2 La. Ann. 606 | La. | 1847
The judgment of the court was pronounced by
The plaintiff purchased certain real estate in New Orleans, at a probate sale, ordered for the purpose of effecting a partition among the heirs of Pigneguy. Upon preparation of the act of sale, it was found that the property was encumbered with a special mortgage in favor of the Bank of Louisiana, executed in their life time by the deceased persons in the matter of whose successions the sale was made. The plaintiff accordingly refused to pay the purchase money absolutely; but caused a sufficient amount of it to be retained and deposited in bank, to protect him against the mortgage. The money was to remain in deposit till the bank should be satisfied, and to be delivered to the heirs of Pigneguy, only upon their exhibiting proof that the mortgage had been raised. This mortgage the recorder of mortgages cancelled, upon no other authority than that of a declaration, made before a notary in the form of an authentic act, by Marsoudet, the administrator of the succession, that, by virtue of his authority as administrator, he released and cancelled the mortgage in favor of the bank. The heirs were thus enabled to withdraw the money deposited, without the plaintiff’s knowledge or consent. Subsequently the bank seized the property to satisfy its mortgage; the plaintiff gave the recorder of mortgages notice of these proceedings; and, after an unsuccessful resistance, was compelled to pay the bank. The plaintiff then sued the heirs of Pigneguy, but obtained in execution of his judgment a partial satisfaction only, and no w claims the residue of what he has thus lost from the defendant, Landreaux.
This brings us to the second proposition of the' defendant, that the administrator of the succession, by virtue of his office, has authority to- cancel mortga-ges created by the deceased. If the proposition, in its general sense, be conceded,still the case of the bank’s mortgage falls under special legislation. By the 31st section of the charter of the Bank of Louisiana it was declared that,- “on all mortgages executed under this act, the president, directors, and company of the bank shall have the right to seize the property mortgaged, in whatever hands it may be, in the same manner, and with-the same facilities, that it coydd be seized in the hands of the mortgagor,-notwithstanding any sale or change of the title or possession thereof, by descent or otherwise.” By the 35th section of the charter, the bank, as mortgagee, was exempted from1 the effects of surrender by insolvent mortgagors, it being declared that, in such cases, the mortgaged property should not pass. This legislation was intended to favor the bank, and to protect its securities from being dilapidated, like those held by individuals, by the notoriously wasteful and extravagant administration of syndics and administrators, and the unreasonable charges which, under pretence of priviliges, were levied at the expense of mortgage creditors. Whether the interest of the State in this institution, or a disposition to encourage banking operations, was the motive of the legislator, it is unnecessary to inquire; the legislative will is clearly expressed, and, under it, the administrator was incapable of cancelling the mortgage virtute officii. That incapacity resulted from a statute which the recorder was bound to know and notice.
The exemption in question has been the subject of judicial interpretation, and has been recognized in the case of Williams v. Bank of Louisiana, 17 La. 382, and in the case of Bertoli v. The Citizens' Bank, 1 Annual R. p. 119. It is also adverted to in the case of the Gas Bank v. Webb, ante p. 526. It is not pretended that the bank was in any wise a party to the proceedings in the Court of Probates, or ever, directly or indirectly, assented to what the administrator has-done. It was an entire stranger to all these matters.
The argument that an administrator has a right to control and receive' the funds of a succession,'seems to us irrelevant.- The-funds deposited did noli belong to the' succession absolutely. I-t belonged to both parties,- under the terms of the contract; to tlie' plaintiff, for the purpose of his protection against; the bank’s mortgage ; to the heirs, when that mortgage should- be released. The condition was that the money was to- remain- in- deposit, and to be delivered to the heirs of Pigneguy,- only upon their exhibiting proof that the mortgage had been raised. That proof the defendant unlawfully furnished, and the immediate loss must fall upon him, leaving.him his recourse upon those whose misconduct has led him into error, and- the heirs who have been benefited by the unlawful receipt of the fund. Judgment affirmed.