Levenberg v. Shanks

115 So. 641, 165 La. 419, 1928 La. LEXIS 1733
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 18, 1928
DocketNo. 28840.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 115 So. 641 (Levenberg v. Shanks) 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
Levenberg v. Shanks, 115 So. 641, 165 La. 419, 1928 La. LEXIS 1733 (La. 1928).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a suit to quiet a tax title, instituted under Act 101 of 1898, after the laps,e of more than three years from the recordation of the tax deed. The land that the tax deed purports to convey is lots 47, 48, 49, and 50, in square No. 233, in the Second district of New Orleans, bounded by, Memphis and Vicksburg streets, Harrison avenue and Bragg street. Plaintiff relies, in part, on the peremption of three years, prescribed by section 11 of article 10 of the Constitution of 1921, to ¿btain judgment quieting her tax title.

The defenses to this action are that the peremption of three years, relied upon by plaintiff, is not well founded, for the reason that defendants have been in the actual possession of the property since the date they acquired title to it, which was in May, 1922, *421 and that their author in title, the New Orleans Land Company, was in actual possession of it at the time of the tax sale, and up to the time of the transfer by that company to defendants; that the tax sale, which was made in 1922, for the taxes of 1921, is null, because the property was assessed in the name of William A. Clark, who was not the owner of it, instead of to the New Orleans Land Company, which then owned it; that the sale is also null, because no notice of intention to sell for delinquent taxes was given to the New Orleans Land Company,- the owner of record at the time of the sale; and that the sale is also null, because it was made under a defective advertisement in the name of William A. Clark. Though not pleaded, it is also urged, under the evidence adduced on the trial, that the taxes for the year 1921, for which the property was sold, were paid prior to the sale.

The defendants called their vendor, the New Orleans Land Company, in warranty, and asked for judgment against it, in the event plaintiff’s tax title is quieted, for $1,-200, which represents the purchase price paid by them for the property, with legal interest thereon from May 2, 1923, the date of their purchase; for $100, which represents the taxes paid by them; and for $3,800, which they aver is the loss they will sustain if deprived of the property, that amount being the increase in the value of the property since defendants purchased it.

The New Orleans Land Company appeared in response to the call in warranty, and, for answer to plaintiff’s demand, adopted the defenses urged by defendants, and, for answer to defendants’ demand for a moneyed judgment against it, denied all liability to them.

In our view, the first question that should be considered is whether the peremption of three years, pleaded by plaintiffs, has any application to this case. This peremption is established by section 11 of article 10 of the Constitution of 1921. The section, so far as is pertinent, reads as follows:

“No sale of property for taxes shall be set aside for any cause, except on proof of payment of the taxes for which the property was sold prior to the date of the sale, unless the proceeding to annul is instituted within six months from seryiee of notice of sale, which notice shall not be served until the time of redemption shall have expired and within three years from the date of the recordation of the tax deed, if no notice is given. * *• * ”

It is -obvious from this section, if the peremption established by it is applicable to the facts of this case, that it bars every defense urged against the quieting of the tax title, save that of prior payment of the taxes for which the property was sold. But the peremption established by that section does not accrue when the owner, at the time of the tax sale, remáins in possession of the property. His continuing in possession, notwithstanding the sale, is a continuous protest against the sale. This was so held under similar provisions in the Constitutions of 1898 (article 233) and 1913 (article 233), and the ruling is equally applicable under the provision contained in the present Constitution. Carey v. Cagney, 109 La. 77, 33 So. 89; Gauthreaux v. Theriot, 121 La. 872, 46 So. 892, 126 Am. St. Rep. 328; Charbonnet v. State Realty Co., Limited, 155 La. 1044, 99 So. 865; Fellman’s Heirs v. Interstate Land Co., 163 La. 529, 112 So. 405. However, the possession here referred to is not the civil possession that springs from a title deed, nor the constructive possession that may follow when actual corporeal possession ceases. The possession here referred to, as said in Carey v. Cagney, supra, and as in effect held in Tensas Delta Land Co. v. Anders, 158 La. 94, 103 So. 522, is the corporeal detention of the property. No other possession than actual corporeal possession is sufficient to operate as a continuing protest against the tax title, and thereby prevent the peremption from accruing.

*423 The only evidence that defendants and the warrantor produced to show actual possession of the property is that the warrantor employed a surveyor, about 1904 or 1905, to subdivide a large tract of land which it had acquired, and which is located in the city of New Orleans, into blocks and lots and to make a plat of the same. The lots in question once formed a part of that tract. Several years after the survey had been made, a Mr. Wirth, who was one of the warrantor’s superintendents, occupied a part-of the tract as his home, and lived there for many years. On what part of the tract he lived does not appear, but while there he looked after the land. After the tract had been subdivided and platted, the warrantor sold lots out of the subdivision to various parties, including the defendants, who acquired their lots some eight or nine months after the tax sale, which was made some seventeen or eighteen years after the tract had been subdivided.

The streets created by subdividing the-tract into blocks were not mere nominal streets as was the case in Handlin v. H. Weston Lumber Co., Limited, 47 La. Ann. 401, 16 So. 955, where the plaintiff without reference to blocks and streets, which had not yet come into actual existence, though platted, leased the entire tract as one body, and where it was held that the possession acquired by him, through his tenant, who took possession of a part of the tract, was sufficient to maintain a possessory action as to one block, included in the lease, though not occupied by the tenant. In this case the warrantor sold lots out of the subdivision with reference to the plat, and, as a result, streets appearing on the plat were necessarily dedicated to the public, and, for aught that appears, some of them were in actual use in gaining access to lots which had been sold. As it does not appear on what part of the tract Wirth lived, and as he did not occupy any part of it until several years after the subdivision had been created, we are not prepared to say that his occupancy, which we assume was as tenant of the warrantor, gave the latter possession of the lots in controversy, since the property occupied by Wirth may well have been cut off from these lots by one of the streets. But be that as it may, defendants purchased these lots some seven or eight months after the tax sale had been made and recorded, and did not make their attack on it until more than three years after they had purchased the lots. During that period they made no attempt to take actual possession of the property, but permitted the lots to remain idle and vacant. Therefore the possession that they had.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 641, 165 La. 419, 1928 La. LEXIS 1733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levenberg-v-shanks-la-1928.