United States v. 524.72 Acres of Land in Webster Parish

33 F. Supp. 474, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3109
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 10, 1940
DocketNo. 2934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 F. Supp. 474 (United States v. 524.72 Acres of Land in Webster Parish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 524.72 Acres of Land in Webster Parish, 33 F. Supp. 474, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3109 (W.D. La. 1940).

Opinion

PORTERIE, District Judge.

The tract of land involved in this litigation was expropriated by the United States in May, 1938, from the record owner, T. A. Glass, and, at the same time, the heirs of Thomas J. Jones were cited by the United States to appear in the proceedings.

After the judgment was taken by the United States, but before distribution of the funds, the heirs of Thomas Jones and Della Jones, his wife, filed a petition of intervention, claiming the proceeds, on the ground that they are legally the owners. They offer alleged weakness in a certain tutorship proceeding, followed by a supposed weakness in an authority for the natural tutrix, the surviving wife, Della Jones, to borrow money from the First National Bank of Minden; then, irregularities are urged against the validity of the foreclosure proceeding by the bank on the mortgage securing the loan; and, additionally, they allege that the bank, purchaser at the public sale, did not acquire good title; and, finally, bring out that Mr. T. A. Glass, purchaser from the bank, by notarial act, had knowledge, directly or indirectly, of the infirmities, and therefore they plead that he is not a purchaser in' good faith upon the face of the records.

The intervention was answered by Glass, denying all allegations which would tend to show any ownership in the Jones heirs, and concluding, in the alternative, with the pleas of prescription of two, five and ten years.

From the petition in intervention by the Jones heirs the following three specific attacks are made on the title of Glass:

(a) The family meeting authorizing the loan by the natural tutrix for the benefit of the minor children had the following provision: ■ “The debt to be in the form of a note to bear 8% interest from its date and due twelve months after date with 10% attorney’s fees, if collected, with legal process, and the minors’ interest in the property to be mortgaged to secure same, together with all the interest of their mother- and brother and sisters, who are the major heirs; and further recommend that if it becomes necessary at the maturity of the note to secure an extension by a renewal of the mortgage, the same may be done.”

From this language the bank had the authority to make a loan secured by mortgage, but not one containing a confession of judgment, the right to executory process, waiver of homestead, and sale without appraisement.

(b) The language “and further recommended that if it becomes necessary at the maturity of the note to secure an extension by a renewal of the mortgage, the same may be done” prohibited the bank to foreclose as it did; that the bank was compelled to renew the loan.

(c) The foreclosure proceeding by the bank, and the purchase at public sale by the bank, are null and void because the alleged infirmities under (a) and (b) were known to the bank.

It is mutually admitted that the law of Louisiana permits the appointment of the mother as the natural tutrix of her minor children. Both sides agree on the law enabling the natural tutrix to borrow, binding the property of the minors, to pay debts of the succession, thus preventing - the immediate loss of the property to pay the debts. See Article 339 et seq., Civil Codq of Louisiana.

At the time of mortgage, the major children joined in the mortgage as owners in indivisión. Obviously, they had the same interest as all the others to try to save the property, and their joining in the mortgage is the expression of it. ' .

The main objection is that the provisions of the family meeting, quoted under (a), made a part of the judicial authority, do not permit a mortgage to secure the payment of the note to contain the pact de non alienando, to import a confession of judgment, to give the right to executory process, to prescribe a waiver of homestead, and to provide for sale without the benefit of appraisement.

Our view is that the language used authorizes a loan; the conditions necessary to secure the loan are implied.

We find that the property had not sufficient worth to support a loan of $2,700 without waiver of the homestead. The property at public sale brought in a bid [476]*476only in the amount of the loan, and that made by the bank. There may have been other bids, but they were lower. The district judge, the widow, the major children, and the bank, could not conceive of a loan in the sum of $2,700 to be safely secured by the property involved without a waiver of the homestead. The homestead exemption in Louisiana is $2,000.

The languáge is “and the minors’ interest in the property to be mortgaged to secure same, together with all the interest of their mother and brother and sisters, who are the major heirs.” This meant a mortgage with its incidental conditions to be reached by agreement between the parties. The mother as natural tutrix for the minors and for herself, individually, the major children for themselves, are on the one hand, and the money-lending bank is on the other hand. She was authorized to borrow, giving a mortgage on the property for security. The mortgage was made to import a confession of judgment, to include the waiver of homestead, as well as the waiver of the benefit of appraisement, because the bank would not make the loan otherwise. The natural tutrix was authorized to grant or withhold these conditions in the broad exercise of her discretion. She was not forced to accept them. The law presupposes she acted to the best interests of her children.

All the above conditions are the usual and customary provisions of loans made in Louisiana secured by mortgage on rural real estate. Though apparently drastic, they insure prompt collection, and, obviously, enable one to get the accommodation and at a more favorable rate of interest.

It is further contended that under the language “and further recommended that if it becomes necessary at the maturity of the note to secure an extension by a renewal of the mortgage, the same may be done”, there should have been an extension of the note at maturity. The maturity was March 28, 1923, foreclosure was not before January 22, 1925, and sale followed on April 25, 1925. This was an extension by the bank of the loan from date due of twenty-two months. If the language be considered mandatory, the bank did fulfill its requirement.

The court thinks, however, that the language means merely that the tutrix was authorized to extend the note at maturity, without the necessity of further court authorization, if -she found the bank willing.

The action of a local bank in making a loan of money to á widow, individually, and also to her as natural tutrix of her minor children, qualified as such by court decree, is usually impressed with good faith. Loans of this type are not sought; they are made generally because there rests upon the bank a sense of civic obligation as a quasi-public institution. No bank to make collection cares to foreclose upon a widow and her minor children.

There must be removed as a possible background to this case any idea that Mrs. Della Jones and her children failed to get value when they mortgaged their property. She received, for herself and children, $2,700 in cash from the bank. She used this money two years and ten months before ■the property mortgaged was sold for the debt. Interest was paid by her only to October, 1923; the maturity of the note was March 28, 1923. No fraud is alleged; the plaintiff’s case is pitched upon mere informalities and want of purportedly essential legal forms.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. Supp. 474, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-52472-acres-of-land-in-webster-parish-lawd-1940.