Reymond v. Louisiana Trust & Savings Bank

148 So. 663, 177 La. 409, 1933 La. LEXIS 1703
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 1933
DocketNo. 31423.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 148 So. 663 (Reymond v. Louisiana Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Reymond v. Louisiana Trust & Savings Bank, 148 So. 663, 177 La. 409, 1933 La. LEXIS 1703 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment dismissing her suit on exception of no cause of action.

The facts disclosed by the petition, and we accept the allegations as true, are that plaintiff is the wife of Dalton S. Reymond and that the two were married under the community régime. On October 19, 1926, Dalton S. Reymond purchased from the Jefferson Homestead Association of Baton Rouge a certain lot of ground with a residence thereon, the homestead association reserving a vendor’s lien thereon in the sum of $5,000. This property fell into the community and the couple occupied it as a residence until some time prior to November 24, 1928, when plaintiff’s husband abandoned her without cause, and since then they have lived apart.

After the separation, plaintiff continued to occupy the premises as a home until February 1, 1930, when the property was sold under foreclosure proceedings instituted by the Jefferson Homestead Association to enforce its vendor’s mortgage.

On November 24, 1928, plaintiff filed and recorded in the conveyance records of East Baton Rouge parish, where the property is situated, a description of the property, together with an authentic- declaration that she and the said Dalton S. Reymond were married and designating said property as a family home, said Reymond, the 'husband, not having previously filed such declaration, all as provided by Act 35, Ex. Sess. 1921, p.' 38. •

On March 9, 1929, nearly five months after Mrs. Reymond had filed and recorded this declaration, the husband, without the wife’s knowledge or consent, executed a mortgage on the property for $17,160, making the mortgage and notes payable to the order of any future holder. The notes were pledged as collateral to the defendant bank to secure a pre-existing debt due by the husband to the bank.

Plaintiff alleged that in making this mortgage, which was second to that held by the homestead association, the husband acted in collusion with the bank, the purpose being to defraud her and to defeat her homestead rights and such rights in the property as were secured by virtue of her declaration filed and recorded according to the provisions of Act 35, Ex. Sess. of 1921.

When the property was sold under foreclosure by the Jefferson Homestead Association on February 1, 1930, the defendant bank, which was the-holder of the second mortgage notes, purchased it at $8,075, which was approximately $3,000 in excess of the amount due the homestead association. The defendant paid to the sheriff the amount due the homestead association and retained the excess and applied it as a credit on its second mortgage notes.

*415 When the property was sold, plaintiff was forced tp vacate. She alleges that at the time she filed the declaration, she had no other home and no other property; that she was then and at the time the property was sold and is now destitute, and is wholly dependent upon her husband for support.

She further alleges that her husband has failed and refused to claim the homestead exemption, as provided in article 11 of the Constitution of 1921, or to take steps to protect her rights under the exemption and her rights under Act 35 Ex. Sess. of 1921, and that she has therefore been driven to the necessity of bringing this proceeding without his authorization or assistance.

She prays for Judgment against the bank for $2,000.

(1) The exception of no cause of action, which was sustained by the trial Judge, is grounded upon the proposition that Mrs. Reymond, the wife, is not the head of a family and has noi one dependent upon her for support and cannot, for those reasons, claim the benefit of the homestead exemption granted by article 11 of the Constitution, which provides that, “There shall be exempt from seizure and sale by any process whatever except as herein provided, and without registration, the homestead, bona fide, owned by the debtor and occupied by him, consisting of lands, not exceeding one hundred and sixty acres, buildings and appurtenances, whether rural or urban, of every head of a family, or person having a mother or father or a person or persons dependent on him or her for support.” (Section 1.)

If this were all the Constitution of 1921 said about homestead exemptions and if Act 35 of the Extra Session of 1921 had not been adopted, the argument made by counsel for the defendant would be unanswerable.

But the Constitution goes further and provides in section 3 of article 11 that:

“Any person entitled to a homestead may waive same, in whole or in part by signing a written waiver thereof; provided, that if such pen-son be ma/rried, and not separated from bed and board from the other spouse, then the waiver shall not be effective unless signed by the latter; and all such waivers shall be recorded in the mortgage records of the parish where the homestead is situated.” (Italics ours.)

The Constitution was finally adopted on June 18,1921. The Legislature assembled soon thereafter in special session and on November 19, 1921, adopted Act 35, which provides:

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of Louisiana, That whenever there shall have been placed of record in the conveyance records of the Parish in which it is located, an adequate and accurate description by metes and bounds, (or other indicia of location, limits and area sufficiently definite to identify, locate and delimit the same), of any lot or parcel of land, together with the authentic declaration of the owner thereof, that he is a married man, and that he desires to and does designate said property as a family home, such particularly described property shall not thereafter be validly sold or mortgaged during the marriage by the husband except with the consent of his wife, expressly set forth in the act or deed, as the *417 ease may be, and signed by' her or her duly authorized attorney in fact.
“Section 2. If the husband shall refuse, or neglect for a period of six months after this Act shall go into effect or the acquisition of a home, to file and record such declaration as provided for in this Act, his wife, who shall be living with her husband, may make, file and record an authentic declaration as provided in Section 1 of this Act; provided that such declaration made by the wife shall be limited to community property occupied as a home, and in case of city, town, or village property shall include not exceeding one lot or lots of ground on which the family residence is actually situated, and in case of rural property shall include not exceeding, twenty (20) acres of land on which the family residence is situated.”

Section 3 of article 11 of the Constitution relating to the waiver of the homestead exemption and Act 35 of the Ex. Sess. of 1921 must be read and construed together. The legislative act supplements the constitutional provisions with reference to the waiver.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 So. 663, 177 La. 409, 1933 La. LEXIS 1703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reymond-v-louisiana-trust-savings-bank-la-1933.