T)ie opinion of the Court was delivered by
Fenner, J.Plaintiffs sue as children and forced heirs of their father and mother, Salvator and Ellen Justi, between whom existed the community of acquets and gains, which community, in 1871, acquired, by purchase in the name of the husband, lot No. 11, of block 42, of the town of Shreveport, which is the subject-matter of this controversy.
Mrs. Justi died in 1872. Her succession was not opened, nor did the father qualify as natural tutor of the rumor children.
*771In 1873, after the death of the wife, Justi, in whose name the title stood, granted a mortgage on the property to secure a debt created and due by himself individually, in favor of one Dalpino.
Justi died, and his succession was opened and administered by the public administrator.
Thereafter, Dalpino proceeded, in the district court, against the succession of Justi, for a foreclosure of his mortgage, by executory process. The attorney of the public administrator, and subsequently, the administrator himself, accepted service of the petition for foreclosure, and waived all other and further writs, notices and delays, and agreed that the property be sold on the sale day of August, according to advertisement.
Notwithstanding this waiver, it appears that all delays and formalities were fully complied with, excepting only the notice of seizure, which, notwithstanding the waiver, was issued, but only served on the attorney of the administrator.
At the sale, under these proceedings, defendant became the adjudicatee. of the property for the price of $500, and has since possessed the same.
Plaintiffs, as heirs of their father and mother, attack this proceeding and the sale under it, as absolute nullities, and claim the property with its revenues.
I.
There can be no doubt that, at the dissolution of the community, Salvator Justi became the owner of an undivided half of this property, and that, as against this half, his mortgage was perfectly valid.
Plaintiffs claim, however, that the mortgage was inoperative as to them, because it was not recorded until after Justi’s death, and because, as forced heirs, they stand as creditors of the succession, citing McCarty vs. Bond, 9 La. 354; Boyles vs. Escofier, 2 Ann. 872; Suc. Harkins, 2 Ann. 923; Suc. Rhoton, 34 Ann. 896, and Rev. C. C. 2264, 2266, 3342, 3347, 3363.
This position is utterly untenable. It is true that, under the above authorities, a mortgage not recorded until after the death of the mortgagee, is without effect against his creditors; and it is also true that, in a certain sense, and for the purpose of attacking disguised donations, simulated transfers and like devices of the ancestor, to defraud them of their legitime, forced heirs are assimilated to creditors, and are granted similar rights.
But, as against real and bona fide creditors of their ancestors, they have no greater rights than other heirs, because their claim as forced *772heirs only attaches to the residue left after payment of such debts. There is no dispute of the validity and reality of the debt and mortgage of Dalpino, and, even without registry, they were binding as against his succession and heirs whether ordinary or forced.
Plaintiffs next assert the nullity of the sale on the ground of certain nullities in the proceedings, viz: Want of notice of order of seizure and sale, insufficiency of waiver by administrator to cure same, issuance of notice of seizure by sheriff instead of by clerk and service on attorney instead of on the administrator.
The record does not show that the notice served by the sheriff was not signed by the clerk.
Even if it did, the very authorities cited by plaintiffs show that such defect could not be urged to defeat the title of a purchase at such sale. Hart vs. Pike, 29 Ann. 262; Billgery vs. Ferguson, 30 Ann. 86; Suc. Sadler vs. Henderson, 35 Ann. 806.
This, however, and the mode of service are of little consequence, because all the defects urged have been held subject to the prescription of five years under art. 3543 of the Code, which is pleaded herein, and, by the terms of the article, runs against minors. Munholland vs. Scott, 33 Ann. 1043; Allen vs. Couret, 24 Ann. 24; Woods vs. Lec, 21 Ann. 506.
We are not to be understood as extending this doctrine to entire absence of notice, but only to cases where there has been a waiver or the like, showing actual notice.
We conclude that the judge a quo has rightly rejected plaintiffs’ demand so far as it affects the husband’s half of the property.
II.
There is no controversy as to the right of plaintiffs to recover the share of their mother in the property.
The only question is as to the relative rights of the parties with regard to revenues and improvements.
The defendant was certainly a possessor in good faith.
She was a purchaser at a judicial sale, made under a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, in a proceeding against the legal representative of the person in whose sole name the property stood upon the records. Nothing on the face of the proceedings or of the records suggested any other ownership than that of the debtor proceeded against; nor is there any hint that defendant had actual knowledge of the latent rights of Mrs. Justi, or even that she had ever existed.
Defendant “ possessed as owner by virtue of an act sufficient in terms to transfer property, the defects of which he was ignorant of,” *773C C. 503, and bad just reason to believe herself the owner. C. C. 3451. Hutchinson vs. Jamison, 38 Ann. 150; Barrow vs. Wilson, 38 Ann. 209; Giddens vs. Mobley, 37 Ann. 417; McCloskey vs. Webb, 4 Rob., 205.
It follows that she is only liable for rents from judicial demand, and is entitled to be reimbursed the expenses she has incurred on the thing. C. C. 3453.
The defendant claims, and was allowed reimbursement of half the taxes which had been paid on the property, and this was unquestionably correct. She was also condemned to pay rent from judicial demand.
Judgment affirmed.