Luckett v. Canadian & American Mortgage & Trust Co.

17 So. 836, 47 La. Ann. 1259, 1895 La. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 3, 1895
DocketNo. 11,706
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 So. 836 (Luckett v. Canadian & American Mortgage & Trust Co.) 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
Luckett v. Canadian & American Mortgage & Trust Co., 17 So. 836, 47 La. Ann. 1259, 1895 La. LEXIS 616 (La. 1895).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This appeal presents the question of title vel non of the minor children and heirs of Mrs; Cornelia Luckett, née Petrovic, deceased wife of Henry P. Luckett, the question being collaterally raised by way of third opposition coupled with an injunction against the executory proceedings of the defendant, in the attempted foreclosure of a special mortgage, which was consented, during her lifetime, by her husband.

In the court below there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff, sustaining and perpetuating the injunction of the under-tutor, and the mortgage company has appealed.

The following is a brief summary of the salient facts about which there seems to be no question or dispute, viz.:

Mrs. Cornelia Luckett was owner by inheritance from her father, Charles A. Petrovic, and her mother, his wife, both deceased, of about eight hundred acres of land, situated in Grant parish, which she sold in 1881 to Lorenzo Smith for forty-six hundred dollars, and of that sum of money and its avails, her husband took possession and converted same to his own use.

On the 14th of February 1884, Henry P. Luckett presented himself [1261]*1261before the clerk of the court and made oath to the fact that be had so received, used and converted the separate funds of his wife, and recognized her legal mortgage upon his real property as securing the restitution thereof — said affidavit being recorded at the time.

On the 8th of January, 1885, said Luckett appeared before a notary public and made, in due form of law, a dation en paiement oí a portion of the property known as the Ashbourn plantation, situated in the parish of Rapides, consisting of about eighteen hundred acres, about five hundred of which are involved in this suit, the aforesaid act being duly recorded in the book of conveyance records for the parish in which it was situated, on the 15th of January, 1885.

On the 22d of October, 1888, Henry P. Luckett executed a special mortgage upon the aforesaid plantation, in favor of the defendant company, to secure the loan of the sum of twenty-two hundred dollars.

On the 20th of October, 1888, just prior to the acceptance by the defendant of the mortgage, Mrs. Luckett executed the following relinquishment under private signature, to-wit:

“ Mrs. Nina Luckett, wife of H. P. Luckett, of Rapides parish, Louisiana, does hereby acknowledge full payment of a certain mortgage given by H. P. Luckett to her, the said Mrs. Nina Luckett; and the Olerk of the District Court of the parish of Rapides, Louisiana, is hereby requested to enter full satisfaction of said mortgage upon the records of his office. _ Said mortgage is dated 12th day of February, 1884, and was given to secure an indebtedness of five thousand dollars and interest, and is recorded in mortgage book CL,’ p. 45 et seq., of the records of Rapides parish, State of Louisiana. This release is made because the Canadian and American Mortgage and Trust Company, Limited, is about to make a loan to H. P. Luckett, and is unwilling to make it unless the fact of the payment of this mortgage be entered of record so as to show the lien of said company will be absolutely the first lien.” This refers to the same consideration as that stated in the affidavit of Henry P. Luckett, which was recorded on the 16th day of February, 1884, in Mortgage Book “ L,” p. 45.

This document was made part of the representation of Henry P. Luckett, upon which the company acted in granting the loan, which was to be secured by his mortgage when accepted; but it contains no mention of the subsequent dation en paiement.

Occasioned by his default, the mortgagee began foreclosure pro[1262]*1262eeedings via executiva in 1891, and caused the mortgaged premises to be seized. ■ This seizure was opposed and enjoined by Mrs. Cornelia Luckett, claiming ownership under the dation.

In answer the mortgage company put her claim at issue by a specific denial of the validity of her title, and a special averment that the dation was “ absolutely null, because the consideration therein named was never received by the husband.”

(The italics are ours.)

On the trial of that case there was judgment in favor of the company. Immediately thereafter time was granted to Luckett, and the executory proceedings were abandoned. Thereafter Mrs. Cornelia Luckett died — in March, 1893 — leaving her minor children as her heirs at law.

In March, 1894, another order of seizure was obtained, and the injunction now under consideration was procured and sale of the property was arrested.

We append the following résumé of the plaintiff’s present claims and pretensions, as it is well stated in the brief of defendant's counsel:

In the present case the plaintiffs, after reciting the dation en paiement to their mother, and the cancellation of the legal mortgage of date of October 20, 1888, substantially allege that on or about August, 1891, the said Canadian and American Mortgage and Trust Company, Limited, instituted proceedings to foreclose their mortgage against Henry P. Luckett, and had seized and advertised for sale her land, to pay, in part, said mortgage, when she obtained a writ of injunction restraining said sale of land as above described and asserting the ownership of1 same and the nullity of said mortgage ; whereupon the local agent of said Canadian and American Mortgage and Trust Company, Limited, and her said husband, by persuasion and the use of marital influence, and the said local agent, by threats against her said husband, induced her to withdraw and abandon her said suit, to dismiss her writ of injunction and to sign a document called a compromise, which was filed therein, containing acknowledgments as to the ownership of said property by her said husband, and other untrue acknowledgments and averments, which she signed in error and in ignorance of the fact that she could not bind herself and her property for her husband’s debts in that form and without any consideration whatever received or promised [1263]*1263her, and all of which acts and proceedings petitioners now allege and charge were concocted and gotten up by the then local agent and attorney of the said Canadian and American Mortgage and Trust Company, Limited, to have the said Mrs. Cornelia Luekett bind herself for her husband’s debts, under the disguise of a compromise of a pending lawsuit, the said agent and attorney of the said Mortgage and Trust Company, Limited, and his said principa being then well aware of the justness of her ownership of the aforesaid property, and all of her rights in the premises, as above recited, and of the falsity of the averments and acknowledgments in said written act of compromise, which was prepared by him and is in his handwriting, and which he induced her to sign by threats of legal proceedings against her said husband for including her property in that mortgaged to the said Canadian and American Mortgage and Trust Company, Limited, and which said document she signed under duress and in error of fact and law, and without any consideration whatever, and under the marital influence and coercion of her said husband.”

They urge the nullity of the judgment rendered' in suit No. 3846 and the cancellation of the legal mortgage in favor of Mrs. Luekett. They pray for judgment in conformity with averments of the petitions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 So. 836, 47 La. Ann. 1259, 1895 La. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luckett-v-canadian-american-mortgage-trust-co-la-1895.