104 So. 115 | La. | 1925
Lead Opinion
On July 31, 1912, John B. Ring and Mary Helen Halsey, his wife, appeared before Jules F. Meunier, late notary public, and acknowledged that they were indebted to Joseph Schilkoffsky in the sum of $700, "borrowed money which the said Jos. Schilkoffsky has this day loaned and advanced to them," for the reimbursement whereof they furnished their joint and several (i.e., solidary) promissory note payable in one year.
And to secure the payment of said note *363 they then and there mortgaged in favor of said Jos. Schilkoffsky two certain lots of ground which the parties declared to be "the same property which the present mortgagors acquired by purchase from the German-American Homestead, per act passed in this office on the 30th day of July, 1912."
From which last declaration it will be seen that the property was acknowledgedly community property. R.C.C. art. 2402. And the debt was manifestly a community debt, for which the wife was and could be in no way bound. R.C.C. art. 2398.
It is therefore quite immaterial that the title to the property stood in the name of the wife, or that she should have joined in the note and mortgage. R.C.C. art. 2404.
Thereupon John B. Ring brought this action to set aside the adjudication, and annul all proceedings had subsequent to theissuance of the order for executory process, on the ground that no notice of demand for payment was made upon him before said seizure was effected, as required by Code of Practice, arts. 735, 736.
The notice of demand for payment, relied upon by the mortgagee, is addressed to both husband and wife, and was served personally upon the wife but not upon the husband. At the time of said service the husband and wife were living apart, and the service upon the wife was not made at the husband's domicile. The sole question herein presented is the sufficiency of that service.
"Art. 182. Nevertheless, if the defendants are husband and wife, or minors, interdicted, or absent persons having the same curator, or persons represented by the same attorney in fact, or partners of the same firm, or members of the same corporation, it will be sufficient to deliver one single citation and one single copy of the petition to the person representingsuch defendants." [Italics ours.]
"Art. 192. If the petition and citation be directed against a married woman not separated from bed and board from her husband, the service may be made by delivering to either the husband or the wife, or by leaving them at the domicile of the latter, by delivering the same to a person apparently above the age of fourteen years, living in their house."
Nor do we think that article 182, C.P., applies here. It is quite true that where husband and wife are made codefendants in a suit, a single citation addressed to husband and wife and served upon the husband alone suffices to bring both into court. Gilmore v. Gilmore, 9 La. Ann. 197; Jordan v. Anderson, 29 La. Ann. 749. And the reason is plain. Under C.P. art. 182, supra, when husband and wife are made codefendants, one citation addressed to both will suffice; but under C.P. art. 192, supra, any citation addressed to the wife may be served upon her husband, and of course the husband is brought into court by a citation addressed to him and served upon him personally. C.P. art. 188.
And it has been held that service on the wife alone of a citation addressed to the wife and to her husband, to authorizeher, would suffice to bring the husband into court *365 for that purpose, where the suit was directed against the wife and the husband cited solely for the purpose of authorizing his wife to defend it. Holt v. Board, 33 La. Ann. 673; Hemel v. Carlisle, 1 Orleans App. 294; Twichell v. Buell, 13 Orleans App. 122. See, also, Phipps v. Mrs. Ruth Snodgrass, 31 La. Ann. 88. And doubtless the reason why the court took this liberal view of article 182, C.P., was because the authorization of the husband in such cases was an idle formality; since "If the husband refuse to empower his wife to appear in court, the judge may give such authority. Rev. C.C. art. 124. Which useless formality may now be entirely dispensed with. Act No. 219 of 1920, p. 365 (amending Act No. 244 of 1918, p. 435).
But the converse of the above propositions is not true. When the husband is made a codefendant in the suit because he has areal interest in the suit and is a necessary party thereto in hisown right and not merely to authorize his wife therein, then it will not suffice that the citation (whether addressed to both or to him alone) be served upon the wife alone (unless at his domicile, and during his absence). And this court has never held otherwise.
