Case Name: F. L. Maxwell vs. Susan Roach et als.
Court: Louisiana Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Louisiana
Decision Date: 1901-11
Citations: 106 La. 123
Docket Number: No. 13,823
Parties: F. L. Maxwell vs. Susan Roach et als.
Judges: Blanchard, J.
Reporter: Louisiana Reports
Volume: 106
Pages: 123–130

Head Matter:
No. 13,823.
F. L. Maxwell vs. Susan Roach et als.
Syllabus.
1. Under the Constitution of 1879, it was incompetent for the owner of a homestead to convey the same to his creditor, either to secure, or to pay, an ante cedent debt. And where it appears that such a conveyance, of such property, in the form of a sale with a right of redemption, for cash, was mainly intended to secure, and, ultimately, and in case of forfeiture of such right, to pay, such debt, the transaction will be set aside.
2. The provision of said Constitution, denouncing as invalid any renunciation or waiver of homestead rights or exemptions, was a rule of public order, and where it appears that, as to its principal consideration, a contract has been entered into in violation of such rule, the contract will not be saved by a valid consideration of minor importance.
APPEAL from the Ninth Judicial District, Parish of Madison— Bansdellj J.
William M. Murphy, for Plaintiff, Appellee.
Wade B. Young, for Defendants, Appellants.

Opinion:
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Monroe J.
On application for rehearing by
Blanchard, J.
Monroe, J. The case presented by this record is as follows, to-wit: In 1891, E. L. Maxwell & Co., composed of F. L. Maxwell and F. P. !M!oore, were doing business as merchants in the parish of Madison^ and there were, at that time, living in the parish, Snsan Roach and her four sons, Bradford, Bryant, Spencer and Walter, issue of her marriage with Spencer Roach, deceased. This family resided upon a small place, of-a little more than thirty acres, which had been acquired by the deceased husband and father as community property, and, after his death, had been registered by the widow and mother as a homestead. During the year 1891, Maxwell & Co. began making advances of supplies, etc., to Susan Roach, with the understanding that they were to be regarded as being made to her sons, as well. It is quite certain, however, that Spencer and Walter were then minors, and it is not unlikely that Bradford and Bryant were also minors in 1891, though they had attained their majority at the date of the transaction out of which this litigation has arisen. In the spring of 1894, the Roaches, who are defendants in this case, needed a mule, and applied to Maxwell & Co. for the money with which to purchase it. They were then indebted to that firm, however, to the extent of some hundreds of dollars, for advances made during the three preceding years, and they were told by Mr. Moore, "that Mr. Maxwell objected to furnish further money until this old balance was arranged." And Mr. Moore, it seems, consulted the legal adviser of the firm, and, being informed that the homestead could not be mortgaged, and that it would be necessary, in order to utilize it for the purpose in contemplation, to make a sale, he explained the situation to Susan Roach, and told her that, in order to effect a sale, it would be necessary that the two minors, Spencer and Walter (the other two having by that time attained majority), should be emancipated; to which she consented, and the two minors were, accordingly, emancipated, by a judgment of the District Court, March 19, 1894. Thereafter, upon March 22, 1894, they, that is to say, Susan Roach and her four sons, executed an act of sale of their homestead to Maxwell & Co. for the stipulated price of $554.97, of which, although the act recites that the sale was made for cash, as we understand the testimony, probably, four-fifths, or more, represented the old account, the inference being a fair one, though there is no direct testimony to that effect, that there was a balance which was represented either by cash or by a mule. This act contains a stipulation to the effect that the vendors shall have the right, to redeem the nroperty, up to January 1st, 1897, upon refunding the price, as stated therein, with interest, at 8% per annum.
Thereafter, in 1895, Moore sold his interest in the property to Max well, and the latter, claiming as sole owner, is the plaintiff in this suit. During the same year, 1895, Susan. Roach, individually, and .as tutrix, filed suit, in which she was joined by her major sons, attacking the transaction into which they had thus entered upon the grounds, as alleged by them, that the emancipation of the minors and the execution of the act of sale by them and the others were the results of a fraudulent deception, practiced on them by Maxwell & Co. by whom, as the plaintiffs alleged, they have been induced to believe that the act in question was merely an act of mortgage to secure the debt due to said Maxwell & Go. The suit thus instituted had, however, not been tried when the present suit was instituted, and it has been cumulated herewith as part of the defense hereto. The date fixed, in the act of sale referred to, for the redemption of the property having long since passed, F. L. Maxwell, upon December 12, 1900, brought the present action, alleging, that no part of the price of said property had been refunded, and praying that he be decreed to be the owner thereof and put in possession, -and that he have judgment against defendants, for rent at the rate of $150 per annum from January 1, 1897; or, in the alternative, that he be recognized as having a mortgage on said property, and that the same be sold to satisfy his claim. For answer, the defendants make the same attack upon the deed sued on that they had made in 1895, in the action brought by them, in fact, they make the petition filed in that suit part of the. answer in this. And, upon the issues as thus made, the case was tried, with the result, that there was judgment for plaintiff decreeing him to be the owner of the property, and condemning the defendants, in solido, for rent, at the rate of $150 per annum, from January 1, 1897; from which judgment the defendants have appealed.
