United States Safe Deposit & Savings Bank v. Barrett

10 Teiss. 159, 1913 La. App. LEXIS 32
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1913
DocketNo. 5732
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Teiss. 159 (United States Safe Deposit & Savings Bank v. Barrett) 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
United States Safe Deposit & Savings Bank v. Barrett, 10 Teiss. 159, 1913 La. App. LEXIS 32 (La. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

His Honor,

EMILE GrODCHAUX,

rendered the opinion and decree of the Court as follows:

On June 20th, 1900, Mrs. Barrett, wife of the defendant, W. J. Barrett, with the authorization of her husband, executed an authentic act in regular form purporting to sell for $2000.00 cash the real estate in question, being her separate and paraphernal property, to Catherine Augey who acknowledged delivery and possession there^ of, with reservation of the right to redeem within three years upon payment of the price aforesaid with interest thereon from date of sale; and this act-was duly placed of record.

. In June, 1906, when the title still stood in the name of Catherine Augey and after six years had elapsed without there being of record any evidence indicating that the three year right of redemption had been exercised, extended or renewed, W. J. Barrett, the defendant and the husband of the aforesaid Mrs. Barrett, applied to the plaintiff bank for a loan to enable him to purchase the property in question, namely, the sum of $5,288. The bank having commissioned a real estate agent to appraise the property, who reported it was worth $6000.00, [161]*161and having had the title examined by its attorney, who reported it valid, agreed to make the loan, provided Barrett wonld furnish additional security to compensate for the slight margin existing 'between the amount of the loan demanded and the reported value of the property.

The transaction was accordingly consummated on June 27, 1906, in the form of a credit sale by Catherine Augey to W. J. Barrett, the price being represented by his mortgage note for $5288, which the bank received at the time in exchange of its two checks aggregating a like amount; and on the same day Barrett executed in favor of the bank, as additional security to the note aforesaid, an act of pledge of certain mules, wagons, floats, etc., employed in the drayage business in which he was engaged.

Subsequently, by sundry payments, Barrett had reduced the debt or loan to $2,831.00, when on the 11th day of November, 1909, he •secured an additional loan of $1000.00 from the bank, which he secured by a second mortgage upon the property in question.

in Maick, 1911, the note of $1000 not having been paid, the bank instituted thereon the present proceeding by executory process; and the property having been seized, the aforesaid Mrs. Barrett thereupon applied for and secured an injunction arresting the seizure and sale on the ground substantially that the purported act of sale with right of redemption of dune 2U, 1900, executed by her in favor of Catherine Augey was intended to be and was in fact but an act of mortgage or security which neither divested her of title nor vested title in Catherine Augey; and that consequently the latter was without authority or right to dispose of the property to the husband, W. J. Barrett, who in turn could make no valid purchase thereof nor thereafter grant any valid mortgage thereon to secure the said note of $1000-or otherwise.

[162]*162¡ The plaintiff bank, defendant in injunction, moved to dissolve the injunction, but this motion, by agreement of the parties, was submitted with the merits and there was judgment dismissing Mrs. Barrett’s proceeding and dissolving the injunction with $250 attorney’s fees and ail costs. From this judgment she appeals.

Before proceeding further with a consideration of the transcript, it is pertinent to now determine these questions:

I. '

Does the authentic act of June 20th, 1900, wherein Mrs. Barrett purports to sell the property to Catherine Augey, with reservation of the right of redemption, evidence oh its face a valid sale with right of redemption, or, on the contrary, a mere mortgage, pledge or other contract of security?

It is not pretended that the act in question does not embody all the essential elements of á valid sale with right of redemption, for it discloses’a divestiture of title on the part of the vendor for a fixed price acknowledged by her to have been received; an acceptance of the act and an acknowledgment of delivery and possession of the property on the part of the vendee, and an agreement reserving to the vendor the right to redeem upon repayment of the price within a fixed period.

The only incident relied-upon as depriving the.instrument of its effect as a sale, is the recital therein that the vendor, in order to exercise the right of redemption, is required to repay not only the purchase price, but also six per cent interest thereon from the date of the act.

It is true that the Code defines a sale with right of redemption §s an agreement whereby ‘ the vendor reserves to himself the power of taking back the thing sold by restoring the price paid for it,” R. C. C., 2567; but it is

[163]*163. equally true that m applying this provision, the Courts, in harmony with what appears to be the prevailing opinion in France upon the subject, have held that the limitation'for the return of the price alone is not sacramental, and that the vendor may provide that the right to redeem shall be conditioned upon the payment of a larger sum than what he received for the property.

Soulie vs. Ranson, 29 An., 168.

We find from a somewhat limited examination of the cases, that in conformity with this principle, ‘ sales with right of redemption have been upheld as such, which on their face prescribed that the vendor, in addition to the price received, should pay a bonus or profit to the vendee, or should reimburse the vendee for the outlays made by him during the redemption period for taxes, or for the impovement of the property or for its preservation and that though, as in this case, the vendor be required' to return the price with interest, the eases hold that the transaction is none the less a valid sale with right of redemption.

Jackson vs. Lemle, 35 An., 855; Caldwell vs. Trezevant, 111 La., 410; Bonnetle vs. Wise, 111 La., 855; Seckinger vs. Cheneville, 125 La., 278; Levy vs. Ward, 32 An., 784.

We take it, therefore, as established under the jurisprudence that the transaction of June 20, 1900, between Mrs. Barrett and Catherine Augey evidenced on its face a valid sale with right of redemption; and this brings us to a consideration of a second question.

I — 1 I — I

Being on its face a valid, sale with right of redemption and there being of record no evidence showing that the right of redemption has been exercised, renewed or [164]*164extended, will not a third person, such as the bank in this case, acting upon the face of the record, be protected from an attack on the title by the apparent vendor on the ground that the act in question is in reality merely a mortgage or other contract to secure a specific debt to the apparent vendee?

This---precise question was elaborately considered and resolved in the affimative in a recent case. Though the organ of the Court announced its conviction, from a consideration of the facts disclosed dehors the face of the instrument itself and of the conveyance records, that the act "was not what it purported to be (a sale with right of redemption), but was intended to evidence a security for a specific debt,” the Court nevertheless held (quoting from the syllabus):

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Related

Marbury v. Colbert
105 La. 467 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)
Caldwell v. Trezevant
35 So. 619 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1904)
Bonnette v. Wise
35 So. 953 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1904)
Leger v. Leger
42 So. 951 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1907)
Eames v. Woodson
46 So. 13 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
Rion v. Reeves
48 So. 138 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1909)
Seckinger v. Cheneville
51 So. 197 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1910)
Jolivet v. Chaves
52 So. 99 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1910)

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10 Teiss. 159, 1913 La. App. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-safe-deposit-savings-bank-v-barrett-lactapp-1913.