Montejo v. Gordy

33 La. Ann. 1113
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1881
DocketNo. 1137
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 La. Ann. 1113 (Montejo v. Gordy) 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
Montejo v. Gordy, 33 La. Ann. 1113 (La. 1881).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered- by

Levy, J.

Henderson Crawford, one of the heirs oí H. Crawford, deceased, executed a mortgage, on the 9th of December, 1865, in favor of Martin Conrad, to secure a note for $3000, in favor of said Conrad, signed by said Henderson Crawford and Larive Crawford, in solido, the mortgage being upon “ his entire interest in the estate of his father, to wit: one-eighth undivided interest in what now remains of said estate, consisting of the sugar plantation belonging to said estate,” describing its quantity, location, boundaries, etc. Suit was brought on this note by Conrad and, on the 1st of May, 1880, there was judgment in the District Court of St. Mary against the makers of said .note and recognizing the mortgage aforesaid as bearing upon and affecting said mortgaged property. In 1869, the widow and heirs of H. Crawford, deceased, executed a mortgage upon the whole of said plantation in favor of P. J. Pavy, to secure a certain debt due by them; this debt was transferred to M. A. Montejo with full subrogation of the mortgage securing it, and the plantation thus mortgaged was seized and sold under executory process, in the suit (order of seizure and sale), No. 6962, of the docket of the District Court, parish of St. Mary, of M. A. Montejo vs. Henderson Crawford et als., and Manuel A. Montejo and L. E. Generes became the purchasers. After the judgment was rendered, on 1st May, 1880, in favor of the administrator of Martin Conrad, thirty days notice and demand for payment was given to the mortgagor, Henderson Crawford, and thereafter ten days’ notice and demand on the third possessors. The administrator of Conrad then filed his petition, setting forth his judgment on the mortgage note with recognition of his mortgage, the adjudication to Montejo and .Generes of the property affected by Conrad’s mortgage, the amicable legal demands of thirty and ten days on the hypothecary debtor and the third possessors, prayed for citation of said third posses[1114]*1114sors “ as the law directs,” and that “ executory process issue and an order of seizure and sale be directed to the sheriff of St. Mary parish, commanding him to seize and sell for cash after the requisite legal delays and formalities,” the mortgaged property. On this petition the District Judge granted the following order: “ Let executory process and an order of seizure and sale issue as prayed and according to law.” Notice of the order of seizure and sale and demand for payment within three days was directed to Manuel A. Montejo and Y. or P. J. Montejo and the executor of L. P. Generes, which was served on P. J. Montejo and said executor. Under the writ of seizure and sale the undivided eighth interest was seized, and notice of seizure made on P. J. Montejo and the executor of Generes. Under the writ the sheriff seized and advertised for sale, the following: "as the property of M. A. Montejo, viz: the one undivided eighth of the following described property, to wit: that certain tract of land or sugar plantation lying and being situated in the parish of St. Mary, State of Louisiana, containing about seven hundred and sixty arpents, superficial measure, having a front on the Bayou Teche of nine and one-half arpents, with a depth that belongs to the same, bounded below by lands of William and A. L. Hayes, with all the buildings and improvements thereon situated, rights, ways, appurtenances thereunto belonging.” The property thus seized and described, was advertised for sale.

M. A. Montejo thereupon brought this injunction suit and the sale was enjoined. Plaintiffs grounds of injunction are: That Henderson Crawford could not grant a mortgage upon his right of inheritance in the succession of his deceased father; that no portion of the property itself, the same belonging to the estate of his deceased father, was mortgaged, and never had been accepted by said Henderson; that "said pretended mortgage never had any legal existence or vitality, is null and void and of no effect against third parties, on account of vagueness, uncertainty and illegalities patent upon its face.” Further, “ that the order of seizure and sale and the proceedings thereunder are illegal, null and void,' and unwarranted in law, in this, that the plaintiff (administrator) in execution, has mistaken his remedy; that, under the law, he was not entitled to the executory’process or any order of seizure and sale, but, if he had any cause of action against petitioner, he should have resorted to the hypothecary action proper; that, having a judgment recognizing simply a mortgage, he could only proceed against the third possessors by the hypothecary action; that upon the original mortgage no executory process could issue and since said mortgage has been merged in a judgment, his remedy was either by fi. fa. against the judgment debtor, or, By the hypothecary action against the third possessor. Further, that even if he could have resorted to the executory [1115]*1115process, there is want of proper service, it having been made on E. J. Montejo personally, and not as agent; that the advertisement is defective for want of definite description of the property seized. The plaintiff in injunction claimed $800 damages, for attorney’s fees, and $500 special and exemplary damages, and he prayed for a decree declaring the nullity of Oonrad’s mortgage, and for an order directing it to be cancelled and erased from the records. The defendant in injunction in his answer, made a general denial and averred that plaintiff was estopped from denying the validity of respondent’s mortgage or the mortgagor’s capacity to hypothecate the property mortgaged in his, plaintiff’s, favor. He admits that the notices to pay and of seizure were served upon Frank J. Montejo, the agent of plaintiff and in possession of the mortgaged property, and avers the sufficiency of said notice; he denies the right of plaintiff herein, to enquire into the sufficiency of the evidence on which executory process issued; and prays for dissolution of the injunction with $250 damages, for attorney’s fees, and 20 per cent exemplary damages. There was judgment in the lower court rejecting plaintiff’s demands and dissolving the injunction, and against the defendant on his reconventional demand for attorney’s feos and damages, reserving to him the right to sue on the injunction bond for damages sustained by him, growing out of the injunction. Plaintiff, M. A. Montejo, appeals.

In order to come to a proper determination of the fundamental issue in this case, we are called upon, first, to decide whether the judgment in this case has been rendered in a proper proceeding, or, in other words, whether the judgment is binding on the plaintiff in injunction, whose property is sought to be sold under the judgment rendered in the proceedings. The plaintiff in that suit, holder of the first mortgage on property which had passed into the ownership and possession of a third possessor, obtained judgment against his debtor, with recognition of his mortgage. The third possessor had not assumed the payment of the prior • mortgage, which did not contain the pact of non-alienation; between him and the plaintiff, first mortgagee, there existed no privity and there rested on him no personal obligation. We are of opinion that the proceeding by executory process of seizure and sale does not lie in this case. It is true, as contended by counsel of appellee, that the sufficiency of evidence to authorize the order of executory process cannot be examined on an injunction and the remedy in such-cases is by appeal, 26 An. 709; 8 An. 23; 20 An 256; and, therefore, we can, in that regard, enter upon no such examination.

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Bluebook (online)
33 La. Ann. 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montejo-v-gordy-la-1881.