Merritt v. Merle

22 La. Ann. 257 | La. | 1870

Taliaferro, J.

This is an appeal taken from a judgment rendered by the district court in each of the above cases, dissolving, with damages, the injunctions therein taken out hy the plaintiff.

In June, 1847, A. H. Phillippon and J. Ami Merle, the latter as the natural tutor of his minor children, Ami, Eugenie, Oscar and Corinne, and as executor of Alfred Phillippon, sold to James McMasters an ■extensive body of land, embracing a large plantation, and sixty-three slaves. It was agreed that the portion of the price which accrued to the minors should be severally paid to them as they respectively attained the age of majority. This large property was sold in March, 1856, by McMasters to R. A. Stewart, who assumed the payment of the installments to the minors at the periods stipulated by McMasters. In September, 1859, Stewart sold the property to Merritt, who bound himself personally to pay the minors, at a time then fixed hy an extension •of the period of payment, as settled hy the contract with McMasters. But, before this extension of time in favor of Merritt, two of the minors, Ami and Oscar, had become of age, and they took out executory process to enforce payment of thoir shares of the purchase price of the property. This took place in April, 1858. Stewart enjoined the seizure, and the suit was undetermined at the time of the sale to Merritt. All further proceedings in the matter seem to -have been suspended by the war. In May, 1865, a motion was made in court by the defendants in injunction to have it set aside. On the fifteenth of June, before any action was taken on this motion,-Merritt intervened in. the injunction suit, alleging that. “ ho had purchased the .land in controversy from Stewart; that he is now the owner and in possession of the property. He, there!oré, prays to intervene and defend the *258title and claim of said Stewart, and tlie proceedings now pending herein.”

The injunction was dissolved and an alias writ issued in January, 1866. This, Merritt enjoined, as he, also, did an order of seizure and sale taken out in May following by the other two heirs. The ground taken by Stewart in the injunction sued out by him was, that a suit had been instituted by the United States for about five thousand aeres of the land bought by McMasters, and subsequently sold to him by McMasters, and that ho was in danger of eviction. Merritt set up the same ground in the injunction taken by him against the alias writ of seizure and sale issued at the instance of Ami and Oscar Merle, and, in addition, that Knapp, under a sale to him from the State, of a portion of the land embraced in the sale to McMasters, was cutting and removing wood from the land, and causing great damage to the petitioner. The same grounds were taken"in the injunction against the order of seizure and sale obtained by Eugenie and Corinnc Merle ; except, in the latter case, he set up the plea of prescription. Knapp, it appears from an injunction taken by him against Merritt, to restrain him from interfering with his operations in cutting and removing timber from a portion of the land, set out in his petition that lie had purchased from the State two thousand two hundred and forty-six acres of the land in question, and that ho had been in peaceable possession of the same from October. 1864.

The suit alleged by Merritt to have been instituted by the United States, for a largo part of the land included in the sale to McMasters, was commenced in the United States Circuit Court on the twentieth of November, 1851, and was finally decided against the United States by the court in the last resort, in December, 1866. See Wallace Report, vol. 4, p. 680.

It is shown that at and before the time of the purchase of Stewart from McMasters, Stewart was fully aware of the suit then pending by the United States claiming a portion of the lands included in the purchase he was about to make. The Phillipon grant, the landed estate convoyed by these sales, contains about twelve thousand arpents, extending from its front on the Mississippi river to Lake Borgne.

The United States claimed in the suit referred to about five thousand arpents of this large survey and which, as we infer, covered the lands claimed by Knapp under title derived from the State of Louisiana. Stewart purchasing with knowledge of the existence of this suit, could not avail himself of the provisions of article 2535 of the Civil Code. That article reads: “If the buyer is disquieted in his possession or has just reason to fear that he shall be disquieted by an action of mortgage, or by any other claim, he may suspend the payment of the price until the seller has restored him to quiet possession, unless the *259seller prefer to give security. There is au exception to this rule when the buyer has been informed, before the sale, of the danger of eviction.” Merritt, by intervention in the injunction suit and claiming to defend the title and claim of Stewart,” was bound by the judgment rendered in that case, and the question arises, is he not precluded by the exception- rei judicata from setting up the same ground in his application to enjoin the alias order of seizure and sale issued by Ami and Oscar Merle ? True, he adds the additional ground that he was disturbed by the claim of Knapp holding title to a part of the land from the State. We are satisfied that the validity of Knapp’s title depended upon that of the United States ; for the State could only derive title from the United States ; and that failing, the right set up by Knapp would necessarily fail as being derived from a vendor without title. There was therefore no new grounds set forth in the petitions for these injunctions obtained by Merritt. The plea of prescription is wholly groundless. The suit of Eugenie and Corinne Merle was not founded on notes as pretended, but upon the written obligation to pay, contained in the deed of sale of sixteenth September, 1859. The plea of prescription of five years is therefore not applicable. 3 An. 46; 13 An. 294.

The obligations of the plaintiffs in injunction were for the price of land and slaves. They can onlv bo enforced against the land mortgaged.

It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court dissolving the injunction be annulled and set aside. It is further ordered that this case be remanded to the court of the first instance, with instructions to reopen it, so far as to ascertain, by proper proceedings, to be taken for that purpose, the value of the slaves sold, at the time the contract was entered into, and which form a component part of the consideration stipulated for the entire purchase of both land and slaves. It is further ordered that when the value of the slaves shall have boon so ascertained, and the deduction thereof made as herein directed, payment of the remainder be enforced by sale of the land mortgaged and under seizure.

It is further ordered that the costs in the lower court be paid by the plaintiffs and appellants, and those of the appeal by defendants and appellees.

Mr. Justice Howe recused.