12 Mart. 543 | La. | 1823
delivered the opinion of the court. Three of the creditors of Smith’s estate demand that they should be placed on the tableau of distribution, as privileged and mortgage creditors, and be paid in preference to others, viz: the heirs of Trudeau, who are the vendors of real estate found in the bankrupt’s possession at the time of his failure; and James Morrison, and James Whitehead, who assert they have obtained mortgages on it.
The heirs of Trudeau, in the year 1816, sold a plantation and slaves, to Smith, the insolvent, situate in the parish of St. Charles. The act of sale was passed before the parish judge of the parish of St. James, and a special mortgage was expressed in it. On the 17th of March, 1821, without any order of the judge, this instrument was recorded, in the parisn where the property is situated. The purchase money, expressed in the deed of conveyance, was one hun
Morrison’s claim is founded on an act, passed in the state of Kentucky, which pursues the common law form of giving a mortgage. The deed expresses that Smith has sold the premises to Morrison, and contains a clause that in case the vendor should pay the vendee, the sum of fifty thousand dollars, the sale is to be void and of no effect.
Whitehead’s arises from a judgment given in this state, and duly recorded in the office of the parish judge of the parish of St. Charles, on the 17th May, 1821.
In the argument of the case, the two last mentioned creditors have united in their efforts to destroy the claim of Trudeau; which, if admitted, leaves nothing for either. We shall therefore first proceed to examine it.
A most extensive range has been taken in the discussion, and as is generally the case, in causes of this magnitude,
In support of his claim, it has, however, been pressed on us, that his right is one of the most sacred nature, which cannot be touched, or impaired, without violating the principle of property itself. We confess to be unable to see the subject in that point of view. The right of the vendor to be paid comes from the law, as does also the mode of carrying that right into effect; his claim possesses therefore, no higher character than any other; except so far as the law has conferred it. To enter into an enquiry on other grounds, would lead, we apprehend, to any thing but a satisfactory result. If gone into, cases might be readily supposed, where the demands of other creditors would have as strong equity to recommend them. A man who lends his money, to enable the purchaser to make the first payment due on the price of a tract of land, in reason, in justice, and foro conscientiæ, has as much right to be paid out of the proceeds of the land, as the
It has been contended that the mortgagees ace not third parties in the sense of the law, and that they stand in no better situation with respect to the force, and validity of the mortgages, than the insolvent himself could. We understand by the term third parties, all persons who are not parties to the contract, agreement, or instrument of writing, by which their interest in the thing conveyed; is sought to be affected. It is not pretended here, that Morrison was a party in the original sale, and there appears to be as little ground for contending that he has become so since, or that he stands in the same place as Smith, his vendor. The purchaser of
We now come to what we consider the great question in this case; and that is, whether the lien which the heirs of Trudeau set up, as attaching on the property sold by them, was one of those, which the legislature, by the act of 1813, required to be recorded. The enquiry lies in a narrow compass, and as already observed, on a correct interpretation of a single phrase used in that act, will depend the respective rights of the parties before us.
The expressions in the statute are "all liens, of any nature whatever, having the effect of a legal mortgage, which shall not be recorded agreeably to the provisions of this act, shall be null and void.” To arrive at a just conclusion, in construing this clause, it becomes necessary to examine what is the effect of a legal mortgage, and that once ascertained, to enquire next in what does the privilege differ from it. As the law itself has spoken on this subject, it is better to refer to it than to trust to any deductions of ours. According to the civil code, the effect of a mortgage is, that the mortgagee has
But it is argued, that a privilege has not the effect of a legal mortgage, because the latter operates on all the property of the debtor; the former only on a particular portion. We do not see what difference this makes, on the part to which the lien attaches; the effect on it is the same, whether other parts of the debtor's property be liable to it, or not. The object of the law was to secure third parties against latent incumbrances on the thing in which they bona
If this should appear doubtful, and we recur, as we are directed to do, in cases where the expressions of the legislature are not clear, to the reason and spirit of the law, and the causes which induced the legislature to enact it, Civil Code, 5, art. 14, a strong argument is derived in favor of including the vendor’s privilege as one of those liens, which were directed to be recorded. The causes, which induced the passage of that law, were latent claims, attaching to property in the hands of innocent persons, producing great injustice in particular cases, and doing an injury to the public by checking the free transfer of property. The object of passing the act was to remove these evils, and a construction, which would leave them in force, must be resisted. Now, the privilege of the vendor, which is not found recorded in the parish where the property is situated, is just as much within the spirit of the law, as the lien
It has been also urged, that if it had been in the contemplation of the legislature to include the vendor’s privilege, among those which are to be recorded, they would have used the expression, “all liens whatsoever,” not “all liens having the effect of a legal mortgage.” It is true the former expressions would have had the effect stated, and would, perhaps, have presented less ambiguity, but the not using them, does not by any means prove that the words, found in the act, have not the same meaning Indeed we draw, from the very terms which the legislature have chosen, a strong argument in favor of the idea, that the claim of the seller of immoveable property, was to be embraced by them. For, if they had intended to confine the necessity of recording, to legal mortgages alone, it may be fairly urged, they would have followed the natural mode of conveying that idea, and said that all legal mortgages whatever, that were not recorded agreeably to the provisions of the act, should be null. Instead of which, they have
Nor is it a matter of surprise that the legislature should have conceived that, by the expressions used, they acted on liens, such as that now under examination. The discussion on this subject leaves it as a very doubtful question in our minds, whether the privileged mortgage be any thing more or less, than a legal mortgage. But without intending to decide that
The cases, heretofore decided in this court,
The next question which the case presents, is, whether it was put on record, pursuant to law. It has been already stated, that the order of the judge is wanting, and in consequence of this defect, Whitehead contends that his mortgage, which was duly enregistered in the office of the parish judge, two months before, is entitled to a preference.
The article of our code, which it is contended, requires this formality, on pain of nullity, after declaring that mortgages shall have effect against third persons, being of good faith, from the day they are recorded, provides “ that this recording shall not be made after the expiration of the legal term, without an order of the court given for that purpose, que sur un ordre du juge, rendu a cet effet.
There is some difficulty in knowing what court, or judge is meant by these terms, but admitting that it is the district judge, or district
We have lastly to enquire into the validity of the instrument by which Morrison claims to be paid as a mortgagee creditor. It is objected that it has not the form required by our laws, for acts of mortgage, and that instruments of writing, tending to affect real estate, must pursue the lex loci rei sitæ. This ques
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the district court be annulled, avoided and reversed, and that the parties to this suit be placed on the tableau of distribution of J. K. Smith, and paid as follows, that is to say, Emilie Trudeau, minor heir of Zenon Trudeau, the sum of five thousand, three hundred and fifty seven dollars, fourteen and a half cents, with interest on the one third of that sum, from the first of April, 1820, on one other third part of the same, from the first of April, 1821, and on the remaining third, from the first of April, 1822, it being the one seventh of the half of the money due for the plantation, sold by the heirs of Trudeau, to J. H. Smith; that James Morrison be placed in said tableau, as a creditor, for the sum of fifteen