This interlocutory appeal asks whether
Davis Oil v. Mills,
I.
The basic facts are undisputed. Appellee Oliver Sterling, a New York resident, owned an interest in a mineral lease on property in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana. Appellant Mary Cobb Block sued Sterling in Louisiana state court. She obtained jurisdiction over Sterling by attaching his interest in the lease. Block obtained a judgment against Sterling and had the property seized and sold to satisfy it.
After Block obtained her judgment against Sterling but before the sheriffs sale, Sterling mortgaged the prоperty to MBank, appellee Bank One’s predecessor in interest. Bank One recorded the mortgage as required by Louisiana law. Bank One did not, howevеr, file a request for notice of seizure under Louisiana statute La.R.S. 13:3886. 1 Louisiana law required that before property could be seized and sold at a sheriff’s sаle, the creditor must give constructive notice by publication and give actual notice to those who have filed a request for notice of seizure.
Althоugh Block knew of Bank One’s interest in the property because it was recorded on the mortgage certificate, she was not required by Louisiana law to notify Bank One of the sale because it had not filed a request for notice of seizure. Block did not attempt to inform Bank One of the seizure or sale. Block bought the property at the judicial sale in January 1989 for $10,000, which was less than 5 percent of its appraised value.
In May 1989, this court decided
Davis Oil v. Mills,
Block filed a motion to dismiss Bank One’s intervention. The district court denied the motion, holding that Davis Oil applies retroactively to the sheriff’s sale at issue here. The district court granted Block’s motion to certify the question for an immediate appeal. This court granted the petition for permission to appeal.
II.
In
Davis Oil Co. v. Mills,
The parties have assumed in their briefs and arguments that the appropriate analysis for determining whether
Davis Oil
should be applied retroactively is the test developed in
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
Therefore, before application of the
Chevron Oil
analysis would be appropriate, we must answer the threshold question whethеr we applied the rule enunciated in
Davis Oil
to the parties in that case. If so,
Beam
dictates that the rule be applied retroactively to this case as well. In order to conclude that the rule was applied to the original parties, the earlier opinion need not explicitly address the retroactivity issue. Where the court does not explicitly decide the retroactivity question or reserve the question of whether its holding applies to the parties before it, “it, is properly understood to hаve followed the normal rule of retroactive application in civil cases.”
In Davis Oil, we determined first that failure to request notice of a seizure under the Louisiana statute did not constitute a waiver of the party’s due process rights to notice. We then concluded that on the facts of that case the minеral lessee’s interest in the property was not “reasonably ascertainable” under Mennonite. On that basis we found no due process violation. Thus, although the holding that failure to request notice could not be treated as a waiver of one's right to notice did not lead to a finding of a due process violation in Davis Oil, it is cleаr that we applied that holding to the parties then before us. We did not discuss the retroactivity of the decision in Davis Oil or reserve that issue. Thus, we conclude that Davis Oil applied the new rule, to the parties before it. Beam dictates therefore that we apply it tо the parties before us in this case.
We recognize the concern of the Louisiana banking industry and the Blocks that the decision to apply Davis Oil retroactively was made in a case to which they were not a party and in which it appears *201 the issue was not strongly argued. Beam concludes that the principles of equality and stare decisis violated when a rule of law is applied to some cases аnd not others outweigh any unfairness caused by the failure to fully argue the appropriateness of nonretroactivity in the earlier case. Ill S.Ct. at 2446. Certainly, any perceived unfairness here is no different from that caused by the failure of an earlier party to persuasively argue one’s position which creаtes an unfavorable precedent on any issue.
It is not an answer that these particular parties were not before the
Davis Oil
court. The Supreme Court hаs squarely rejected the idea that the application of a rule to a particular case should turn upon the particular equities of that cаse.
See Griffith v. Kentucky,
Because we applied the rule of Davis Oil retroactively in that case, we must apply it retroaсtively here. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s conclusion that the holding in Davis Oil should be applied in this case.
Notes
. A request for notice of seizure contains "the legal description of the immovablе property, or description of the fixture, the owner of the property, and the name and address of the person desiring notice of seizure.” La.R.S. 13:3886. The person requesting seizure must also pay ten dollars to the sheriff to defray the costs of providing notice. Id.
.
Davis Oil
does not interfere with the state's ability to maintain traditional recording requirements. Interests which are unrecorded are not reasonably ascertainable to the creditor and therefore actual notice is not required. The problem with the Louisiana request-notice system was that it required a procedure in addition to the recording procedure which is necessary to make the interested party reasonably ascertainable.
Mennonite Board of Missions v. Adams,
