Norton v. Enos

104 So. 194, 158 La. 423, 1925 La. LEXIS 2075
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1925
DocketNo. 26892.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 104 So. 194 (Norton v. Enos) 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
Norton v. Enos, 104 So. 194, 158 La. 423, 1925 La. LEXIS 2075 (La. 1925).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

Defendant entered into a written contract to purchase from plaintiffs a double cottage, located at 618 and 620 Pirst street, in this city, for the price of $4,SOO, and, in accordance with the terms of the agreement, deposited with Ed Michelet, the real estate agent who was handling the matter, |480, to be applied on the purchase price, and agreed that plaintiffs should have the right to enforce performance of the contract. Defendant later refused to comply with the contract, on the ground that the title to the property, tendered by plaintiffs, was defective, and not merchantable. Plaintiffs then instituted this suit, praying that defendant be condemned to accept title and to pay the balance of the purchase price, together with 820, the cost of making tender of title, and, in the alternative, for judgment forfeiting the amount deposited by defendant, and for the cost of the tender made.

When defendant refused to accept the title tendered him, he stated, in writing, seven grounds for his refusal. Pour of the seven have since been abandoned. Those still insisted upon will be stated, as we reach them, in the course of this opinion.

The first objection to the'title is that there are no certificates, in the name of the Orescent Building & Loan Association, annexed to the act passed before E. M. Stafford, notary public, on August 17, 1923. This is the act by which one of the plaintiffs, Mrs. Norton, acquired title to the property. The act is a notarial one, and there is no certificate attached to it, made by the recorder of mortgages, showing whether or not there were any incumbrances on the property, in the name of the Crescent Building & Loan Association, the vendor therein, at the time the act was passed; nor is there any certificate, attached to the act, made by the register of conveyances, showing .whether or not the property had been previously alienated by the Crescent Building & Loan Association, though the act recites that both certificates are attached thereto.

Based upon the foregoing statement of facts, the question is presented whether the failure of the notary to attach the certificates mentioned is such an objection to the title tendered as justifies defendant in rejecting the property.

Article 3364 of the Civil Code provides that:

“Every notary who shall pass an act of sale, mortgage or donation of an immovable, shall be bound to obtain from the office of mortgages of the place where the immovable is situated, a certificate declaring the privileges or mortgages which may be inscribed on the object of the contract, and to mention them in this act, under penalty of damages towards the party who may suffer by his neglect in that respect.”

Section 449 of the Revised Statutes provides that:

“The parties to a notarial act may, by written clause in the act, dispense with the certificate of mortgage required by article three thousand three hundred and twenty-eight Lpresent number 3364] of the Civil Code, and the notary or parish recorder shall not in such case be entitled to charge for such certificate.”

Sections 2528 and 2529 of the Revised Statutes provide that:

Section 2528: “It shall be the duty of every notary public of the parish of Orleans, before passing any act or deed of sale, to demand a certificate from the register of conveyances,' showing that the vendor had not alienated in any other way the property about to be sold by him, said certificate to give a clear description of said property, and the fee of two dollars for said certificates each shall be paid by the vendor of said property.”
Section 2529: “Any notary public or sheriff in the parish aforesaid neglecting to procure the aforesaid certificate before, passing any sale as aforesaid, shall be liable to a fine of not less than two hundred and fifty dollars, nor *427 more than five hundred dollars, and costs of court, one half for the benefit of the complainant and the other half for the benefit of the state.”

Article 3364 of the Civil Code, quoted above, does not expressly provide that the certificate of the recorder of mortgages, required by the article, shall be attached to the sale, which the notary is about to pass; nor do sections 2528 and 2529 of the Revised Statutes expressly require that the certificate of the register of conveyances be attached to it. However, we think that the article of the Code cited, though it does not expressly so provide, contemplates that the certificate of the recorder of mortgages shall be attached to the act, save when the procuring of that certificate is waived, in the manner provided by section 449 of the Revised Statutes; and we also think that sections 252S and 2529 of the Revised Statutes, though they do not expressly so provide, contemplate that the certificate of the register of conveyances shall be attached to the act of sale. However, while we so think, 5’et we are clearly of the opinion that the failure to attach these certificates, or even to procure them, has not the effect of invalidating the sale. As such failure in no manner affects the validity of the sale, • we are of the opinion that, where one enters into an agreement with another to purchase property from him, and finds that the certificates contemplated by the foregoing provisions of law are not attached to one of the sales, passed by notarial act, and forming a link in the chain of title to the property which he has agreed to purchase, he is not for that reason justified in rejecting the title. This is so, because the only right of such person to reject the title, after having entered into an agreement to purchase, is because of some defect in the title, or because of some incumbrance on the property, which the party with whom he has contracted refuses to satisfy and cancel, and the absence of the certificate from a sale, under which his intended vendor holds, constitutes neither of these. We therefore conclude that the fact that certificates of incumbrances and of non-alienation were not attached to the sale from, the Crescent City Building & Loan Association to Mrs. Norton did not justify defendant in rejecting the title tendered him by Mrs. Norton and her husband.

Another objection urged against the title is to the legality of a ratification made by Ernest, August, and Andrew Lanier, in a sale by the heirs of Mrs. August Egdorf to the Crescent City Building & Loan Association, of the property in question. This sale constitutes a link in the title tendered. The deed recites that the property, which was then being conveyed, was acquired by the vendors by judgment in the Succession of Mrs. Sophie M. Egdorf, No. 144102 of the docket of the civil district court. Following this recital, the deed recites that the Laniers, mentioned above, intervened in the act and declared that they took full cognizance of the judgment rendered in said Succession of Mrs. Sophie M. Egdorf, No. 144102, on October 4, 1922, recognizing the heirs and legatees and putting them in possession, and that they ratify and approve same, and convey to the purchaser named in that deed any right which they may have in and to said property.

Defendant relies, in support of the insufficiency of the ratification, chiefly on article 2272 (first paragraph) of the Civil Code, which paragraph reads:

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Roberts v. Medlock
148 So. 474 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)
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Bluebook (online)
104 So. 194, 158 La. 423, 1925 La. LEXIS 2075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-enos-la-1925.