13 La. 205 | La. | 1839
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 13th May, 1828, the plaintiff purchased, by nota
The plaintiff now claims the part which was sold, alleging that he never parted with his title, and that he has not been legally divested of it.
The defendants and their warrantors claim title under the judicial sale, and the only question at issue is, whether that sale and the proceedings under which it took place were in due form of law. In the District Court the case was submitted to a jury, who gave their verdict in favor of the plaintiff; and judgment having been rendered in conformity therewith the defendants appealed.
The act of the legislature under which the defendants caused the parcel of ground in controversy to be sold, has already received the interpretation of this court, in the case of Morris vs. Crocker, 4 Louisiana Reports, 147, and it was then held, that purchasers under that act are bound to show, that all the formalities required by it have been fully and faithfully complied with.
That statute authorizes the collection, in a manner which it provides, of the taxes and other sums due to the corporation by non-residents, who have no agents in the city. The district judge was of opinion, and so charged the jury, that Ihe name of the non-resident owner must in all cases be §*ven proceedings under that statute, and that the designation of an unknown owner was not sufficient to make them valid. We are of opinion the judge did not err. If the name 0f t]ie owner had been known in this instance, the cor-7 poration would have known, also, that Kenny Laverty was his agent, and had paid taxes for him on other property, a few m0nths before the institution of the suit by the corporation. So long as the owner was unknown, the court who . _ . , , , - tried the case had no means to ascertain whether he resided
We are of opinion that the judgment of the District Court ought, to be affirmed.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed with costs in both courts.