Ryall v. Todd

8 La. App. 105, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 655
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1927
DocketNo. 2177
StatusPublished

This text of 8 La. App. 105 (Ryall v. Todd) 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
Ryall v. Todd, 8 La. App. 105, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 655 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

WEBB, J.

The plaintiff, W. P. Ryall, alleging ownership and [possession of the NE% of SW% pf Section 27, Township 9 [106]*106North, Range 13 West, in Sabine parish, Louisiana, under deed from W. E. Tatum of date December 22, 1917, filed for record January 28, 1918, who is alleged to have acquired title by mesne conveyances from the United States, filed this suit on October 31, 1923, against the representatives of J. E.- Todd, and W. O. Taylor, J. M. Foster, and S. E. McCarquodale, in which he allaged the facts above and that one J. A. Jackson had pretended to have acquired the title from Foster & Glassell Company, Limited, and had rendered the same for taxes and had deliberately refused to pay the taxes with the view of creating a fictitious tax title and that the property had been sold, at tax sale to J. E. Todd under the assessment made against J. A. Jackson for the year 1917 as per tax deed of date June, 15, 1918, recorded June 24, 1918, and that said sale had been made without notice to plaintiff who was at the time of the tax sale in actual, physical possession of the property under his title.

That J. E. Todd had transferred the property to W. C. Taylor, J. M. Foster and' S. E. McCarquodale, which transfer had been recorded on the conveyance records of Sabine parish and that the said tax deed was null and void and the recordation of same and transfers by the said Todd constituted a cloud upon plaintiff’s title, and he prays for judgment decreeing the tax sale and all subsequent transfers null and ordering the same erased from, the records.

The. defendants answered admitting the tax sale and deed to J. E. Todd, and otherwise denying plaintiff’s allegations, and alleging the validity of the tax title, and pleaded the prescription, of three years.

On trial, judgment was rendered against defendants, declaring the tax deed null and void, and ordering it erased from the record, and also declaring subsequent transfers null and void and ordering them erased from the record from which judgment the defendants appeal.

OPINION.

The evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff was a deed from J. T. Webb to J. D. Woodward of date March 4, 1911, recorded March 7, 1911, under which the vendor retained a vendors’ lien and mortgage to secure a portion of the price and proceedings via executiva by W. E. Tatum, the holder of the mortgage, against J. D. Woodward, and sheriff’s deed thereunder to W. E. Tatum of date June 2, 1917, recorded June 5, 1917, and a deed by W. E. Tatum to plaintiff, W. P. Ryall, of date December 22, 1917, recorded January 28, 1918, and parol testimony showing that W. P. Ryall had possession of a part of the property at the time the deed was made to him by Tatum, and that Ryall planted and cultivated a portion of the property in 1918 and had remained in continuous possession o.f the property; that the property had been assessed to him and he had paid the taxes thereon from 1918 to the date of the suit.

Plaintiff also offered and filed in evidence a deed of the property from J. D. Woodward to J. E. Graham of date September 2, 1912, recorded November 6, 1912, and from Foster & Glassell Company, Limited, to J. A. Jackson of date February 12, 1917; recorded March 10, 1917, and also the tax deed from J. A. Jackson to J. E. Todd of date June 15, 1918, recorded June 24, 1918, which purports to have been for the taxes assessed against the property in the year 1917; and plaintiff also offered in evidence a petition and preliminary orders filed and obtained on June 25, 1915, in proceedings via executiva by Foster & Glassell Company, Limited, versus J. E. Graham against the property in contest, [107]*107and a deed from J. E. Graham, by the sheriff, which purports to have been made under a seizure and sale under a writ of fieri facias of date September 11, 1915, recorded October 11, 1915; but said last named deed does not include the property in contest.

The defendant also offered the deed from J. D. Woodward to J. E. Graham and also the assessment rolls for the. year 1917 showing the assessment of the property in contest to J. A. Jackson and a transfer or deed of the property by J. E. Todd to W. C. Taylor, J. M. Foster and S. E. MeCorquodale (in the proportions of one-half to Taylor and one-fourth each to the other vendees) of date December 19, 1919, recorded December 23, 1919, and a deed from S. E. MeCorquodale to P. B. Meyer of his one-fourth interest, of date July 5, 1920, recorded on the same date.

The property involved in this controversy we assume is of little value and the parties appear to have considered only the most salient points, and we confine the opinion to the questions presented by counsel or questions necessarily connected with the questions presented.

The defendants contend that the judgment should be reversed on the following grounds.

First, that plaintiff is without right to question the validity of the tax title under which defendants claim.

Second, that the evidence fails to show that the tax title was invalid.

I.

The basis of this contention, which was not set up in the answer, is that the evidence . offered showing the proceedings via executiva by Foster & Glassell Company, Limited, of date June 25, 1915, against J. E. Graham, who had acquired the property from J. D. Woodward by deed on September 2, 1912, recorded November 6, 1912, and the deed by J. E. Graham, through the sheriff (proceeding under a writ of fi. fa.) of date September 11, 1915, recorded October 11, 1915, had divested the title of J. D. Woodward long prior to the proceedings via executiva taken by W. E. Tatum against J. D. Woodward under which the deed was made to Tatum by the sheriff of date June 2, 1917, recorded June 5, 1917, and that Tatum did not acquire any title through the sheriff’s sale from J. D. Woodward and that plaintiff, of course, did not acquire any title under the deed made by W. E. Tatum 'of date December 22, 1917, recorded January 28, 1918.

The evidence, however, does not show that any sale was made under the proceedings via executiva taken by Foster & Glassell Company, Limited, and the sale made by the sheriff purportedly acting under a writ of fieri facias does not include the property in contest, and hence on the face of the record such transactions did not divest J. E. Graham of title, and while the deed from J. D. Woodward to J. E. Graham, of date September 2, 1912, recorded November 12, 1912, did as between Woodward and Graham, divest the former of title, it did not affect the right of the holder of the notes secured by vendor’s lien and mortgage containing the pact de non alienando from proceeding directly against the property through J. D. Woodward. (Stevens vs. Pinneo, 26 La. Ann. 617; Bank vs. Miller, 44 La. Ann. 199, 10 South. 779; Dodds vs. Lanaux, 45 La. Ann. 287, 12 South. 345; Fontenot vs. LaFleur, 2 La. App. 602) and the sale by the sheriff under the proceedings via executiva instituted by W. E. Tatum against J. D. Woodward of date June 2, 1917, recorded June 5, 1917, divested Graham of any title which he ac[108]*108quired from Woodward, and W. P. Ryall, plaintiff, having acquired from Tatum certainly had the right, on the face of the record, to attack the tax title, being at the time of the tax sale the real, legal record owner and in possession.

II.

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Related

Palfrey v. Connely
106 La. 699 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)
Bunkie Brick Works, Ltd. v. Police Jury
37 So. 970 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1905)
Stevens v. Pinneo
26 La. Ann. 617 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1874)
Citizens Bank v. Miller
44 La. Ann. 199 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1892)
Dodds v. Lanaux
45 La. Ann. 287 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1893)
Fontenot v. LaFleur
2 La. App. 602 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 105, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryall-v-todd-lactapp-1927.