And the reason for the distinction is that article 182, C.P., supra, provides that such joint citation to husband and wife may be served upon "the person representing them." So that such citation may be served upon the husband alone because he represents both himself and his wife (Rev. C.C. art. 2404; C.P. arts. 107, 192), but may not be served upon the wife alone because she represents only herself.
There is, however, one case which seems to hold otherwise, to wit, Gaines v. Sarah Morris, Tutrix, et al., Cotutor, 6 Rob. 4. But that case is readily distinguishable, even by its very title. The nominal defendants, husband and wife, were respectively tutrix and cotutor of the wife's minor children by a former marriage, and these minors were the *366 real defendants. Manifestly, under such circumstances, a service upon either (and especially upon the tutrix) sufficed to bring the minors into court. The real question before the court was whether the minors had been brought into court; and it is immaterial how the court expressed itself in deciding that the minors had been sufficiently cited by service upon the tutrix alone.
As we said at the beginning, the note on which executory process issued was a community debt and signed by the husband, who alone was liable thereon, notwithstanding that the wife had also signed it (R.C.C. art. 2398); and the mortgage rested on community property of which the husband had sole control at the time he mortgaged it, notwithstanding it stood in the name of the wife (Rev. C.C. arts. 2402, 2404). It is otherwise since Act No. 186 of 1920, p. 304, amending Rev. C.C. art. 2334.
Our conclusion is that on the very face thereof the husband was the sole party liable on the note and (legally) sole mortgagor of the property; and hence demand for payment under executory process should have been made upon him, and was not so made by service on the wife alone.
But when sued upon the note and mortgage, she showed that the property had not been purchased with separate funds, and was not her separate property; that the note given by her had been used to extinguish part of the purchase price of the property, and thus constituted a community debt, for which she was not bound; and that plaintiffs, the mortgagee and holder of the notes, were aware of all these facts.
The court held, accordingly, that the wife was not personally liable on the note, nor was her (separate) property; but that the wife must be taken as having acted throughout as the agent of the community, with the consent of the husband. And the court gave judgment against her as such agent (in effect, against the community), and against the mortgaged (community) property.
And all that the court said therein, which might be thought to have any bearing on this case, was the following:
"In like manner, in the present suit, in so far as she has sought to have the mortgaged property released from the mortgage on that part of the property belonging to the community, she must be held to have been litigating as the agent and representative of the community. How far it would be possible for a wife tostand in judgment for the community in this manner, inthe absence of the husband from the suit, is a questionnot arising in the present case, since the husband hasjoined her and aided her throughout in the defense ofthe present suit." (Italics ours.)
We see nothing in the above which has any bearing on the issue involved in this case; certainly, nothing favorable to defendants' contentions.
Addendum
In deciding this case, we overlooked the fact that John B. Ring died while the suit was pending. One Angus Gaines is the administrator of the succession of Ring, and, as such, was made a party to the proceedings in this court before the decree was rendered. He has filed a petition for rehearing, or for a correction of the decree, so that he may be recognized therein as the administrator of the succession, and so that the right to an accounting for the rents and revenues of the property of the succession may be reserved to him, as administrator. The correction can be made without a rehearing.
The decree rendered by this court on the 30th of March, 1925, is now amended so as to read as follows:
The judgment appealed from is affirmed in so far as it annuls the sheriff's sale to the defendant Schilkoffsky, and in so far as it annuls the executory proceedings that were had subsequent to the issuing of the order of seizure and sale; the said judgment is annulled in so far as it condemned the defendant Schilkoffsky, to pay rents and revenues at the rate of $80 per month from the 3d of September, 1920; the right is reserved, however, to Angus Gaines, administrator of the succession of John B. Ring, to have an accounting from the said defendant, *370 Schilkoffsky, for said rents and revenues. The succession of John B. Ring is to pay the costs of this appeal; the defendant Schilkoffsky is to pay the costs incurred in the civil district court subsequent to the order of seizure and sale; the costs incurred previous thereto and all costs that may hereafter be incurred in the foreclosure proceedings are to await the final result of the proceedings. With this amendment the rehearing is refused.