Rauschkolb v. Di Matteo

181 So. 555, 190 La. 7, 1938 La. LEXIS 1264
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 2, 1938
DocketNo. 34450.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 So. 555 (Rauschkolb v. Di Matteo) 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
Rauschkolb v. Di Matteo, 181 So. 555, 190 La. 7, 1938 La. LEXIS 1264 (La. 1938).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The plaintiff instituted foreclosure proceedings on a $7,000.00 note executed by defendant and secured by a mortgage on cer-' tain immovable property located in the Town of McDonoghville (now the City of Gretna), and subsequently filed a supplemental and amended petition alleging that Joseph, Ignacio, Francisco, Leonardo, Antonio, Maria, Salvador and Francesco Fradella claimed to be the owners of an undivided 1/18 interest each in the mortgaged real estate and prayed that they be made parties defendant and that demand for payment be made upon them, in default of which a writ of seizure be issued and the property be sold to satisfy his demand.

The Fradellas answered averring that they were the owners of an undivided 1/18 interest each in the real estate upon which the plaintiff was seeking to foreclose, and that they had never mortgaged the property' to the plaintiff nor authorized any mortgage on their interest. Then, assuming the position of plaintiffs in re-convention, they prayed for an injunction restraining the sheriff from selling their undivided interest in the property to satisfy the plaintiff’s mortgage.

The court issued a preliminary injunction staying the foreclosure, and plaintiff filed an answer to the reconventional demand .denying that the Fradellas were the owners of any interest or part of the property, but that the defendant mortgagor was the true and lawful owner of all of the property, having purchased it from the vendee of the Fradellas, whose interest had been lawfully sold during their minority in the succession of their father through a partition proceeding instituted by the dative tutor of the minors, recommended by a family meeting, which was duly homologated by the court. These averments were substantially the same as those set up in the case of Fradella v. Pumilia et al., 177 La. 47, 147 So. 496.

Upon the trial of the case, counsel for the mortgage creditor offered, over the objection of the attorney for the Fradellas, the identical records and testimony which were introduced in evidence upon the trial of the case of Fradella v. Pumilia et al., supra. The objection was based upon a plea of res adjudicata. The district judge originally overruled the objection and plea but later maintained them, holding that, since this Court, in the case of Fradella v. Pumilia et al., supra, held that that part of the tutorship proceedings' which authorized the sale of the *11 minors’ interest in the property was null and void, because it was not expressly stated .or sufficiently indicated therein that it was a partition proceeding under Act No. 25 of 1878, amending Rev.St. § 2667; and that, as the mortgagor, Mrs. Pumilia, was bound by the decision of the Supreme Court with reference to the Fradellas’ part ownership of the mortgaged property that the decision was equally binding upon Charles Rauschkolb, the mortgage creditor, who was the mortgage debtor’s privy, citing State ex rel. Brock, Bank Commissioner, v. Clancy et al., 178 La. 687, 152 So. 331.

The lower court also concluded that this Court, having held in the case of Fradella v. Pumilia et al., supra, that the Fradellas were the owners of an undivided 1/18 interest each in the property in question, and the judgment having .become final, that the Fradellas are the owners in fact of their interest in the property; and that as the Fradellas did not sign the mortgage or authorize any one to grant a mortgage on their interest in the property, the plaintiff’s mortgage did not bind their interest but operated only on the 10/18 interest in the property of the mortgagor debtor. The judge perpetuated the injunction, restraining the mortgage creditor from seizing, advertising or selling the undivided 1/18 interest each of the' Fradellas in the property.

The plaintiff appealed.

Article 2286 of the Revised Civil Code provides :

“The authority of the thing adjudged takes place only with respect to what was the object of the judgment. The thing demanded must be the same; the demand must be founded on the same cause of action; the demand must be between the same parties, and formed by them against each other in the same quality.”

In the suit of Fradella v. Pumilia et al., supra, plaintiffs did not make the mortgage creditor a party to the proceedings. The object of their demand was to be declared the owners of an undivided 1/18 interest each, as against their mother and stepfather.

In the instant case, the mortgage creditor is asserting his demand under the $7,000.00 note, secured by the mortgage granted on the whole of the property in question. It, is, therefore, clear that this is neither the same cause of action or object of judgment, nor the same parties in the same quality as involved in the case of Fradella v. Pumilia et al., supra.

In the case of Foutelet v. Murrell, 9 La. 291, it was decided that a judgment obtained by the heirs of a deceased wife against the surviving husband, annulling the adjudication of the property of the succession to him, on the ground that it was the wife’s exclusive property and the sale was made through error, did not bind a mortgagee, who obtained his rights against the property from the husband, when the mortgage creditor was not a party to the suit and, therefore, that the judgment was not res adjudicata.

In Lacassagne v. Abraham, 48 La.Ann. 1160, 20 So. 672, the Court decided that the judgment in a suit to annul a sale on *13 the'ground of fraud, could not be pleaded as res adjudicata in an injunction suit to restrain the. foreclosure of the mortgage on the property where the mortgagee had not been a party to the original suit.

In Hayes Lumber Co. v. Jones Drilling Co., 177 La. 626, 148 So. 899, this Court held that a judgment recognizing a materialman’s lien against the owner of .immovable property and sustaining a writ of provisional seizure was not binding on the mortgagee who, although served with notice of the seizure, was not. made a party to the suit.

In the case of Carpenter v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., La.App., 167 So. 223, the court pointed out the difference between res adjudicata and stare decisis. Of course, where the jurisprudence is well settled on a point of law, it applies equally to all parties regardless of whether or not they were parties to the suit. In pleading res adjudicata, it is necessary that the party affected be a party litigant in proceedings where the judgment was obtained.

The sole authority relied upon by the Fradellas and cited by the trial judge in reaching his conclusion in State ex rel. Brock, Bank Commissioner, v. Clancy et al., 178 La. 687, 152 So. 331. In that case, the special agent of the mortgagee questioned the validity of the imposition and the collection of a special drainage tax affecting the mortgaged property on the same grounds previously urged by the mortgagors and owners, who lost their case when the judgment of the district court was affirmed by the Supreme Court. Perkins v. Clancy, 176 La. 787, 146 So. 748. In discussing the plea of res adjudicata filed by the sheriff and tax collector, the lower court pointed out that the question had already been settled by the Supreme Court, thereby indicating that the judge considered the question stare decisis, but he continued to discuss it under the plea of res adjudicata.

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 555, 190 La. 7, 1938 La. LEXIS 1264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rauschkolb-v-di-matteo-la-1938.