175 So. 492 | La. Ct. App. | 1937
Relator seeks mandamus to compel the sheriff of Ouachita parish to execute and deliver to him, as adjudicatee, deed conveying lot 4 of square 3, Heard Wallace addition to West Monroe, fronting 55 feet on Cypress street and 145 feet on Travis street. The sheriff declined to execute the desired deed for the reason that relator's bid, though two-thirds of the appraised value of the property, was not sufficient to discharge liens and privileges against the lot which, according to mortgage certificates furnished him by the recorder of mortgages, he contends, were superior in rank to that under which the sale was provoked. Before answering, respondent filed exceptions of nonjoinder and of no cause or right of action. The proceeding being summary, trial of the case on its merits was had subject to the exceptions. In support of the exception of nonjoinder, it is urged that the owners of the unsatisfied liens and encumbrances against the lot, as disclosed from the mortgage certificate, and the recorder of mortgages of Ouachita parish, were indispensable parties to the rule. The trial court did not pass on either exception. Relator's demands were rejected and he brings this appeal.
We think there is merit in the exception of nonjoinder, but as we are clearly of the opinion that plaintiff's cause is not well founded in law and that the judgment of the court a quo is correct, we shall address our attention to the case on its merits and finally dispose of it.
The record and admissions in briefs disclose the following undisputed facts pertinent *494 to the issue presented by the pleadings:
In the year 1927, the city of West Monroe, in keeping with the power granted by Act No. 147 of the General Assembly of 1902, as amended, initiated an extensive program for the construction of sidewalks therein and, after compliance with the terms of said act, constructed a sidewalk on Cypress street abutting the property of Heard Wallace, above described. The total cost of the improvement was $44.00, 20 per cent. of which was paid in cash and the balance of $35.20 was made payable over a period of five years. Legal evidence of the completion of the improvement, its acceptance, and levying of assessment against the lot to preserve the lien securing payment of the cost were all seasonably recorded in the mortgage records of Ouachita parish. Section 4 of Act No.
Also, in the year 1928, the city of West Monroe caused many of its streets to be paved, pursuant to the provisions of Act No.
No further payment was made on the cost of the sidewalk construction and the city foreclosed the lien and secured judgment for the amount thereof. The property was seized by the sheriff and sold with benefit of appraisement. Relator became the purchaser, paid to the sheriff the amount of his bid, and demanded a deed, which was refused.
The sole issue in the case therefore is whether the paving lien, though subsequent in date and registry, primes that securing payment for the cost of the sidewalk.
The preference rank of sidewalk cost liens is fixed by section 4 of Act No.
It will not be questioned that the Legislature was competent to adopt a law embracing the subject-matter contained in Act No.
A proper ranking of liens is not necessarily determined by the order or dates of registry. They are stricti juris; arise, are construed, and have effect as to substance and rank, strictly in keeping with the law establishing them. This rule, with extreme clarity, is laid down by the court in Central Savings Bank
Trust Company v. Tucker,
"Mortgages, either conventional or judicial mortgages, take rank in the order in which they are recorded; but liens, unlike mortgages, are ranked in the order fixed by the statutes creating them. It is declared in article
Under the plain prohibition of article 684 of the Code of Practice, the sheriff was without right to execute relator a deed to the property adjudicated to him; and, for the reasons herein assigned, the judgment appealed from is affirmed with costs.