New Orleans Land Co. v. Southern States Fair-Pan-American Exposition Co.

79 So. 525, 143 La. 884
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 27, 1918
DocketNo. 22741
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 79 So. 525 (New Orleans Land Co. v. Southern States Fair-Pan-American Exposition 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
New Orleans Land Co. v. Southern States Fair-Pan-American Exposition Co., 79 So. 525, 143 La. 884 (La. 1918).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, C. J.

Plaintiff sold to defendant four contiguous tracts of land aggregating 87 (or perhaps 93) acres, for $131,000, of which $20,000 were paid in cash and the balance was represented by 111 bonds, of $1,000 each, secured by mortgage and vendor’s privilege; the act of sale containing the pact de non alienando, and certain stipulations with reference to the appointment of á receiver, the foreclosure of the mortgage, payment of attorney’s fees, etc., in the event of the nonpayment of the semiannual interest on the bonds; and, that event having occurred, the receiver was appointed, and at his instance the mortgaged property was seized and, after due advertisement, was adjudicated to the plaintiff company for $16,000, which' amount, save 10 per cent, paid to the sheriff, for costs, was retained by the adjudicatee in part satisfaction of its claim, amounting to over $126,000. Thereafter, Jas. A. Petty filed a rule alleging that, under a contract with defendant, he had erected a building on the land in question, including certain extra work, for an agreed price, aggregating $14,752.75, of which $12,021.15 had been paid, leaving due him a balance of $2,731.60; that his contract had been duly recorded; that he had thereby acquired a lien and privilege, first in rank, upon land and building, securing the payment of said price and balance due thereon; and that, under the order of sale, the privileges inscribed against the property had been canceled and the holders referred to the proceeds; wherefore, he prayed that they and the receiver be required to show cause why his claim should not be paid, by preference, from said proceeds in the hands of the receiver. Plaintiff and the receiver answered that the latter would hold the funds, subject to the order of court, but that the rights of the parties could not be adjudicated until the receiver should have filed his account; after which the account was filed, showing that the claim of the vendor and the costs of the proceedings left nothing for the plaintiff in rule or other creditors. Plaintiff in rule then filed an opposition to the account, reasserting the priority of his claim and privilege and praying that the same he recognized and satisfied, in full, and in preference to all others, and:

“In the alternative, in the event the court should hold that he is not entitled to be paid the full amount of his said claim, with interests and costs, by preference and priority over said New Orleans Land Company, out of the proceeds of said sale, then that a separate appraisement be made of the real estate herein sold and of the house thereon, which was erected by opponent, and that opponent 'be awarded, in said account, the full sum of his said claim, with interest -and costs, under the provisions of article 3268 of the Revised Civil Oode_, * * ~ with recognition of opponent’s first lien and privilege for the full amount of his said claim against the fund of $16,000, the purchase price of said real estate.”

[887]*887The separate appraisement was ordered and made, and the report of the appraisers reads, in part, as follows:

“(1) We find the entire tract of land * * * to be conservatively worth $100,000.
“(2) We are in doubt as to whether the instruction of the court requires us to appraise the one acre of ground on which the building in question was erected, or not; if such be desired, we appraise the same at * * * $1,500.
“(3) With respect to the value of the building erected .on the said acre, * * * we find * * * that the contract cost of said building, plus the extras which were duly installed and approved, amounted to $14,752.75, and we are of opinion that the said building, for the purposes for which it was constructed, was worth the said amount, as of date the receivership sale.”

Tli'e appraisers, called as witnesses, testify that, while they considered the building was worth the cost price, for the purposes for which it was constructed (i. e., as the gateway to the grounds of a projected Pan-American Exposition which barely survived the period of its incubation), it adds nothing to the present value of, but is a detriment to, the land, for ordinary purposes, and as now held by the former owner and adjudicatee.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff, and against the defendant, for $111,000, with interest, attorneys’ fees, and costs, and recognition of the vendor’s lien and privilege and special mortgage on the property described in the petition; and in favor of th’e opponent sustaining his opposition and ordering that the account of the receiver be so amended as to recognize him as a privileged creditor in the sum of $2,056.98, with interest, “to be paid by preference and priority over all other persons whomsoever out of the proceeds of the sale of said real estate, and that the costs of this opposition be taxed against the receiver.” Plaintiff and the receiver have appealed, and the opponent has answered praying that the award be increased to the amount claimed in his petition of opposition.

Opinion.

[1] Under the subtitle, “Of the Privilege of the Vendor of Movable Effects,” article 3228 of tlie Civil Code reads:

“But, if he allows the things to be sold, confusedly with a mass of other things belonging to the purchaser” (debtor), “without making his claim, he shall lose the privilege, because it will not be possible in such case to ascertain what price they brought.”

We refer to the article thus quoted because it has, at times, been confused with other provisions of the Cdde which relate to the privilege of the vendor of immovable property, and has, apparently, been considered as bearing upon the effect of the pact de non alienando, and upon the question of the necessity for appraising the improvements placed upon ^uch property before, rather than after the sale, and upon the respective rights of the creditors claiming such improvements, on the one hand, to have the improvements sold, as well as appraised separately from the land, and of those holding mortgages, and vendors’ privileges on the land, on the other hand, to have the improvements sold with the land.

The “other provisions” of th’e Code, to which we have above referred, are to be found in articles 3249, 3268, 3397, and 3407, to wit:

“Art. 3249 (3216). Creditors who have a privilege on immovables are:
“(1) The vendor, on the estate by Mm sold, for the payment of the price, or so much of it as is unpaid. * * *
“(2) Architects * * * contractors, * * * workmen employed in the constructing, * * * buildings, * * * or malting other works.
“(3) Those who have supplied the owner, or other person employed by the owner, his agent or subcontractor, with materials * * * when such materials have been used * * * in such houses or other works.
“The above-named parties shall have a lien * * * upon the building, * * * and upon the lot of ground, not exceeding one acre, upon which the building * * * shall be erected; provided, that such lot of ground belongs to the person having such building erected. * * * ”
“Art. 3268 (3235). When the vendor of lands finds himself opposed by workmen seeking pay[889]

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 525, 143 La. 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-land-co-v-southern-states-fair-pan-american-exposition-co-la-1918.