Stubbs v. Lee

105 La. 642
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
DocketNo. 13,755
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 La. 642 (Stubbs v. Lee) 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
Stubbs v. Lee, 105 La. 642 (La. 1901).

Opinion

Statement op the Gase.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, O. J.

On January 6th, 1891, Mrs. E. J. Lassiter sold to Mrs. Sarah J. Seale and John M. Lee, Jr., certain property described as being partly in the parish of Ouachita and partly in the parish of Union, for the price of five thousand two hundred dollars, of which two thousand dollars were paid in cash and the balance represented by two joint and several notes of the purchasers of sixteen hundred dollars each, with interest thereon at eight per cent, from the date of [644]*644sale, payable, respectively, on the 1st of January, 1892, and 1893. Payment of these notes was secured by special mortgage and vendor’s privilege on the property purchased, as was also payment of all the costs to be incurred in enforcing such payment, including attorney’s fees, fixed at ten per cent, on the amount sued for. This act was duly recorded in the parishes of Ouachita and Union.

On the 24th of April, 1893, Mrs. Sarah J. Seale sold the half of the property which she had so acquired to her joint owner, John M. Lee, Jr., the property being described as being “principally” in the parish of Ouachita, and in addition to this property she conveyed an interest which she had acquired with John M. Lee, Jr., in the succession of Joseph Baker and wife — and an interest in an unexpired lease of the Arons place.

The price and consideration was:

First: That Lee assumed the discharge and payment of the note given by the vendor and himself, payable January, 1893, and to hold Mrs. Seale harmless therefrom; it being declared that it was understood that Mrs. Seale had fully discharged the note for the same amount due Mrs. Lassiter, January, 1892, and that this note was surrendered to Lee for cancellation.

Second: The sum of seven thousand dollars, with interest to be paid thereon from the 1st of January, 1893; this amount was represented by Lee’s note payable 1st of March, 1894.

Payment of this note and all costs incurred in the enforcement thereof, including attorney’s fees, fixed at 5 per cent., was secured by special mortgage and vendor’s privilege on all the property purchased. On the same day (24th of April, 1893) Mrs. Seale sold to John M. Lee, Jr., two other prpperti.es, the “Pace” place, and the “Rock Row” place, for $7,000 on credit, for which she took Lee’s note, secured by special mortgage and vendor’s privilege. Lee having paid nothing, Mrs. Seale, on the 3rd of August, 1895, obtained an order of seizure and sale, and on the 25th of January, 1896, the property sold by Mrs. Seale to Lee was all sold for $5,778.67, leaving over $10,000 still due upon her mortgage notes.

At that sale the half interest in the Port Union plantation sold by Mrs.' Seale to Lee, brought only $1,334. On December 7th, 1896, Mrs. Seale sued Lee, and on the 27th of February, 1897, obtained judgment against him for $14,000, with interest and attorney’s fees, less $5778.67, the amount of the adjudication to her on the 25th of January, 1896.

[645]*645The first of the two notes, the one due January 1st, 1892, was pa’d by Mrs. Seale. The other note, due January, 1893, with some credits, was transferred by Mrs. Lassiter to Linton W. Stubbs. On June 23rd, 1899, Stubbs sued Lee and Mrs. Seale to recover upon the balance of-this last note. He obtained judgment, and under a writ of fi. fa. issued upon this judgment the entire 'Port Union plantation, which had been bought by Lee and Mrs. Seale from Mrs. Lassiter, was adjudicated to Mrs. Seale for five thousand seven hundred dollars, Mrs. Seale at that time owned one undivided half of the property and Lee the other half. Out of this amount the sheriff paid the plaintiff, Stubbs, the amount of his debt, with all interest, costs and fees, aggregating $2333.59, which satisfied the writ in full and left in the sheriff’s hands the sum of $3228.86. Previous to this sale, third oppositions were filed by Mrs. Seale, the Ouachita National Bank and the Kingsland Manufacturing Company. Mrs. Seale claims this amount as being the owner of one undivided half interest in the property and as having the oldest mortgage upon the property.

She claims that having paid the note of the 1st of January, 1892, given by herself and Lee jointly and severally, as part of the purchase price of the property from Mrs. Lassiter, secured by mortgage on the entire property, she became, as against Lee’s interest, subrogated to the rights of the creditor, Mrs. Lassiter.

That this amount of $800, with interest and costs, one-half of the note, entitled her to a special mortgage and vendor’s privilege on the property, ranking and taking effect from the 6th of January, 1891, and that for the balance she was entitled to a preference and precedence over the Kingsland & Douglas Manufacturing Company by virtue of the prior recording of her judgments against Lee and by virtue of having defeated and annulled a fraudulent sale of Lee’s interest in the land to his brother-in-law, Webb, on August 6th, 1895. She asserts a precedence and preference over the Ouachita! National Bank, because in her two suits, Nos. 4558 and 4559, the court decreed the judgment In favor of the bank against Lee to be fraudulent, and annulled the same in so far as it affected Mrs. Seale’s claims; that the effect of the judgment in these two eases was to postpone the claims of the bank under its judgment in suit No. 4397 to her claims. Therefore she should be paid first out of these proceeds. The Ouachita National Bank claims those proceeds under a judgment rendered upon a confession of judgment by Lee in suit No. 4397 on the 24th of December, 1896, and" by [646]*646virtue of its having been recorded prior to the judgments of either Mrs. Seale or the Kingsland & Douglas Manufacturing Company. To this opposition, Mrs .Seale answered that the note and title of the bank thereto, and the judgment based thereon, had been, by judgment of the District Court, declared fraudulent and of no effect, so far as Mrs. Seale, the plaintiff in the revocatory actions, was concerned.

The Kingsland & Douglas Manufacturing Company, in their third opposition, claim a priority and preference over Mrs. Seale and the bank, on the ground that their judicial mortgages were first recorded, and hence primed, the judicial mortgages of Mrs. Seale and the bank. They deny that by the payment of Mrs. Seale of the $1600 note, given by herself and Lee to Mrs. Lassiter, she was subrogated to the rights of Mrs. Lassiter. They plead the prescription of five years to this claim, and deny that by the payment of taxes she was subrogated to the lien and privilege securing the same.

On the 6th of August, 1895, an act was passed by which Lee pur-ported to sell his undivided half of the “ Port Union ” plantation (bought from Mrs. Lassiter) to his brother-in-law, Webb, for'$3000, represented by Webb’s note, secured by special mortgage and vendor’s privilege. This note was transferred by Lee to the Ouachita National Bank as collateral security for debts due by him to the bank. On the 24th of December, 1896, the Ouachita National Bank obtained a judgment by confession against Lee for $3000, and this judgment was recorded in Ouachita parish on the — day of-; — , and in Union parish on the ■ — • day of-.

Suits were brought by Mrs.

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