44 La. Ann. 907 | La. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs, alleging themselves to be the holders of and owners of a mortgage claim against property sold at tax sale, brought this suit to cancel the same.
An exception of no cause of action and prescription was filed The exception was maintained and the suit dismissed.
On appeal to this court the judgment was reversed, and the case remanded for the purpose of trying the question of prescription, and on the merits in case the exception of prescription should be overruled.
In the decree remanding the case to be tried on the merits, the exception of no cause of action was disposed of.
In the opinion of the court remanding the case the facts are fully stated. 42 An. 857.
After the ease was remanded the plaintiffs filed an amended petition for rents and revenues, and the defendant, De Rouen, for the price of the tax sale, the taxes subsequently paid and for the value
There was judgment for plaintiffs, and the defendant, De Rouen, has appealed. In January, 1869, John Hays sold the land in controversy to his nephews, David, William and Malachi Hays. The price was $15,000, in five instalments, evidenced by promissory notes, in solido, maturing in one, two, three, four, five years from date. The purchase price was secured by vendor’s privilege and special mortgage. John Hays died in 1869. David Hays, one of the vendees, qualified as his administrator. His two brothers and co-debtors signed his bond as administrator. In 1875 David Hays brought suit on the notes, obtained judgment against himself and co-debtors, and caused execution to issue on the judgment. The sale was arrested by injunction, and nothing further was done in the execution of the judgment. Subsequently the administrator, David Hays, caused the erasure of the judgment from the records on the ground that it had become extinguished by prescription.
It is contended by plaintiffs that prescription on the notes was suspended during the time that David Hays was administrator, and that if the judgment be a valid one, prescription of the judgment was interrupted by several suits instituted by the plaintiffs. The defendant’s contention is that the notes were merged in the judgment, which they allege was valid, and that there has been no interruption of prescription on the same.
Complaint is also made by defendants that David Hays has been improperly made a party- to this suit, as he has no interest in it, having disposed of his interest in the land. But he has a direct interest in the question which has been raised as to the validity of the debt, and we are of the opinion that he has been properly made a party defendant.
It is no longer an open question that an administrator of a succession indebted to it can not sue on the claim in behalf of the succession, and that prescription is suspended during the continuance of his administration. McKnight vs. Calhoun & Sons, 36 An. 408; 32 An. 1037; 37 An. 341.
In the instant case there is no attempt made to enforce the debt against a co-debtor who has interposed the plea of prescription, which" has been suspended by the position in which one of the co-debtors, who alone could act, has placed himself. But it is a universal rule in our jurisprudence that the interruption of prescription by one solitary debtor interrupts it as to the' others, because the debt is indivisible, and each is bound for the same thing. We see no reason why it should not apply to a suspension of prescription. In the instant case the reason is the more urgent, because the co-debtors were sureties on his official bond, and undeniably responsible for the mal-administration of their principal.
So far as the administrator, Hays, is concerned we do not understand that defendants contend, as to him, that the debt was prescribed. If not, then the debt really existed. No one could plead prescription against it when he was prohibited from doing so.
The plea of prescription, if sustained, destroys the obligation as an entirety. During the administration of David Hays the mortgage notes were kept alive and in existence.
The mortgage, if reinscribed as accessory to the debt, was also kept alive, and can be enforced on the property upon which it rests. No purchase, therefore, unless at tax sale, can defeat it.
The object of this suit is to set aside the tax sale in order to make the mortgage upon it executory.
Was the mortgage kept alive with the notes which it was given to secure? The mortgage is not destroyed by a failure to reinscribe it within ten years.
The omission to reinscribe a mortgage within ten years from the first inscription will cause it to lose its effect, its rank only, and the reinscription will give it effect from the time of such reinscription. Shepherd vs. Orleans Cotton Press Co., 2 An. 100.
Any one who has acquired an adverse interest by reason of the failure to reinscribe the mortgage within ten years can. oppose the same. It is subordinated to his rights. In this case the defendants have not suffered by failure to reinscribe the mortgage within ten years. They have acquired no adverse interest by such failure.
The inscription of the mortgage was made' March 17, 1870, and re-
When the defendant, De Rouen, purchased at tax sale 5th March, 1887, the mortgage was in full force, and he had acquired no adverse interest prior to its reinscription.
What has been said in relation to the suspension of prescription on the notes applies to the judgment, conceding it to be valid, as the mortgage was reinscribed during its existence, and was ■ kept alive with the judgment. 42 An. 152.
This case illustrates the soundness of the rule prohibiting an administrator bringing a suit against himself, in which he not only makes himself a defendant, but plaintiff, controlling the judgment, thus enabling him, as was attempted in this case, to convert the debt into a judgment, and then permit it to prescribe and order its cancellation and erasure from the records.
Tax Sale.
The property was sold for taxes under Act 98 of 1886. It was assessed to the estate of Wm. Hays. He resided and died in the parish of St. Mary. His heirs also resided there. The property was owned in indivisión by several.
There was, therefore, no valid assessment of the property upon which a sale could be made. It is elementary that the assessment is the basis of a judgment for the sale. Sue. Mercier, 42 An. 1139; Hays, Administrator, vs. Victor, Sheriff, 33 An. 1162.
The tax collector’s deed is prima facie evidence that all the prequisites to the sale have been complied with, but it is subject to consideration. In this ease the facts show that essential requirements of the law have been omitted.
It is evident from the assessment that the tax debtors received no notice as required by Art. 210 of the Constitution. Breaux vs. Ne-grotto, 43 An. 426.
The tax deed also shows that said article of the Constitution was violated in the sale of the property in block.
The tax sale is null and void.
Judgment affirmed.