Neither of the sons of Susan Roach appeared upon the trial, to sustain, by their testimony, the charges of fraud which had been made by them, or on their behalf. In fact, the only witness who appeared for the defense was Susan Roach, who testified that she did not know when she was married, or when her children were bom, of anything about the emancipation of the two minors. She does not, however, utter a syllable concerning the act of sale iipon which the plaintiff sues, or intimate that there was any deception practiced upon her with regard to any portion of the transaction. It does appear that she is living on the place in controversy with her sons, and that the youngest son, with his wife, and a grandchild, live in the house with her. Upon the other hand, the record contains the testimony of several respectable witnesses to the effect that the whole matter was fully explained to them all; that there was no fraud or deception practiced on them, and that they understood that they were making a sale such as the act-signed by them witnesses, and we entertain no sort of doubt as to the truth of this testimony.
The question then is, was the transaction thus entered into legally possible? There can be no doubt that the property which was the subject thereof was a homestead, secured by the Constitution of the State to the defendant, Susan Roach, as the head of a family, even assuming that her adult sons were not to be considered for the purposes o-f that question, • since two of her sons were then minors living at home. Wood vs. Perkins, et als., 43 Ann. 347. But the organic law not only secures the homestead to the persons mentioned against attack from without, but is equally imperative and efficacious in securing it as against the acts of such persons themselves; the ordinances upon the subject being rules of public order which the beneficiaries are incompetent to waive. The language is:
"The homestead shall not be susceptible of mortgage, except for the purchase price, labor and material furnished for the building, repairing, or improving homestead; nor shall any renunciation or waiver of homestead rights or exemptions be valid. The right to sell any property which shall be recorded as a homestead shall be preserved, but no sale shall destroy or impair the rights of creditors therein." Constitution of 1879, Art. 222.
The prohibition as to mortgage is absolute, and contains no exceptions. And if it was incompetent to mortgage the homestead for money received at the time, a fortiori was it incompetent to mortgage it to secure an antecedent debt. And if it was incompetent to mortgage the homestead to secure an antecedent debt, a multo fortiori was it incompetent to give it in payment of such debt, or validity to agree to do so. And yet, from the testimony of Moore, it is evident that the purpose of the deed was, for the time being, to secure the amount which was due to his firm, and, ultimately, to obtain its payment by the delivery of the property; and, in so far as the acts, agreements and transactions of the parties, whether considered singly, or collectively, were influenced by that purpose, they were absolutely and incurably void and of no legal effect.
That a homestead may be sold there is no doubt; and, as sales o£ other property may be made in different ways, so sales of homesteads may be made in different ways, but the transfer of property to a creditor to secure, or to pay, a pre-existing debt is not a sale, and no such disposition can be made of a homestead.
The only other question which the case presents, is, whether the instrument sued on should be maintained as a sale, by reason of the fact that there is said to be included in the nominal price the money necessary for the purchase of a mule? And this question, we think, must be answered in the negative. It has been shown that the amount stated in the act to be the price was not a price, but that the main consideration moving from the vendees to the vendors concerned a pre-existing debt due by the latter to the former. If, apart from that, there was a price for the property, it has not been disclosed by the evidence. And without a price there was no sale. And without a sale the plaintiffs could have acquired no right or title to the defendants' homestead. Even, however, had the amount of the money advanced for the purchase of the mule been disclosed, and had it been made to appear that the deed was executed in order to secure, or pay, an antecedent debt of $400, and to obtain $154.07 with which to buy a mule, we should not be prepared to hold that the defendants were thereby divested of their homestead, since it would, even then, appear that the contract, as to the principal consideration, had been entered into in violation of a rule of public order embodied in the organic law. Erom the view which we have thus expressed, upon the main question, it is evident that nothing need be said upon the subject of rent. But, if our conclusion upon the main question had been other than it is, we should have been at a loss to understand how the defendants could be held liable, in solido, for $150 per annum as rent, since there is not a syllable of testimony in the record either as to any agreement to pay rent, or as to the value of the use and occupancy of the land.
For these reasons, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the judgment appealed from he annulled, avoided and reversed, and that the demands of the plaintiff be rejected at his cost, without prejudice, however, to any claim that he may have against the defendants, or either of them, individually.