16 La. Ann. 227 | La. | 1861
The plaintiff caused to be recorded in the office of Mortgages of the Parish of Concordia, on the 10th of July, 1851, a judgment which he had obtained against Thomas Curry.
On the 10th of February, 1849, Curry agreed, in a writing drawn up by the defendant, Sparrow, to sell to P. Alexander the undivided half of sec. 9, the S. E. half of sec. 8, fractional sections 16 and 17, and the W. half of sec. 15, all in town
On the 10th of January, 1852, Curry made a deed to Alexander, in accordance with their aforesaid agreement. This last deed was accepted by the present defendant for the vendee, and was duly recorded on the 22d March, 1853.
The above described land forms apart of the Bringier grant.
The object of the present suit is to subject the above described property to the payment of the said mortgaged judgment, in the hands of Edward Sparrow, the actual owner and third possessor of the premises.
The Bistrict Judge rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, ordering the seizure and sale of the property to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand.
The defendant appealed.
In 1841 Curry and Garland purchased the Bringier grant as containing 40,000 arpents.
The claim was patented as containing only 28,971 68-100 acres.
Curry and Garland, it appears, sold divided portions of the land, to the extent of 5,130 acres, thus leaving undivided 23,841 67-100 acres. They sold, June 3d, 1846, to W. C. Hamner, an undivided interest of 1,500 acres, and a like undivided interest to H. A. Bullard; and by a compromise, the heirs of James Mooney were, on June 25th, 1846, recognized as undivided owners for 5,500 63-100 acres. The undivided interest of Curry, in the tract of 23,841 67-100 acres, was thus reduced to 7,670 52-100 acres on the latter date.
On the 7th of April, 1849, the heirs of /. Bastable recovered by judgment of Curry an interest of 4,329 undivided acres; and on the 30th of April, 1850, the Sheriff of the Parish of Concordia, as tax collector, executed a deed of sale in favor of the present defendant, Edward Sparrow, of the undivided interest of Curry in the Bringier grant, this interest being put down at 7,500 acres, more or less, in the Sheriff’s deed.
It is thus seen that the entire interest of Thomas Curry in the Bringier tract had been absorbed before the date of the registry of the judgment of the plaintiff, B. A. Alderson.
The tax sale to Sparrow was, on the day of its execution, recorded by the Clerk of the District Court in the book of Sheriff’s deeds, but was only recorded in the Recorder’s office of conveyances on the 25th October, 1852.
The law does not require the registry of collectors’ sales in the office of conveyances out of the city of New Orleans, nor are we advised that a recording is necessary in the Parish of Orleans. Such was the decision in the case of Baker v. Towles’ adm’x et al., 11 La. 438.
Our predecessors say: “ But the plaintiff contends, that the Sheriff’s deed can have no effect' against him, because it was not recorded until after the institution of this suit, and that the Act of 1813, as well as that of 1810, and the Civil Code of 1808, required that such deeds should be recorded, in order to give them effect against third persons.
“ It does not appear to us that either of the’ provisions relied on embraces deeds of this kind. The Act of 1813 speaks of Sheriffs’ sales made under execution, and although, in some respects, there is some analogy between the. two cases, yet the tax roll, which is the warrant of the collectors to coerce the collection of taxes, is certainly not an execution, nor can the sale be said to be by the Sheriff in that capacity. His sureties as Sheriff are not responsible for his acts as collector. He gives a distinct bond.”
The first of these two Acts is a substantial re-enactment of the seventh section of the Act of 1810, p. 60, and of the first section of the Act of 1813, p. 206. See, to the same effect, Revised Statutes of 1852, verbo Recorder, p. 475, || 1 and 2.
It also appears from the evidence, that in 1854, William, C. Micou, who had acquired the undivided interest of the heirs of James Mooney, instituted, in the District Court of the Parish of Concordia, an action in partition against all his co-owners, including Thomas Curry, of the heretofore mentioned undivided 23,841 67-100 acres of land. The sale of the whole property, by separate section, and by fractional section, as given in the United States survey, was, under these proceedings, decreed on the 11th of November, 1854, and the judicial sale took place in July, 1856. The undivided interest of each co-proprietor was designated in the decree of partition as follows :
Interest of the succession of William C. Micou.5,500.63 acres.
“ “ Wright, Williams <& Co.1,500 “
“ “ William C. Hamner.1,500 “ .
“ “ Edward Sparrow.5,506.02 “
« “D.S. Stacy.2,753.01 “
“ “ D. S. Stacy’s six minor children.2,753.01 “
“ “ J. B. Denegre.4,329 “
Total as above.23,841.67 “
D. S. Stacy, prior, to the death of his wife, in whose rights his six minor children figure in the partition suit, had conveyed to Edward Sparrow the undivided interest of all his acquisitions in said grant, and had acquired the undivided interest of all the acquisitions of Edward Sparrow in the same. Thus their interest was the same.
At the partition sale of July, 1856, Stacy tad Barrow acquired, among other property, the sections and fractional sections of land described in the sale from Curry to Alexander4, (we will here remark, that Alexander conveyed the land bought by him from Curry, to Sparrow and Stacy, in December, 1853) and subsequently, at a judicial sale made to effect a partition between Sparrow and the heirs of Stacy, the former acquired the lands described in the Alexander sale, with the exception, perhaps, of a portion of the west half of the section 15.
In the first partition suit, D. S. Stacy, in his answer, after stating various conveyances made by Curry and Garland, adds : “ Defendant shows that the share of Thomas Curry in said grant was 9,192 52-100 acres, and has been disposed of in the following manner, viz :
Recovered by Bastable’s heirs.....4,329 acres.
Sold to Mrs. Lillard.1,280 “
“ “ John Johnson.1,764 “
“ “ P. Alexander. 920 “ ■
“ at tax sale... 899.52 “
9,192.52 “
This answer was adopted by Edward Sparrow, and the present plaintiff now
The plaintiff was not a party to the partition suit, nor did he acquire any right on the faith of these declarations, for his judgment and its registry were of anterior dates. Besides, we know of no law which, as a general rule, prevents a party from claiming ownership to property under different titles. In fact, the purchase of one’s own property is null. C. C. 2418.
It may well be that, in this instance, the defendant did not object to the sale from Curry to Alexander, because he was cognizant of the prior promise of sale, and had doubts as to the validity of his sheriff, or tax sale, as to Alexander’s, interest, by reason of such prior knowledge of his equitable right; but surely no one, excepting Alexander or those claiming. under him, could have successfully contested the title of Sparrow under said tax sale, unless for other causes.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be reversed and avoided, and that ours be for the defendant, with costs in both Courts.