Le Blanc v. Babin

2 So. 2d 225, 197 La. 825, 1941 La. LEXIS 1086
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 3, 1941
DocketNo. 35861.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 So. 2d 225 (Le Blanc v. Babin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Le Blanc v. Babin, 2 So. 2d 225, 197 La. 825, 1941 La. LEXIS 1086 (La. 1941).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

The petitioners are the owners in the proportions of an undivided one-third interest to each in and to the following described property: An undivided one-half interest in and to the West half of Section 4 and the Southeast quarter of Section 4, Township 9, South Range 2 East, 490.95 acres, that part of Southeast one-fourth of Section 5, Township 9, South Range 2 East lying in Ascension Parish, 162.40 acres, that part of West half of Section 33, Township 8, South Range 2 East in Ascension Parish, 179.25 acres, approximately; the Southeast quarter of Section 33, Township 8, South' Range 2 East, 102.78 acres in the Southeast, East of River, Parish of Ascension, containing 995.38 acres, more or less, according to the official plat of the survey of said land in' the State Land Office, being the property acquired by vendor of the Board of Commissioners for the Pontchartrain Levee District by Patent No. L-103, March 29, 1926.

*829 Petitioners acquired the entire property by purchase from one Joe Gottlieb on April 13, 1926, by authentic act of sale passed before S. J. Gottlieb, a notary public in and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana, duly recorded on April 24, 1926, in Conveyance Book 65, Folio 494, of the records of the Clerk’s Office of the Parish of Ascension.

Subsequently, petitioners sold a one-half interest therein to the late Saul J. Gottlieb, and likewise disposed of the timber thereon with the right of removal for a definite period, but petitioners have, at all times since April 13, 1926, .been the owners of the undivided one-half interest in said property above described.

The defendants, Benton P. Babin, Andrew J. Babin, and Wickliffe M. Babin, claim to have acquired the property of petitioners on the 28th day of October, 1933, at a tax sale made in the matter of “State of Louisiana against Delinquent Tax Debtors” for the taxes due to the State of Louisiana and the Parish of Ascension, for the year, 1932, assessed according to the advertisement and tax deed, in the name of “Burton, Le Blanc, et als.,” the deed under which defendants qlaim having been recorded on November 22, 1933, in Conveyance Book 73, Folio 75, of the records of the 1 Parish of Ascension.

(1) Petitioners attack the tax sale as null and void, each ground for nullity being pleaded alternatively, in the following order in which they are set forth:

(a) That said property for the year 1932 was assessed in the name of “LeBlanc, Burton, et als., St. Gabriel, La.,” and that said assessment was consequently illegal, null and void, because your petitioners’ deed to said property was filed and recorded legally and properly in the Conveyance Records of the Parish of Ascension on April 24, 1926, and because your petitioners were the record owners at all times thereafter of the said property, and the assessor of Ascension Parish was required to assess the property to them in their proper names.

(b) That the assessment was illegal, null and void in that said property was erroneously and improperly described as follows:

No. of Acres

497.69

163.65 Acs. W y2 of Sec. 4-9-2

81.82 Acs. SE *4, Sec. 4-9-2

81.20 Acs. SE %, Sec. 5-9-2

11.39 Acs. SE 14, Sec. 33-8-2

89.63 Acs. Frc. W y2 Sec. 33-8-2

. (c) That the said attempted sale was further null and void in that, in violation of the provisions of Act No. 170 of the Legislature of Louisiana of 1898, and particularly Sections 50 and 51 thereof as amended, no demand for the payment of taxes, no notice of the delinquency of the taxes, and no notice of the intended tax sale were ever served upon your petitioners or either of them, or addressed to your petitioners or either of them, or forwarded to your petitioners or either of them, or received by your petitioners or either of them, although your petitioners were the owners of the said property at all times during the years 1932 and 1933 and were taxpayers entitled to notice.

*831 Plaintiffs have also set out other grounds of nullity of the tax sale, which we do not deem it necessary to discuss.

(2) The trial judge held that the assessment was legal and valid, and that a notice of the delinquency of the taxes and of the intended tax sale, forwarded by registered mail by the sheriff of the Parish of Ascension, addressed to “J. Burton LeBlanc et als., St. Gabriel, La.,” and receipted for by one “John Richard, agent,” was a legal and valid notice. Petitioners contend that John Richard was not the agent or representative of either of the petitioners, nor was he authorized in any way to act for petitioners and, if the said notice was actually sent, then it was illegal, null and void and of no effect.

(3) Judgment was rendered in this case dismissing the suit of petitioners, confirming the title of defendants and recognizing defendants as the sole owners of the property in dispute, which is described in the judgment as “An undivided one-half interest in and to: The West half of Section 4 and the Southeast quarter of Section 4, Township 9, South Range 2 East, 490.95 acres, that part of the Southeast one-fourth Section 5, Township 9, South Range 2 East lying in Ascension Parish, 162.40 acres, that part of West half Section 33, Township 8, South Range 2 East in Ascension Parish, 179.25 acres, approximately; the Southeast quarter of Section 33, Township 8, South Range 2 East, 162.78 acres, in the Southeast, East of River, Parish of Ascension, containing 995.38 acres, more or less, according to the official plat of the survey of said land in the State Land Office.” Tr. p. 84. (Italics ours.)

From this judgment petitioners have appealed.'

(4)The assessment of this property as it appears on the 1932 assessment roll for the Parish of Ascension, on page 214, assessment number 4132, is as follows:

“Le Blanc, Burton, et als., St. Gabriel, La. “497.69 acres—

163.65 Acs. W % of Sec. 4-9-2

81.82 Acs. SE J4, Sec. 4-9-2

81.20 Acs. SE i/4, Sec. 5-9-2

11.39 Acs. SE Sec. 33-8-2

89.63 Acs. Frc. W y2 Sec. 33-8-2”

See copy of Assessment, Tr. p. 61. (Italics ours.)

This property was sold to defendants at tax sale, for delinquent state and parish taxes of 1932, on October 28, 1933, under the same description.

In the present case the assessor has assessed the whole of each such subdivision, and has followed it up with one-half of the acreage, except in the assessment of the Southeast of Section 33-8-2 “at 11.39 acres,” when this particular quarter of the section contains “162.78 acres” as shown in deed of the entire property purchased by plaintiffs from Joe Gottlieb on April 13, 1926, by authentic act of sale, duly recorded April 24, 1926, in Conveyance Book 65, Folio 494 of the records of the Clerk’s Office of the Parish of Ascension. Besides, the assessment is not made in the name of “Burton LeBlanc, et als.” but in the name of “LeBlanc, Burton, et als.”

*833

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Bluebook (online)
2 So. 2d 225, 197 La. 825, 1941 La. LEXIS 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-blanc-v-babin-la-1941.