12 La. Ann. 148 | La. | 1857
The plaintiff and defendant claim to be owners of the tract of land in controversy, in virtue of titles derived from the same author.
The plaintiff claims, by direct conveyances from James Bowie and the defendant, in virtue of a forced sale made by the Consolidated Association upon a mortgage given to that institution by James Bowie, and a purchase at the Sheriff’s sale by said Consolidated Association, and a transfer by it to the defendant.
The defendant’s title is the oldest, and the plaintiff’s counsel admit that it is incumbent on them to show it to he defective before they can recover. They propose, in substance, to do so in two modes, viz:
1st. They allege that the proceedings of the Consolidated Association, in their order of seizure and sale, were null, and hence no title was conveyed by the sale to the bank by the Sheriff, nor by the bank to Barrow.
2d. That the description of the property in the act of mortgage was vague and uncertain, and could convey nothing which could prejudice subsequent purchasers in good faith.
I. Laforest claims in virtue of a transfer from Robert J. Walker. The act of mortgage given by James Bowie to the bank when he borrowed the money upon his mortgage and pledge of stock contained the pact de non alienando.
Walker, Duncan Walker and Wilkins bought of James Bowie, and when Robert J. Walker bought the interest of his co-purchasers, ho bought the stock in the Consolidated Association which was secured by the mortgage of Bowie to the bank. The objections to the executory proceedings are that no such proceeding could be instituted upon the mortgage as against Walker, and if such proceeding could be instituted against him, the present one was defective for non-observance of the legal delays and forms; that tho attorneys ad hoc appointed to represent the defendant, R. J. Walker, the absentee, could not waive the required proceedings and accept services; that prescription had inter
We remark that at the time the order of seizure and sale was signed by the Judge ten years had not elapsed from the maturity of the bond to the date of such order. Moreover the bond had credits endorsed upon it which, if correctly made, interrupted prescription from the date of such payment.
If it be conceded that one, not a party to the order of seizure and sale, can callaterally question its regularity in this particular, we think the burden of proof would be upon him to show that the alleged payments were fictitious and improperly made, and that the order of the Judge was granted upon an instrument absolutely barred by prescription.
In regard to the other objections, we observe that no appeal was taken by Walker, and that the proceedings in the order of seizure and sale were confirmed by a monition. Under the facts of the case, we do not see how it is possible for the plaintiff to question in this collateral manner the regularity of the proceedings in the order of seizure and sale.
If the Judge of the District Court granted the order of seizure and sale upon a copy of the bond instead of the bond itself, it was at most but an error in the judgment, subject to revision on appeal, and one which was not injurious to Walker, as we must presume from the fact that the bond really existed, and Walken' never thought it worth his while to appeal.
If Walker did not chose to appeal upon a mere matter of form, it is clear that no other persons ought to avail themselves of the objection, particularly after the homologation of the order and all of the proceedings by a monition. Revised Statutes, p. 341, § 7.
The institution of the executory process against Walken' instead of Botoie was one of which he, Walker, could not complain, for he was in possession of the property, and was thus notified of the necessity of making payment in order to relieve his property from seizure, he being the owner of Bowie's stock secured by the mortgage.
If, under the pact de non alienando, a sale of the property would have been legal without service upon Walker and by service upon Bowie merely, it cannot be the less so by service upon the third possessor, who really represents the property which it is the object of the proceeding to sell, and who is to be injured by the sale. Moreover in this case the defect is cured by the monition, which is notice not only to Bowie and Walker, but to all other persons besides.
II. The second point presented by the plaintiffs and appellants is much more difficult.
It grows out of the description in Bowie's mortgage to the Consolidated Association, dated 15th June, 1829, under which the order of seizure and sale issued in 1840, and the land was sold by the Sheriff on the 21st September of that year.
The description of the mortgage is in these words: “A plantation, situated in the parish of Terrebonne, measuring seventy-five arpents on the Bayou Boeuf alias Bayou du Large, on the left bank of said bayou, by forty arpents in depth and fifty arpents front on the same bayou, on the right bank, by the same depth of forty arpents, bounded above by other lands belonging to said Bowie, and below by Mr. Edmond Hogan on the left bank and by Mr. William Hargrove on the right bank of the said bayou, of which plantation there is now only a
The order of seizure and sale, as well as the monition, having followed this description of the property, it is the title under which the defendant must, if at all, protect his possession. In itself it appears well enough upon paper, but contains a latent ambiguity, which makes its application to Boioie’s land upon Bayou du Large very difficult.
Bowie owned two tracts of land upon Bayou du Large of eighty arpents front on both sides of the bayou by a depth each side of forty arpents. The upper tract is called in this controversy the “Gabion tract;” the lower tract is called the “Felicé tract,” they being two confirmations by Congress to persons of those names. The defendant is in possession of and claims so much of the “ Gabion tract” as could be found after sales made by Bowie prior to the mortgage to the hank were carved out of it. The plaintiff contends that the “Felicé tract” answers the description contained in the mortgage better than the “Gabion tract.”
The District Judge has examined the hypothesis of the plaintiff and the pretensions of the defendant in this respect, in an elaborate and able opinion which he has placed on file, and he has arrived at the conclusion that both Wallcer and Laforest are chargeable with notice, and that as against them the description in the mortgage, accompanied as it has been by possession, was sufficient to vest the title to the land in controversy in the defendant. '
We concur fully in the reasoning and conclusion of the District Judge on this branch of the case, and deem it sufficient to state, as we have done, the result, simply observing- that although the “Felicé tract” corresponds in more particulars with the boundaries mentioned than does the “Gabion tract;” yet it is shown that there was no improvement at all upon that tract of land, whilst there was a small improvement upon the other; that the “ Gabion tract of land is identified by one of the witnesses, who appraised the land for Bowie and the bank, as the one appraised, and moreover, that all parties, up to the sale of Wallcer's pretensions to Laforest, in 1855, seem to have treated the “Gabion tract” of land as the one covered by the mortgage.
It is true that Article 8273 of the Civil Code requires that a mortgage, in order to be valid, should describe the nature and situation of each of the immovables on which the mortgage is granted; yet we think that where a sale of the mortgaged property has been made under an order of seizure and sale, and possession has followed the title, that an error in some of the boundaries ought not to be permitted to defeat the title, where the most important calls in the description are answered, and the identity of the tract is also established aliunde, particularly in favor of one purchasing- with notice, as in the present case with Laforest.
Judgment affirmed.