Third Dist. Land Co. v. Lassere

15 So. 2d 850, 204 La. 451, 1943 La. LEXIS 1074
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 8, 1943
DocketNo. 36849.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 15 So. 2d 850 (Third Dist. Land Co. v. Lassere) 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
Third Dist. Land Co. v. Lassere, 15 So. 2d 850, 204 La. 451, 1943 La. LEXIS 1074 (La. 1943).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

At a tax sale held by the City of New Orleans on September 8, 1924, for unpaid taxes of 1923, there was adjudicated to plaintiff, Third District Land Company, Ltd., a parcel of ground designated as Square 4867, bounded by Marigny, Dublin, Mandeville and Edenburgh Streets, and situated in the Third District of the named municipality. The adjudication was made under an assessment to one H. A. Lassere.

In this action plaintiff is seeking a confirmation of its tax title, proceeding under the provisions of Act No. 106 of 1934. After alleging in the petition the mentioned acquisition, it averred that such Square, along with other property, was obtained many years ago by the Milne Asylum for Destitute Orphan Boys (herein called Milne Asylum) from Alexander Milne; that in 1848 Milne Asylum sold to H. A. Lassere Lot One of said Square; that in 1850, at a public auction, the remaining eleven lots of the Square were purchased from the Milne Asylum by “one named Kernion whose first name was not given”; that “it does not appear from the conveyance records for the Parish of Orleans that Kernion has sold the said property”; and that plaintiff has been in possession of the land for more than five years.

Lassere and Kernion, or their heirs if they be not living, were cited as defendants through a curator ad hoc. This representative, in his answer, denied each of the allegations of the petition.

Milne Asylum, however, is the principal defendant herein. It filed an answer admitting its sale of Lot One to H. A. Lassere but denying that the person referred to as Kernion ever acquired from it any title, right or interest in the remaining lots of the square. Further, by way of a special defense, it averred that there was a dual assessment of the property in 1923, and that the taxes due to the City of New Orleans for that year were paid by it.

There was judgment, following a trial of the case on the issues thus created, rejecting the demands of plaintiff. Additionally, the court decreed the annulling and setting aside of the tax sale held in 1924. Plaintiff appealed.

Milne Asylum makes no claim to the ownership of Lot One of the square. That lot, admittedly, was sold by it to Lassere under a notarial act in 1848. But it does earnestly dispute the legality of both the *455 mentioned auction sale, occurring in 1845, of the square’s remaining eleven lots, and the tax sale of 1924.

Respecting the defenses urged, the following statement is made in the brief of Milne Asylum’s counsel, with which the attorneys for plaintiff seem to concur, viz. :

“It is conceded that if it can be said that Milne Asylum had divested itself of title to the remaining 11 lots under the purported adjudication to the person referred to as “Kernion”, then the Milne Asylum is without interest to contest the plaintiff’s tax title. Conversely, if “Kernion” acquired no rights, title or interest in the property under the alleged adjudication, then the tax sale is null and void so far as concerns Milne Asylum, if the evidence adduced discloses a dual assessment, and the prior payment of the taxes for the year 1923.”

At the outset, it may be said that no one appears to have the actual physical possession of any part of Square 4867. Such parcel of ground has never been improved, and, along with other property in that immediate vicinity, it is burdened with a heavy growth of grass and weeds. There is evidence in the record indicating that in 1934 and again in 1939, plaintiff leased it to certain persons for cattle grazing purposes at a price of $1 per year; but no conclusive showing is made that the fences assertedly erected by the lessees enclosed the particular property in question.

Ownership of the square by Milne Asylum, a corporation, commenced in 1845 when it acquired from Alexander Milne a large tract of land described as being “bounded on the north by Lake Ponchartrain, on the east by Franklin Avenue, on the south by the lands of Gentilly and on the west by Elysian Fields or Ponchartrain Railro.ad.” Within this boundary is Square 4867. As above pointed out, however, lot one of that square was sold by the corporation in 1848 to Lassere.

Later, there was filed in the notarial records of Orleans Parish a proces verbal of some auctioneers named Bonneval and Benit, reciting that by order of the Milne Asylum there was sold on September 9, 1850, various parcels of ground, including the eleven lots in Square 4867, which were adjudicated to Kernion, and further stating that the terms of payment for the sales were “one-eighth cash and the balance at 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years for notes without endorsement secured by mortgage.” Accompanying the proces verbal was a notarial Act of Deposit dated September 19, 1850, executed by Andre D. Doriocourt, acting in his capacity of President of Milne Asylum for Destitute Orphan Boys. Doriocourt’s signature was also affixed to the signed auctioneers’ proces verbal.

The existence of the described instruments in the official records of Orleans Parish is recognized by appellee; but its counsel, in support of the attack made on the purported adjudication, directs our attention to the fact that there is nothing to show that the named auctioneers had written authority from Milne Asylum to make the sale of the eleven lots of the square, or that the purchaser, Kernion, ever complied with the terms of his bid.

*457 Revised Civil Code Article 2606 (being identical with Article ¿2584 of the Civil Code of 1825), states with reference to an auctioneer’s sale that:

“This officer, after having received in writing, from the seller, the conditions of the sale, must proclaim them, in a loud and audible voice, and afterwards propose that a bid shall be made for the property thus offered.”

This article ha's been interpreted in a number of cases in our jurisprudence as requiring that the authority given to the auctioneer by the vendor, as well as the conditions on which the sale is made, should be in writing. It reflects the principle, basic to our law, that title to real estate cannot be created by parol evidence.

In Harang v. Gheens Realty Co., 155 La. 68, 98 So. 760, 766, the following pertinent observation is made: ,

“ * * * However, for the adjudication to vest title in the adjudicatee, it is necessary that the auctioneer have written authority to offer the property at auction. If no such authority is given him, the title does not pass by the adjudication. C. C. art. 2606; Cronan v. Succession of Mc-Donogh, 12 La.Ann. 269; Reinach v. Jung, 122 La. [610], 612, 48 So. 124. In the case at bar, it does not appear that the auctioneer was authorized by Livaudais or by any one else, having the required power to offer the property at auction. The only reference to authority is the recital in the proces verbal that the sale was made by order of Livaudais and for his account, but it does not appear that the order was a written one. Hence, as it does not appear that the auctioneer had written authority to offer the property when he made the sale, title did not pass to the adjudicatee by the adjudication.”

In Silverstein v. Koppel, 166 La. 1075, 118 So.

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15 So. 2d 850, 204 La. 451, 1943 La. LEXIS 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/third-dist-land-co-v-lassere-la-1943.