W. B. Thompson & Co. v. McNair

7 So. 2d 184, 199 La. 918, 1942 La. LEXIS 1162
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 2, 1942
DocketNo. 34797.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 7 So. 2d 184 (W. B. Thompson & Co. v. McNair) 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
W. B. Thompson & Co. v. McNair, 7 So. 2d 184, 199 La. 918, 1942 La. LEXIS 1162 (La. 1942).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demand for the reformation of a sheriff’s deed conveying a certain tract of land seized and sold under executory process. The record discloses the following facts.

In the year 1921, Frank W. McNair, the owner of a tract of land situated near the Village of Gilbert in Franklin Parish, executed two mortgages in favor of the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc. One of the mortgages was executed on February 26, 1921, to secure the sum of $3,000 and covered the entire tract of land owned by the mortgagor. Included hi the mortgage was the SE1! of Section 35, Township 13 North, Range 8 East, the property involved in this suit. The other mortgage was executed on April 11, 1921, to secure the sum of $1,185.14, and with the exception of the SE% of Section 35, Township 13 North, Range 8 East, covered the same tract of land described in the prior mortgage. Both mortgages were duly recorded in the mortgage records of Franklin Parish. W. B. Thompson & Company, a commercial partnership of the City of New Orleans, acquired the notes and mortgages from the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc.

On December 10, 1924, Frank W. McNair, the mortgagor, sold to the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc., the tract of land described in the act of mortgage executed on November 26, 1921. The deed evidencing this sale was filed for record in the clerk’s office on December 11, 1924. About three years and four months thereafter, viz., on April 20, 1928, W. B. Thompson & Company invoked executory process to enforce the mortgages which it had acquired from the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc. In both suits o,rders for executory process were granted, notices of demand were served, writs of seizure and sale were issued, and the mortgaged property was advertised for sale by the sheriff.

Tire record fails to show any return on the writ of seizure and sale issued in the suit to foreclose the mortgage securing the sum of $3,000. Apparently that foreclosure proceeding was abandoned by the mortgage creditor which allowed the mortgaged property to be seized and sold in the other foreclosure proceeding. The mortgage in the foreclosure proceeding that was main *461 tained, excluding the SE% of Section 35, Township 13 North, Range 8 East, covered a tract of land containing only 320 acres. This tract of land was purchased at the sheriff’s sale by W. B. Thompson & Company, the.mortgage creditor, and the sheriff’s deed was filed for record in the clerk’s office of Franklin Parish on August 16, 1926. About 11 years later, viz., on August 25, 1937, the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc., as the record owner, sold by warranty deed to C. W. Berry, Jr., the SE14 of Section 35, Township 13 North, Range 8 East. The deed was filed for record in the clerk’s office of Franklin Parish on August 25, 1937. One month later, viz., on September 25/ 1937, this suit was filed for the reformation of the sheriff’s deed executed in the proceeding to foreclose the mortage securing the sum of $1,185.14 given by Frank W. McNair to the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc., on April 11, 1921.

The defendants in the suit are Frank W. McNair, the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc., C. W. Berry, Jr., the clerk of Court, and the sheriff of the Parish of Franklin.

Plaintiff claims that it is the owner of the 160 acres of land composing the Southeast Quarter of Section 35, Township 13 North, Range 8 East, which “through a clerical inadvertence” was omitted from the description in the sheriff’s deed as well as from the description in the mortgage and in the petition for executory process. Plaintiff asks that the Sheriff’s deed be reformed so as to include the omitted 160 acres of land and that the records of the parish be corrected so as to reflect the true description of the property.

There is no allegation of bad faith or fraud contained in plaintiff’s petition. By consent of counsel of the parties, the case was submitted for decision in the district court on copies of the entries in the public records, the acts of mortgage, judicial proceedings, and other records affecting the title to the property in dispute.

On April 11, 1921, in order to secure the sum of $1,185.14, Frank W. McNair gave the Gilbert Mercantile Company, Inc., a mortgage on the following described property :

EY2 of NW% and all NE%, Sec. 35, except 21 acres lying north of a conventional line commencing at the 1/2 mile comer of the North boundary line of said Sec. and running south 75 degrees East 41 chains. Also 21 acres off the south end of SW% Sec. 26 being that portion of SW^ of. Secs 26 lying South of a Conventional line commencing at the 1/2 mile corner of said boundary line Sec. 35 and running North 75 degrees West 41 chains all in T. 13 N.R. 8 E., containing 400 acres more or less. Notarial book “7” folio 461.

Also WYs of NWy2 Sec. 35 T. 13 N.R. 8 E. less 1 acres sold to the Macedonia Colored Church. Notarial book “7” folio 459.

The same description appears in the petition for the foreclosure of the mortgage, the copy of the act of mortgage attached thereto, the writ of seizure and sale, and the sheriff’s deed. The recital, “containing .400 acres, more or less, Notarial Book 7, *462 folio 461,” appearing in the description is relied on by plaintiff to establish its claim of ownership to the omitted 160 acres of land, in addition to the lands specifically described in the various documents.

Plaintiff argues that since it would require the omitted 160 acres to make up the 400 acres referred to and because of the fact that in Notarial Book 7 at page 461, the entire 400 acres is included in the description, there is sufficient evidence to show that it actually acquired the entire tract at the foreclosure sale, and that its title thereto is good even as against an innocent third party.

Plaintiff’s argument fails to distinguish between the. case where an erroneous description is sought to be corrected and the case where the omission of property is sought to be rectified. In the case of an erroneous description, a reformation of the instrument is always permitted as between the parties and, in some cases, even as to third parties, but the case is different as to omissions where - the rights of an innocent third person have intervened.

The determination of the issue involved in this case is controlled by the decision in Bender v. Chew, 129 La. 849, 56 So. 1023, 1024. The only difference between the cases is that a much stronger case for the application of the doctrine involved is presented here than in Bender v. Chew. In that case, Mrs. Bender brought suit against Chew, seeking the reformation of a deed so as to include'40 acres of land the description of which was entirely omitted, as is the situation presented here. There was a recitation in the deed that the description contained 1320 acres, more or less, when, as a matter of fact, only 1280 acres were described. In the instant case, the recitation in the instruments sought to be reformed is that the property contained 400 acres, more or less, when only 240 acres are specifically described. In the Bender case, the description concluded with the following recital, “being the same land patented to John T. Roots on the twenty-first day of June, 1884, by the state of Louisiana; by him, to said John T. Roots, sold and conveyed to us by his patent,- dated Jan.

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Bluebook (online)
7 So. 2d 184, 199 La. 918, 1942 La. LEXIS 1162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-b-thompson-co-v-mcnair-la-1942.