Wetherbee v. Lodwick Lumber Co.

193 So. 671, 194 La. 352, 1940 La. LEXIS 982
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 9, 1940
DocketNo. 35491.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 193 So. 671 (Wetherbee v. Lodwick Lumber Co.) 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
Wetherbee v. Lodwick Lumber Co., 193 So. 671, 194 La. 352, 1940 La. LEXIS 982 (La. 1940).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

The Lodwick Lumber Company purchased at public sale made on October 6, 1934, a large tract of land in Bossier Parish and paid therefor $82,500. The sale was made by the sheriff under a writ ordering him to sell the property to effect a partition thereof. The lumber company recorded its deed in the conveyance records of the parish and immediately took possession.

The writ of sale under which the sheriff acted was issued pursuant to a judgment rendered on April 23, 1934, in a suit for partition, styled Continental Securities Corporation v. George W. Wetherbee (Risinger, Intervener), decreeing: “That there be judgment herein in favor of plaintiff, Continental Securities Corporation, and of M. Risinger, Intervener, and against the defendants, recognizing the said Continental Securities Corporation, and the said M. Risinger, Intervener, to be the owhers in indivisión, in the proportion of an undivided one-half (%) interest each” in the property sought to be partitioned, and further decreeing that the property be sold at public auction to effect a partition.

'A detailed statement of the facts and circumstances leading up to the suit for partition and the issues involved in that litigation was made by us in our original opinion and reiterated chronologically in our opinion on rehearing in the case of Continental Securities Corporation v. Wetherbee, reported in 187 La. 773, 175 So. 571. While the facts and issues involved in that litigation, as stated by us in those opinions, are pertinent to the issues involved in the present suit, we shall not restate them here, but refer to them later in this opinion as occasion arises.

It should be stated here, however, that the same George W. Wetherbee, who was defendant in that partition suit, is plaintiff in the present suit. In the partition suit his defense, in sum, was that the plaintiff, Continental Securities Corporation, had no title to the one-half interest in the land which it claimed. In that suit the title to . the respective interests in the property claimed by the parties to the suit was the major issue involved and had to be decided before the partition was ordered. That issue was decided, and it was held by the trial court that the plaintiff, Continental Securities Corporation, owned an undivided one-half interest in the property and that Risinger owned the other one-half interest. *362 Wetherbee, the defendant in the partition suit, did not appeal suspensively from the judgment ordering the property sold, and that judgment therefore became executory ten days after it was signed.

On April 11, 1935, eleven and a half months after the judgment was rendered, Wetherbee petitioned for, and was granted, a devolutive appeal to this court, which appeal was perfected. But on October 6, 1934, approximately six months before the appeal was applied for and about five months after the partition judgment became executory, the Lodwick Lumber Company, defendant in the present suit, purchased the property at public sale made to effect the partition.

When the case finally reached this court on Wetherbee’s devolutive appeal, the judgment recognizing the Continental Securities Corporation’s title to one-half interest in the property, and ordering the same sold to effect a partition, was reversed, anu ’t was decreed that the foreclosure proceedings under which the Securities Corporation claimed to have acquired title in 1933 were null and void. But our decree reversing the judgment was handed down long after the sale to effect the partition took place, and was made several months after Wetherbee applied for, and was granted, the devolutive appeal.

On rehearing in the case cited above, we held that the Lodwick Lumber Company obtained valid title to the land, but reserved Wetherbee’s right to apply for a rehearing. He applied for a rehearing and alleged that the court erred in holding that the lumber company acquired valid title, because it was not a party to the suit, and that, if the judgment were permitted to stand, he would lose his constitutional right to attack the-sale. He further alleged on information and belief that the sale was null because of certain transactions which took place between the Continental Securities Corporation, the plaintiff in the suit for partition, and the Lodwick Lumber Company, the purchaser of the property at the partition sale, which transactions amounted to a fraud upon his rights, and that, if permitted to do so, he could prove that the public sale at which the lumber company became the purchaser of the property was tainted with fraud and therefore should be set aside.

We refused the rehearing with a per curiam, in which we said that, the charges of fraud made by Wetherbee in his application for rehearing not having been involved in the suit before us, we could not decide in that case what effect such charges, if made in a proper proceeding and proved, would have on the lumber company’s title to the land.

The present suit by Wetherbee against the Lodwick Lumber Company and others followed. He here attacks the sale in a direct action and asks that it be set aside, at least to the extent of the undivided one-half interest which the Securities Corporation claimed to own. The first seven articles of plaintiff’s petition relate mainly to the defenses which Wetherbee made to the suit for partition, which were that said corporation never owned any interest in the land because the foreclosure proceedings under which it claimed to have ac *364 quired a one-half interest were null and void. It is not necessary to refer to these allegations further than to say that Wetherbee’s defense in the partition suit was sustained by this court, as stated above.

The grounds on which the plaintiff now attacks the sale made to the Lodwick Lumber Company are set out principally in his application for a second rehearing in this court, and he makes those allegations a part of his petition in this case “as fully and to the same, extent as if the same were copied in extenso in this petition.” In his application for a second rehearing, Wetherbee charged on information and belief that the Continental Securities Corporation induced the Lodwick Lumber Company to bid for the property upon an agreement that it would lend to, or procure for, the lumber company the funds with which to pay for the interest of M. Risinger in the property; that the consideration of the loan was an agreement on the part of the Lodwick Lumber Company that it wopld convey to the Continental Securities Corporation an undivided one-half interest in the minerals in and under the said property in case it became the purchaser; that the deal was consummated by the execution of a mortgage in favor of the Continental American Bank & Trust Company “almost contemporaneously with the sheriff’s deed”, and by the execution on October 16, 1934 — this was ten days after the sale — of an act of sale from the lumber company to the Securities Corporation and the bank, of an undivided one-half interest in the minerals.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 671, 194 La. 352, 1940 La. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wetherbee-v-lodwick-lumber-co-la-1940.