40 La. Ann. 413 | La. | 1888
The opinion of tlie Court was delivered by
This is a suit to compel an adjudicatee to comply with his bid on. certain real estate.
The defence is that the title tendered is not such as the defendant is bound to accept.
Tbe appeal is taken by the plaintiffs from a judgment against them.
The material facts from which the litigation arises, are the following:
The Citizens’ Bank was a creditor of J. W. Zacharie for a large amount, secured by mortgage on valuable property in this city.
After tbe death of Zacharie, the property involved in this controversy and other property was offered for sale by the sheriff, under an execution, for the payment of back taxes.
At that sale, which occurred in 1874, the bank became the adjudicatee. : ■ .
' In Juñe, 1875, the widow and heirs of Zacharie and .the bank executed an act whereby the claim of the bank was liquidated and the
It was stipulated, ex industria, that the object of the agreement was to place matters in the condition in which they stood before the sheriff’s sale for taxes; but that the widow and heirs of Zacharie would, under no circumstance, be liable for the debt due the bank.
In the course of time, finding that her condition had not improved, and that it was her interest to foreclose her mortgage, the bank, in 1876, instituted proceedings to that end, against Widow J. W. Zacharie executrix and possessor.
Under the writ issued, the property was seized, advertised, and in August, 1876, adjudicated for $54,000 to the bank, who retained the amount of adjudication, which was inferior to her claim, and she paid the costs and charges.
In 1881 the bank sold to the plaintiff part of the property thus adjudicated, aud in May, 1884, the plaintiff caused it to be offered at public auction, when it was adjudicated to the defendant for $20,000.
The validity of the title tendered having been questioned by the defendant, who declined to comply, the bank intervened, joining the plaintiffs, to affirm the title made them by her. On the other hand, the widow and heirs of Zachaiie, brought in by the plaintiffs and by the bank, make common cause with the defendant.
The only question to be determined is simply:
Whether or not the title resided in the succession of J. W. Zacharie at the foreclosure of the mortgage.
The argument cannot be successfully urged that the bank cannot hold the affirmative, as she has undertaken to reconvey to the widow and heirs of Zacharie, the property adjudicated to her at the sheriff’s sale for taxes, and as by the retrocession, the title passed from her to them, and was at the date of the proceedings, in them and not in the Succession of Zacharie.
The object of the act, to which allusion has already been made, was to adjust with the widow and heirs, the claiffi of the bank, to avoid the tax sale formally, and, as said, to place matters and persona in the condition in which they stood before the sheriff’s tax sale.
The retrocession was designed for no other purpose than to show an express relinquishment of any title by the bank to the property in favor of the succession, represented them by the widow and heirs, Who, at Zá'charie’s death, had become the joint owners of the property left by him and who had undertaken to champion its rights.*
At that time the bank could well have issued executory proceedings against the succession of Zacharie (Bank vs. Buisson, 7 R. 506), and as the title was in it at the date of the seizure and sale, to foreclose, it is apparent that the bank had a right to proceed against the succession represented by the executrix. Indeed, she had no other alternative. R. C. C. 3181.
In such a case, it was unnecessary to make any other parties.
The objection that, by the agreement of 1875, a contract of antichresis was entered into, and that the bank had no right to surrender the property which formed the object of it, has no foundation.
The bank had a right to relinquish or abandon possession at any time, as she had not bound herself to retain it. R. C. C. 3178.
Viewing the agreement otherwise than as an antichresis, we do not find in its tenor, any obligation assumed by the bank to retain possession, until the debt be finally paid. Had such been the intention of the parties, they surely would have unequivocally expressed it.
The bank, besides, had hypothecary rights on the property, the exercise of which had not been, in any manner, suspended or affected by the agreement in question.
We, therefore, conclude that the title offered is such as the purchaser was bound to accept.
It is, therefore, ordered and decreed that the judgment appealed from be reversed, and that there be now judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and the Citizens’ Bank, intervenor, rejecting the claim of the widow and heirs of J. W. Zaeharie, declaring that the property described in the petition belongs to the defendant, David Haas, and condemning him to pay to the plaintiff the price of adjudication: Twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) and interest, with vendor’s lien and privilege aud special mortgage on the property and according to the terms and conditions of the adjudications, as specified ip said petition, and that the widow and heirs of Zaeharie and the' defendant, Haas, pay costs in both courts.
Rehearing refused.