Montagne v. Bergeron

488 So. 2d 448, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 6890
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 1986
DocketNo. 85-683
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 488 So. 2d 448 (Montagne v. Bergeron) 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
Montagne v. Bergeron, 488 So. 2d 448, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 6890 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

W. ELLIS BOND, Judge Pro Tem.

This is an appeal from a declaratory judgment adjudicating the ownership of a parcel of land under one of alleged dual chains of title emanating from a common ancestor in title.

The facts available to the court are not in dispute, having been submitted to the trial court in a joint written stipulation of facts along with copies of some documents of record. The stipulation, after tracking a chain of title of the affected property into the common ancestor in title, Ignace Frederick, states:

“2. Ignace Frederick mortgaged the following described property to the F.B. Collins Investment Company on February 28, 1920, which mortgage is recorded in Book 62, Page 489, under Entry Number 25025, to-wit:
170.475 acres lying and being situated in Section 2, Township 12 South, Range 3 East, Louisiana Meridian, and designated as follows: 80.00 acres being East Half of Southeast Quarter, 8.875 acres lying in Eastern portion of Northwest Quarter, of Southeast Quarter, and 96.00 arpents or 81.60 acres lying in the southern portion of Northeast Quarter, and designated as Lots 5 and 6 of Act of Partition had between heirs of Ursin Frederick, deceased, bearing number 20,040, record of conveyances of Vermilion Parish, Louisiana.
3. The aforementioned mortgage and note of F.B. Collins Investment Company was assigned to North American Life Insurance Company by instrument dated August 1,1921, and recorded in Mortgage Book 69, Page 4, under Entry Number 29222.
4. Ignace Frederick and J.U. Frederick executed a Cash Deed on January 12, 1925, to A. Kaplan conveying the following described property to construct a canal....
(a) A strip of land one hundred (100) feet wide running through our land, and extending fifty (50) feet on each side of a line described as follows: Beginning on the west boundary of our land in the Southeast Quarter of Section Two (2), Township Twelve (12) South, Range Three (3) East, at a point 270 feet South of the North boundary of the said Southeast Quarter and running S. 56-E, 1100 feet, thence South 30-30-E 470 feet, thence to the left on the arc of a circle of a radius of 500 feet a distance of 400 feet, thence East forty (40) feet to the Abbeville-Lafay-ette State Highway, on the East side of said Section Two, Tp. 12, S.R. Three East; containing 4.59 acres;
(b) Another strip of land fifty (50) feet wide off of the South side of our land in the Northeast Quarter of Section [450]*450Two (2), Township Twelve (12), South, Range Three (3) East, and running East adjoining and parallel to the South boundary of said Quarter Section a distance of 870 feet; containing 1.00 acre.
5. On July 28, 1927, by Sheriffs Sale, recorded in Volume 89, Page 242, under Entry Number 42968, Gilbert Le-Blanc purchased the identical tracts, described in Paragraph 1, and formerly owned by Ignace Frederick.
6. On May 21,1930, Gilbert LeBlanc, by cash deed recorded in Volume 105, Page 183, under Entry Number 48852, conveyed to John Nugier, all of the property which he purchased at the above described Sheriffs Sale.
7. The plaintiffs herein are the successors to John Nugier.
8. The defendant, Acadia Vermilion Irrigation Company, Inc., is the successor to A. Kaplan.
9. Acadia Vermilion Irrigation Company, Inc. and its predecessors, built and openly possessed, operated and continuously maintained as owners a canal for the purpose of irrigation on the above described strip of land since the cash deed was made to A. Kaplan, executed on January 12, 1925.
10. Acadia Vermilion Irrigation Company, Inc. and its predecessors executed right of ways and other legal acts involving this property.
11. Acadia Vermilion Irrigation Company, Inc. and its predecessors paid property taxes on the above described strip of land since the cash deed was executed to A. Kaplan on January 12, 1925.
12. The plaintiffs herein and their predecessors in title paid property taxes on the entire tract of land described in Paragraph 1 above since the Sheriffs Sale dated July 23, 1927.
13. In 1979, the Acadia Vermilion Irrigation Company, Inc. unilaterally ceased operating the canal and has abandoned and dismantled the entire canal system.
14.Jessie James Bergeron and Akemi Bergeron purchased the above described strip of land from the Acadia Vermilion Irrigation Company, Inc. by deed dated December 2, 1981, and recorded in Volume 986, Page 817, under Entry Number 81-8986, and said defendants have been in possession of said properties as owners since date.”

Plaintiffs allege they are the record title owners of the strip of land formerly used for an irrigation canal. Defendants urge that they are the owners of the same property and allege they have constructed substantial improvements thereon since their purchase of it in 1981. The contentions of the parties center upon the wording of the conveyance document referred to in Paragraph 4 of the stipulation. Defendants contend it is a warranty deed conveying an ownership interest in the strip of land, hereinafter referred to as the Kaplan strip, while plaintiffs contend it conveys only a servitude for an irrigation canal. The trial court aptly referred to the document as confusing, a description with which we con-cui;. However, for reasons hereafter set forth, we find it unnecessary to make a finding as to its efficacy.

At the time of the conveyance regarding the Kaplan strip in 1925, the entirety of the Frederick property was burdened with a mortgage granted by him 1920. It contained the “pact de non alienondo” wherein the mortgagor bound himself not to sell, alienate, deteriorate or encumber the property to the prejudice of the act. The conveyance to Kaplan was in contravention of that declaration.

The mortgage was foreclosed upon in 1927. The sheriffs deed of sale of the entirety of the property began the chain of title through to plaintiffs’ ancestor in title. The deed recites that the sheriff sold the property under a writ of seizure issued at the instance of the mortgagee-assignee. The fact that the writ was one of seizure as distinguished from a writ of fieri facias, demonstrates that the foreclosure was by executory process rather than by ordinary process.

[451]*451Under the provisions of the Louisiana Code of Practice in effect at that time, and until 1960, the privileged lien holder could proceed to enforce the' privilege against the original mortgagor by executory process without making a third party possessor a party to the action. A sheriff’s deed of sale of the entirety of the mortgaged property divested a third party possessor of whatever interest he may have acquired therein subject to the mortgage contrary to the “pact de non aliendo.” See present LSA-C.C.P. articles 2701 et seq. and 3741 et seq., and the sources cited thereunder. See also 21 Tulane Law Review 238 and 32 Tulane Law Review 555 for historical development of executory process.

The foreclosure and sale of the Frederick property divested Kaplan and his successors of whatever interest had been granted subsequent to the mortgage, be it an ownership interest or a servitude.

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Related

Newman v. Livingston Parish Police Jury
603 So. 2d 250 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1992)
Montagne v. Bergeron
492 So. 2d 1218 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
488 So. 2d 448, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 6890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montagne-v-bergeron-lactapp-1986.