $1,250 mortgage was intended only to cover the apartment house property, and that it was error in preparing the mortgage to cover both properties, the same allegation unsuccessfully urged by G. Percy Smith, mortgagor, in the original suit on the mortgage notes. It prays that the judgment of the lower court he corrected and reformed so as to enforce the $1,250 mortgage against the apartment ■house property only; or, in the alternative, against both properties and not against the residence property alone, as decreed by the lower court.

It further alleged and prayed that the $1,-250 mortgage be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of both properties proportionately to the amount for which each was appraised and sold, and that the remainder of the proceeds from the sale of the residence property be applied to the payment of its mortgage in the sum of $4,150.

The only question now before us for deter *363 mination on the merits is, Out of which fund should the $1,250 mortgage he paid, whether out of the proceeds from the sale of the apartment house, the dwelling house, or out of both, in proportion to the amount received from each?

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 361, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawton-v-smith-lactapp-1933.