Shaw v. Marceaux

125 So. 460, 12 La. App. 401, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 322
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1929
DocketNo. 561
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 So. 460 (Shaw v. Marceaux) 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
Shaw v. Marceaux, 125 So. 460, 12 La. App. 401, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 322 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

This suit was instituted by Howard Shaw as the holder for valuable consideration of a promissory note for $1,600 assigned to him by the P. B. Collins [402]*402Investment Company, which note is secured by a special mortgage on a tract of land situated in Vermilion parish, given by Aymar Marceaux, Jr., one of the defendants herein.

Plaintiff alleges that, under a writ issued in the case of the People’s Bank & Trust Company, the land subject to his mortgage was on July al, 1922, pretendedly adjudicated at sheriff’s sale, to John Nugier of Vermilion parish. He further avers that the sale was made for $3,000; that, according to the recital of the sheriff’s deed, he retained in his hands $89 for costs; and that $2,911, the remainder of the bid, was “attributed to the payment of certain special mortgages upon said property in favor of said P. B. Collins Investment Company.” With reservation of his rights to attack the sale for nullity should he fail in this action, and to sue the sureties on the bond of Adam Boudreaux, sheriff at the time of the adjudication, plaintiff asks for judgment in solido against Aymar Marceaux, Jr., defendant, John Nugier, and Adam Boudreaux, for $1,600 with interest and attorney’s fees, with recognition of his special mortgage on the property adjudicated, for its seizure and sale, and that he be paid by preference over its proceeds.

Howard Shaw having died since the suit was brought, the Northern Trust Company of Chicago, executor, was substituted as plaintiff.

Adam Boudreaux, sheriff at the time of the adjudication, admits the sale in the case of the People’s Bank & Trust Company; also that the price of the .adjudication was for $3,000, but which he alleges he never received. He avers that he got only the sum of $89 for costs, and denies all the other allegations of plaintiff’s petition.

Aymar Marceaux, Jr., has passed out of the case, leaving John Nugier as the other defendant.

In the answer filed by John Nugier it is admitted that the mortgage was given by Aymar Marceaux, Jr., on the property in question, and that the mortgage was assigned to plaintiff. Nugier specially pleads that the property mortgaged was bid in by him for the People’s Bank & Trust Company in the name of F. J. Montagne, and not “by F. J. Montagne on behalf of John Nugier,” as appears in the proces verbal of the sheriff’s sale. In connection with the foregoing averments, Nugier alleges that the adjudication was to the bank, which, doubting its validity, never took possession of the land, nor ever made itself responsible for any prior mortgages, but, as a matter of fact, abandoned the property. He also alleges that he never took possession thereof, nor ever assumed or made himself responsible for the prior mortgages on the property. He denies any liability to plaintiff for the amount sued upon or any part- of it, and denies the other allegations of the petition.

Judgment was rendered below rejecting the demand, from which plaintiff appeals.

Exceptions of no cause of action were filed by Adam Boudreaux and John Nugier, which were referred by the court to the merits. We find it unnecessary to pass on the exceptions, as they are effectually disposed of by our judgment on the merits.

Article 684, C. P., in referring to adjudications in execution of judgments where the bid is insufficient, says: If the price offered by the highest bidder is not sufficient to discharge the privileges and mortgages existing on the property, that have a preference over the judgment creditor, “there sh^ll be no adjudication, and the [403]*403sheriff shall proceed to seize other property of the debtor, if there be any.”

The adjudication of the property in question was obtained by the People’s Bank & Trust Company, the judgment creditor of Aymar Marceaux, Jr., as hereinabove stated. Marceaux had given his promissory note for $1,600, with a special mortgage on the property to secure its payment; also several prior special mortgages on the property as appears by the certificate of the clerk to the sheriff for the sale; and in all exceeding the sum of $6,000. These mortgages had a preference over the bank, judgment creditor of Marceaux. The highest bid offered for the property at the sheriff’s sale was the sum of $3,000, for which it was adjudicated, apparently to John Nugier, according to the recitals of the proces verbal of the sale. It is evident that this sum was insufficient to discharge the special mortgages that had a preference over the judgment of the bank. In such a case under the specific provisions of article .684, C. P., “there should be no adjudication.” This article of the Code has been construed in many decisions, dating from our earliest authorities.

In the case of Trudeau vs. McVicar, 1 La. Ann. 426, the property was adjudicated to Trudeau, plaintiff, through his agent, Edwards, for $500 for a price insufficient to discharge the special mortgages that existed on the property, and which had a preference over the claim of the judgment creditor. In that case Trudeau, purchaser, having been placed in actual possession of the property, it was contended he could not withhold the price. The court held that its delivery had been made in virtue of an adjudication expressly prohibited by law, consequently null, and that the possession, not having a title to support it, could not have been maintained, citing a previous decision in support of its conclusions. It was held that a bond which Trudeau had given for a part of the price was without consideration, and was therefore not due by him.

In Pasley vs. McConnell, 38 La. Ann. 470, the court said that there was no better settled rule that, unless the price of adjudication exceeded the privileges and special mortgages, there could be no sale, affirming the case of Trudeau vs. McVicar, 1 La. Ann. 426, above cited, and subsequent decisions on this subject.

In De Armas vs. Morgan, Martin Reports (N. S.) vol. 3, p. 606, body of decision, Judge Martin, organ of the court, says:

“Whether we consider the plaintiff in the fieri facias, or the sheriff as the vendor, there was no price received or to be received by either. The mortgage creditor cannot he considered as the vendor, nor the sheriff as his agent, etc.”

The court held that, as there was no price which is the essence of a sale, there was no adjudication.

In the decisions to which we have referred, it was unquestionably decided that, when the price offered was insufficient to pay the special mortgages that had a preference over the judgment creditor, there could be no sale, and that an adjudication made under such circumstances was an absolute nullity.

In Walmsley vs. Theus, 107 La. 417, 31 So. 869, Judge Breaux, on rehearing, after referring to the vigorous opinion by Judge Martin in third N. S., above cited, concludes, after citing other cases, that the .nullity resulting in such cases from the inadequacy of the price to discharge the special mortgages is relative, and not absolute, and cannot be pronounced unless all the parties in interest are before the [404]*404court “in the issue of nullity.” It would seem from these latter expressions of the Supreme Court through Mr. Justice Breaux that the nullity complained of here is not absolute, and, as there is no direct issue in nullity with all the parties in interest, this court cannot under a collateral attack hold that the adjudication was null.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 460, 12 La. App. 401, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-marceaux-lactapp-1929.