Suthon v. Cambon Bros.

105 So. 252, 159 La. 134, 1925 La. LEXIS 2207
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 22, 1925
DocketNo. 25822.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 So. 252 (Suthon v. Cambon Bros.) 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
Suthon v. Cambon Bros., 105 So. 252, 159 La. 134, 1925 La. LEXIS 2207 (La. 1925).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

The plaintiffs herein are the Misses Georgiana, Fannie, and Mary Suthon. They, together with Mrs. Manette Suthon and their brother, Hugh S. Suthon, executed, in 1913, a mortgage in favor of Maurice Cambon, for something over $16,000, on certain real property in the parish of Terrebonne. Cambon Bros., the defendants herein, became the owners of the mortgage, and, in 1918, attempted to foreclose it by way of executory process. The Misses Suthon and Mrs. Manette Suthon, Hugh S. Suthon not making himself a party to the suit, enjoined the proceeding to foreclose the mortgage, except to the extent of $3,000. They were successful in the trial court, but on appeal the judgment there rendered was set aside, and the' injunction dissolved. See Cambon Bros. v. Suthon, 147 La. 66, 84 So. 496. After the decree of this cóurt was received by the court below, the foreclosure by executory process was proceeded with; and, at the sale which •ensued, the members of the firm of Cambon Bros, purchased the property mortgaged.

The Misses Suthon, whom we shall hereafter refer to as the ifiaintiffs, now desire to recover the property purchased at said sale by the Cambons, by redeeming it from them, subject, however, to the right of Hugh S. Suthon to redeem from them his interest ■in the property. They allege that in all of the proceedings, had, leading up to the sale, they were rei>resented by their brother, Hugh S. Suthon. They .also allege, among other things,' that prior to, at the time of, and subsequent to, the adjudication of said property to the Cambons, it was agreed between the latter, on the one part, and Hugh S. Suthon and themselves, on the other part, that they and Hugh S. Suthon should have the right to redeem all of said property by paying to Cambon Bros, the amount of the mortgage for which the property was about to be and was sold, including the costs of sale, and such sums as the Cambons would be com- , pelled to pay by reason of mortgages and privileges on said property, priming their mortgage. They also allege that, as additional consideration for the right of redemption, asserted by them, they surrendered to the Cambons a note for $10,000, secured by mortgage on a part of the property, adjudicated to the Cambons, executed by them several days prior to said adjudication, and also deeded to the Cambons that part of the property which was affected by the $10,000. mortgage mentioned. They also allege that the Cambons, notwithstanding their agree *137 ment to permit them to redeem the property-, now contend that the right of redemption was given only to Hugh S. Suthon, and refuse to recognize their right to redeem the property. -They therefore bring this suit to have recognized and to enforce the right of redemption asserted by them, and make the Cambons and Hugh S. Southon parties defendant to their suit.

The sheriff’s deed, made to the Cambons, pursuant to the adjudication, as might be presumed, does not contain the slightest evidence that the right of redemption was reserved or granted to plaintiffs; nor does'the deed, alleged by plaintiffs to have been executed by them in favor of the Cambons, to that part of the property affected by the $10,000 mortgage, contain any reference whatever to a right of redemption. As such was the case, and as plaintiffs possessed no written evidence whatever showing that they had the right to redeem the property, they attached to their petition interrogatories on facts and articles, to be answered by Hugh S. Suthon and the Cambons. The interrogatories were answered, and the answers of the Cambons show that, after the adjudication made by the sheriff to them, Hugh S. Suthon, on his own account, endeavored to open negotiations with them to acquire the property from them on terms partly cash and partly on credit. The answers of the Cambons further show that they refusec;! to open negotiations with Suthon unless a cloud, which they thought that plaintiffs were casting upon the title which they had just acquired, was removed, and unless the $10,000 mortgage note, mentioned above, and executed several days prior to the adjudication, was' surrendered to them, and they were assured that there W’ould be no subsequent attack upon their title. • The answers of the Cambons further show that,' at the time they advised Suthon of these terms as a basis for • opening negotiations with him, they also informed -him that under no circumstances or conditions would they negotiate or bargain with his sisters, the plaintiffs herein, directly or indirectly, relative to a sale of said property. The answers of the Cambons also ’show that, on the same day that they were approached by Suthon, the latter delivered to them a’ document, which is the deed referred to by plaintiffs in their petition, signed by Suthon and plaintiffs, recognizing the title in the Cambons to all of the property purchased by them at the sheriff’s sale, and that Suthon later surrendered to them the $10,000 mortgage note, mentioned above. The answers of the Cambons also show, as do likewise those of Suthon, that no right to redeem the property was ever granted to plaintiffs. While the answers to the interrogatories on facts and articles do not so disclose, yet it may be said in this connection that it appears, from a document produced and offered in evidence by Suthon towards the close of the trial, that the negotiations between him and the Cambons resulted in the latter binding themselves for a consideration paid by Suthon, aggregating several thousand dollars, to sell to him, on or before January 1, 1928, the property in controversy, in the event he should desire to purchase within that time, and that, during the life of the promise to sell, he should have the right to use and oeGupy a residence on a part of the property without paying rent therefor.

After Suthon and the Cambons had answered the interrogatories on facts and articles addressed to them, they filed their answers to the suit, and in due course the case came on for trial. On the trial of the case, plaintiffs were confronted with the fact that they had no documentary evidence to establish the right of redemption, claimed by them, and with the further fact that the answers to the interrogatories on facts and articles were unfavorable to them. Plain *139 tiffs therefore attempted to establish the right to redeem, asserted by them, by parol evidence. The attempt to so establish that right was objected to by defendants on the ground that parol evidence is not admissible to. establish the right to redeem real estate, and upon the further ground that, such being the case, the answers to. the interrogatories on facts and articles, made by defendants, could not be contradicted by parol evidence. The trial court sustained the objection, and the question is whether the ruling made by that court is correct.

The sale, as we have seen, by which the Cambons acquired title to the property in controversy, was a judicial sale. The law does not accord to the debtor the right to redeem his property when sold at such a sale. However, a debtor may contract with his creditor to the effect that, in the event the latter should become the purchaser of the former’s property at a judicial sale to be held, the creditor will reconvey the property to the debtor t^pon the payment of a specified sum, but such an agreement, when made, amounts, strictly speaking, to an option to purchase the property rather than to the right to'redeem it.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 252, 159 La. 134, 1925 La. LEXIS 2207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suthon-v-cambon-bros-la-1925.