Murphy v. Estate of Sam

527 So. 2d 1190, 1988 WL 63542
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 22, 1988
Docket87-120
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 527 So. 2d 1190 (Murphy v. Estate of Sam) 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
Murphy v. Estate of Sam, 527 So. 2d 1190, 1988 WL 63542 (La. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

527 So.2d 1190 (1988)

St. Louis MURPHY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ESTATE OF Philip SAM, et al, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 87-120.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

June 22, 1988.

*1191 Dwight D. Reed, Opelousas, for plaintiff-appellant.

Peter C. Piccione, Jr., Lafayette, Richard B. Millspaugh, Opelousas, for defendants-appellees.

Before FORET, DOUCET, LABORDE and KNOLL, JJ., and SWIFT[*], J. Pro Tem.

DOUCET, Judge.

Plaintiff, St. Louis Murphy, appeals from a judgment dismissing his suit to quiet his tax title to a lot located in the City of Opelousas.

The City of Opelousas assessed Philip Sam property taxes in the amount of $2.10 for the year 1979 on a 50 x 100 foot residential lot with a house on it. Sam was the record owner at the time the assessment was made. The taxes were never paid and both Sam and his wife passed away, apparently in the early part of 1980. In May 1980, the administratrix of their estates sold the lot to Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Fenelon. The Fenelons were unaware of any tax delinquency for 1979 and the taxes remained unpaid. Subsequently, on September 6, 1980, the lot was sold by the City of Opelousas to plaintiff to satisfy the debt due for the unpaid property taxes. On January 11, 1983, the Fenelons sold the lot to Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Peltier. All three sales were recorded in the conveyance office for the Parish of St. Landry within days or weeks of the respective sales.

On October 24, 1985, pursuant to La.R.S. 47:2228, plaintiff brought this suit to quiet his tax title naming as defendants the estates of Philip and Bertha Sam, Mr. and Mrs. Fenelon, and Mr. and Mrs. Peltier. The Peltiers filed a third-party demand against the Fenelons. The trial court found that none of the property owners had received notice of delinquency as required by law and therefore, the sale was an absolute nullity.

The record clearly shows that notice of delinquency was not given as required by law. La. Const. art. 7, § 25(A) provides for tax sales and states in part "... at the expiration of the year in which taxes are due, the collector, without suit, and after giving notice to the delinquent in the manner provided by law, shall advertise for sale the property on which the taxes are due." La.R.S. 47:2180 provides for notice of delinquency and at the time of the tax sale stated:

"A. On the second day of January each year, or as soon thereafter as possible, the tax collector shall address to each taxpayer who has not paid all the taxes, which have been assessed to him on immovable property, or to the record owner of the property for which the taxes are delinquent, or to the actual owner in the event the record owner is deceased, written or printed notice in the manner provided for herein that his taxes on immovable property must be paid within twenty days after the service or mailing of the notice, or that the property will be sold according to law.

B. The tax collector shall send to each taxpayer by certified mail, with return receipt requested, the notice prescribed herein, provided that in cities containing a population of over fifty thousand persons, the tax collector may either send this notice by certified mail or *1192 may make personal or domiciliary service on the taxpayer.

After the tax collector shall have completed the service by the notices herein required, either by mail or by personal or domiciliary service, he shall make out a proces verbal stating therein the names of delinquents so notified, their post office addresses, a brief description of the property, the amount of taxes due and how the service of notice was made. Such proces verbal shall be signed officially by him in the presence of two witnesses and filed, in the parishes other than the parish of Orleans, in the office of the clerk of court for recording and preservation. In the parish of Orleans, such proces verbal shall be filed in the office of the state tax collector for the city of New Orleans and preserved for record. This proces verbal shall be received by the courts as evidence. The tax collector shall be entitled to collect actual mailing costs of each certified, with return receipt, notice, and mileage shall be charged for service of this notice. A like charge will be made if the property is adjudicated to the state or any subdivision thereof.
C. The tax collector shall publish one general notice substantially in the form set forth herein, addressed to all unknown owners of assessed immovable property situated in his parish, and to nonresident owners of such property whose post office address is unknown, in which he shall describe the property as described in the tax roll. Such notice shall be published once a week for two weeks in a newspaper published in his parish, or if there be none published in the parish, then such notice shall be given in the manner provided by law for judicial sales. He shall pay for the publication, and shall be entitled to collect as costs therefor the pro rata share of the publication costs from each unknown owner or from the property assessed to him. The collector shall certify on his tax rolls that he has published the notices, and the certificate on either roll shall make full proof thereof until disproved in a judicial proceeding."

The provisions of R.S. 47:2180 are made applicable to parishes and municipalities by La.R.S. 33:461.

It is not argued that notice could have properly been given as set out in subsection C, for at no time was the owner of the property unknown or a nonresident. Notice should have been given as set forth in subsection B. The record contains no proces verbal evidencing that notice was lawfully given. On the contrary, the record contains, by authentic act, a statement by the City Clerk of Opelousas reciting that between the years 1971 and 1985, his office, which was responsible for notifying tax delinquents, did not sent out such notices by either certified mail, or apparently, registered mail. The statement more specifically confirms that no such notices were sent to Philip Sam or the Fenelons regarding the tax delinquency on the property in question for the year 1979.[1] The only notice of the pending tax sale was the advertisement in the official journal prior to the sale.

La. Const. art. 7, § 25(C) provides a five-year peremptive period within which a tax debtor or his successor(s)-in-title may seek to set aside a tax sale. After the expiration of that period the right has been held to be completely extinguished absent three circumstances, none of which are present in the case at bar.[2]

*1193 However, a review of Louisiana jurisprudence shows what appear to be conflicting opinions as to the effect of a failure to give notice of a pending tax sale to the delinquent and/or the record property owner. Some courts have held that the failure to give such notice, alone, is a relative nullity cured by the expiration of the five-year constitutional peremptive period. Thompson v. Walker, 235 La. 519, 104 So.2d 721 (1958); Preston v. McGehee, 502 So.2d 171 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1987); Kemper v. Dearing, 369 So.2d 1208 (La.App. 2nd Cir.1979); Lasseigne v. Clement, 311 So.2d 600 (La. App. 4th cir. 1975), writ denied, 313 So.2d 846 (La.1975); Welsch v. Carmadelle, 264 So.2d 341 (La.App. 4th Cir.1972), writ denied 262 La.

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Bluebook (online)
527 So. 2d 1190, 1988 WL 63542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-estate-of-sam-lactapp-1988.