58 So. 824 | La. | 1912
Nathan C. Crain, a head of a family, consisting of a wife and five children, owned 120 acres of land, which he occupied as a homestead.
In 1907, under the form of a sale and resale, Crain mortgaged SO acres of his homestead to the McLain & Varnado Company, and gave his note for $1,000, payable to the order of said company and secured by mortgage and vendor’s privilege on the premises. The Bank of Osyka acquired the note in due course of business and in 1909 instituted suit against Crain to recover judgment on the note, and to foreclose the special mortgage and vendor’s privilege by which it was secured. Crain was duly cited, but made no appearance, and judgment of default was entered and duly confirmed against him for the amount of the note, with interest and costs, with recognition and enforcement of the special mortgage and vendor’s lien on the premises.
Crain enjoined the execution of the judgment obtained by the Bank of Osyka, -on the ground that the property formed a part of his homestead, exempt from execution under article 244 of the Constitution. The bank' pleaded the judgment against Crain as res. judicata.
It appears that the wife of Crain did not waive the homestead; and that she and her husband have died since the institution of this suit, leaving five minor children by a former wife, three of whom reside on the land in controversy.
There was judgment below in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant bank appeals.
It is admitted in the statement of facts that at the date of the filing of this injunction suit in 1909 Crain actually oioned md resided on the land in controversy. It follow's that the pretended sale and resale of the property w'as a simulation, and that the transaction was in reality a mortgage of the homestead. A husband cannot waive his homestead rights, without the w'ritten consent of the wife. Constitution of 1898, art. 246. Doubtless, Crain himself is estopped by the acts of sale and resale, and by the judgment in favor of the Osyka Bank, to deny that he purchased the property from the McLain & Varnado Company, and that the note held by the bank was given for the purchase price of the land in controversy. But the true question is whether the simu
In a well-considered opinion handed down in that case by Mr. Justice Monroe, the conclusion was reached that the pretended sale and resale of the homestead was a nullity, not only between the parties, but to the third holder of the negotiable note purporting to represent the price of the resale. We make the following excerpt from the opinion:
“As the matter concerns the public policy of the state, it does not meet the requirements of the case for one seeking to enforce a mortgage against a homestead to show that the exceptional conditions necessary to its validity appear to exist. He must show that they do exist; otherwise the Constitution, in so far as the homestead provisions are concerned, may be reducen to the value of waste paper by any two persons who put their transaction in the form of a sale and resale, instead of a simple •act of mortgage.”
We reaffirm the doctrine of Carroll v. Ma-gee as in accord with the reason and spirit ■of the constitutional provisions on the subject-matter of homesteads.
Judgment affirmed.