Succession of Gravolet

197 So. 572, 195 La. 832, 1940 La. LEXIS 1123
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 28, 1940
DocketNo. 35084.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 197 So. 572 (Succession of Gravolet) 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
Succession of Gravolet, 197 So. 572, 195 La. 832, 1940 La. LEXIS 1123 (La. 1940).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

In September, 1935, the Adema Realty Co., Inc., leased to Anson Gravolet a strip of land on the Pointe-a-la-Hache Canal in Plaquemines Parish. At that time there were no buildings or other improvements of any character on the strip of land.. Gravolet, the lessee, constructed certain buildings on the leased premises, which he used in his business of canning shrimp and oysters. The lessor never acquired any interest in the buildings erected by the lessee.

On May 11, 1937, the Adema Realty Co. made another lease of the same property *836 to Anson Gravolet, the second lease apparently being an extension of the first. The second lease was for a period of 10 years, for rental of $240 per annum, payable annually in advance. Gravolet continued his shrimp and.oyster canning business until the date of his death on December 24, 1937.

Shortly after Anson Gravolet’s death, his widow was appointed administratrix of his succession. On February 21, 1938, the Adema Realty Co. filed a petition of intervention in the succession proceeding, claiming tite sum of $2,160 for the remaining nine years of the lease. It prayed for judgment against the succession for that sum, and that its lessor’s lien and privilege be recognized and enforced against all the ' buildings on the leased premises and on all movables of every character and description belonging to the succession.

Another creditor intervened in the succession proceeding and joined the administratrix in resisting the claim of the Adema Realty Co. for the full amount which it claimed, the contention being that under Act-190 of 1926 the lessor’s privilege and right ■ of pledge is limited to a term of six months after the death of the lessee because the premises were used wholly for mercantile purposes.

On June 18, 1938, the district court rendered judgment decreeing “that the intervention of the Adema Realty Co., Inc., plaintiff, be maintained to the extent of six (6) months after the death of the lessee, Anson Gravolet, December 24, 1937, with privilege as prayed for, or for one-half of the annual rental of $240 or the sum of $120, and it is hereby dismissed as to the remainder of the sum claimed”.

From this judgment' the Adema Realty Co. appealed to this court. A motion' to dismiss the appeal was denied by this court on Jan. 10, 1939 (191 La. 599, 186 So. 41). While the intervention proceedings were pending in the lower court, the administratrix applied for, and was granted, an order to sell the property of the succession to pay debts. She listed as items for sale all the buildings and improvements erected on the leased premises by Anson Gravolet, the lessee, and the lease itself and the right of occupancy of the premises under the lease. The other property listed for sale is not involved in this lawsuit. The buildings and the lease itself were advertised for sale, the advertisement containing the stipulation “that Purchaser is to assume the payment of all the rental due under said Lease for the full unexpired term of said Lease, as provided by the said Lease— the sum of $1,920.00”.

The sale was made on August 6, 1938, and Bougon’s Oyster House, Paul Bougon, Proprietor, became the purchaser of the buildings and the lease, the sheriff’s proces verbal of the sale reciting that the purchaser had assumed the obligation of paying the rentals as they fell due under the lease.

When the case was reached for argument in this court, counsel exhibited the advertisement and proces verbal of the sale, which had not been filed in evidence in the lower court. It was suggested that this court had no right to consider these *838 documents for the reason that they had not been filed, and on March 6, 1939, we remanded the case to the lower court for further hearing and for the reception of evidence relating to the proceedings which took place in the lower court subsequent to the date on which the appeal was granted. 192 La. 255, 187 So. 659. The case was reopened in the district court, and all documents relating to the sale of the property at succession sale, including the judgment ordering the sale, the advertisement, and the proces verbal of the sale, were filed in evidence. Some additional testimony was heard showing that the Succession of Gravolet was insolvent.

After the second hearing in the trial court, the following judgment was rendered :

“It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment herein rendered by this Court on the 18th day. of June, 1938 be recalled, rescinded and annulled, and that there now be judgment in favor of Mrs. Thelma Dragon Gravolet, Testamentary Executrix of the Estate of Anson Gravolet, defendant herein, and against plaintiff, Adema Realty Company, Inc., recognizing the full validity of the adjudication of said lease and factory buildings and appurtenances to Bougon Oyster House, Paul Bougon, Proprietor, who, by virtue of the adjudication, has recognized plaintiff’s lessor’s lien and privilege on the factory buildings and appurtenances securing said lease and has assumed the payment of the full rental under the terms of said lease as same becomes due; and,

“That there be further judgment restricting the claim of Adema Realty Company, Inc. against the Estate of Anson Gravolet to the extent of one year’s rental, which is now due and payable in advance under the lease for the year ending May 11th, 1939, viz: the sum of Two Hundred, Forty and No/100 ($240.00) dollars, and ordering the immediate payment' of this amount by the defendant executrix herein, with full privilege and preference over all ordinary creditors.”

From this judgment the Adema Realty Co. appealed.

Counsel for appellant state in their brief that the questions presented on this appeal are whether the rent for the full term is now due and collectible, and whether the provisions of Act 190 of 1926 are applicable to this case.

We hold that Act 190 of 1926 does not apply. It provides in Section 1 that the lessor’s privilege and right of pledge under any lease “on any building used wholly or in part for mercantile purposes, executed or entered into after August 31st, 1926, shall not extend in the case of the failure or death of the lessee in such a way as to secure rent for a term of more than six months after such death or failure”. The reason the act does not apply in this case is that the property leased consisted of a tract of land on which there were no buildings of any character or description at the time the original lease was made. At the time the second lease was made on May 11, 1937, there were buildings on the land; but they had been *840 erected and were owned by Anson Gravolet, and the lease covered the land only. The act applies to leases on buildings used wholly or in part for mercantile purposes, and does not apply to leases on lands.

Act 190 of 1926 amends and reenacts Act 128 of 1894. The only change made in the amending act is that the term specified is six months instead of 12 months, as was specified in the original act.

In the case of Patterson Co. v. Port Barre Lumber Co., 136 La. 60, 66 So. 418, this court held that “Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 572, 195 La. 832, 1940 La. LEXIS 1123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-gravolet-la-1940.