Marigny v. Nivet

Porter, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the sale of the effects of the succession of a certain Margurite Troxler, deceased, Bosque, one of the plaintiffs in this suit, became the purchaser of a tract of land, under the following designation:

"A plantation, situated in the parish of Plaquemines, on the right bank of the Mississippi, at about twenty-six miles be*500low the city of New-Orleans, said plantation measuring eleven and two-third arpents, fronting said river, with the ordinary depth of forty arpents, bounded on the upper line by the property belonging to the estate of the late Antoine Paturel, and on the lower line by that of Jean Salvant, together with a dwelling house, and other out houses thereon, and thereunto belonging, fences, &c. adjudged for the pnce of $10,300.

Previous to the purchaser giving his notes for the price, conformable to the terms of the sale, a survey was made of the premises, the eleven and two-third arpents, mentioned in the deed of sale, were measured off, and boundaries planted. This survey shewed that the quantity just mentioned, did not embrace all the land contained within the boundaries expressed in the ajudication; that one arpent and twenty-two toi-scs still remained. Bosque, however, accepted the eleven arpents and two-thirds, as the quantity bought by him, took a bill of sale from the curator, with boundaries conformable to this quantity, giving for upper limit lands of the succession, instead of those of Paturel, as mentioned in the adjudication, and gave his notes for the purchase money. The curator of the succession, afterwards had an inventory made of the one arpent and twenty-two toises, and exposed it for sale. At the auction, Bosque appeared and bid for the laird, but it was finally adjudged to the defendant Nivet.

This took place in the year 1829, in the month of February, and in November of the same year, this action was instituted.

The defendants have called in warrantee, the heirs of Troxler, amounting to forty-seven in number, who by their answer, have put at issue the plaintifis right to recover.

The court below gave judgment however in their favor, and decreed that the possessors should recover over against, their warranters, the amount paid for the premises. The latter have appealed.

Pending the suit, Prosper Marigny, one of the plaintiffs, sold to Gustave Marigny, the title in the premises which he *501had acquired from Bosque, the original purchaser. A mo-tionywas made to make the vendee of Prosper, a party to the suit. It was opposed, but the court allowed him to become plaintiff. It has been contended here, that the judge erred in permitting this addition to the parties.

If pending a suit the plaintiff sells to. another, the teivenTand115, be-“tíon.' party

i • i i t i • ■ We tlnnk he did not: a third party, wno has an interest in a cause, may intervene. Such is the general principle. There is no law which forbids the sale and purchase of land for which a suit is pending, nor any which prevents the buyer from becoming a party to the action, and watching over the rights he has acquired. The proceeding does not in any respect, impose additional burthen on the defendant, and it increases his security for costs.

The counsel for defendants have argued this, as a case in which the intention of the parties, must control the expressions in the act of adjudication. They admit that if that act stood alone, the plaintiffs could recover, but insist that the acceptance of the deed of sale, by different limits, shews that the quantity mentioned in the adjudication, was that which formed the object of the contract, not that contained in the boundaries.

The plaintiff replies, that his acceptance of the sale, was caused by an error, in regard to the rights previously acquired by him — that if the quantity had been less .than the eleven and two-third arpents, he could have been compelled to pay the whole price, and that where he took the risk of a lesser quantity, he has a right to any surplus that may exist.

The first question is, whether the adjudication conferred a title to the land sold, without a deed from the curator? and the second is, if it did, to what quantity?

We have positive provisions of law on both these questions.

By the 2586 article of the Louisiana Code, it is provided, that the “ ajudication is the completion of the sale, the purchaser becomes the owner of the object adjudged, and the contract is from that time, subjected to the same rules which govern the ordinary contract of sale.”

ct 0f aciju-dication, confers a complete title to the object or pro-furchaserl’without any deed, or act passed before a notary, by the seller, seifwho^huy^ac-definite antTfixed boundaries, des-cubed in tne act of adjudication, takes tweerTsuciTbounds although it gives hima greater quantity, than that cal- aries! & quantity than what is contained in the act of adjudication, does ttie right he has acquired to a larger amount of property under the sale, of a deed^under ees11 is hTthe^na-ture of a contract entered into by the purchaser in error of the rights he already posies-is not^bindfng'on him' '

The 2601, is still more explicit, it declares the adjudication1 to be a complete title, and need not be followed by an act passed before a notary.

The deed therefore, by the curator, could confer no better title. The buyer was the owner of every thing stricken off fo him.

I he second question is solved by an article of the same work. If any one sells, or alienates a-piece of land, from one fjxecj boundary to another fixed boundary, the purchaser • ^ J . . takes all the land between such bounds, although it give him a greater quantity of land than is called for in his title, anc^ although the surplus exceed the twentieth part of the quantity mentioned in his title. — Louisiana Code, 850.

# .... It is clear, therefore, that the purchaser, in this instance^ did acquire all the lands contained between the boundaries^ mentioned in the act of aiudication.

We must now inquire if he has lost them?

The acceptance of a deed of sale, containing other bound-ar*es> does not in our opinion destroy the right previously acquired. The terms used in it, negative all idea of the par- . , ties intending to modify or change the original contract. It refers to the sale at auction, and professes to carry it into ef-fecj;_ There is no consideration expressed in it for the re-1 nunciation, or abandonment of the rights the purchaser had acquired by the adjudication. It does not express, what cannot presumed, a donation — it can be regarded in no other light, than a contract entered into by the purchaser, in error ° . * . . of the rights which he already possessed, and as such, is not ,• ,- ,- binding on him.

The bidding at the second sale, for property which was already his, is conclusive evidence of this error; and prevents the party to whom it was adjudicated, from claiming any advantage from the acquiesence of the plaintiff in the sale.

■ It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs.

*503-On application for a rehearing, it is ordered, adjudged and -decreed, by consent of parties, that the judgment of the district court be annulled and reversed; and it is further ordered and adjudged and decreed, that the plaintiff do recover of the defendant one arpent and twenty-two toises of land, in ■ front, with the ordinary depth, having the limits mentioned in the petition, together with the costs of the court of the first instance, those of appeal to be paid by the appellees.