Lafon v. Saddler
Lafon v. Saddler
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court. The petition states that the plaintiff, is a
The statement of facts admits the purchase and payment of the price by the defendant, that the tacit or legal mortgage of the plaintiff on the house, as the builder of it, was never recorded, as the act of 1813 ch. 49. is stated to require—that the defendant was not made a party to the suit, brought by the plaintiff against Godwin—That Godwin has failed, and that the sum claimed, is due to the plaintiff, for work done on the house.
The plaintiff’s counsel contends, that his is a privilege or legal mortgage, which has its effect against those persons, without being stipulated for, Civil code 470, art. 75, and that the words of the act of 1813, do not extend to the destruction of liens, which, not arising from any written contract or stipulation, are not susceptible of being recorded. The expressions of the
The defendant’s counsel replies, that the petition shews, that the plaintiff’s claim is grounded on a notarial act, which was susceptible of being, and is admitted not to have been, recorded.—That contracts are the laws, that govern the parties.—That the tacit provisions of the law, always yield to the express stipulation of the party, whom the law intended to protect.
This court is of opinion, that the judgment given below is a correct one. The plaintiff hav
The act of 1813, had no other object, than to prevent the effect of latent acts or instruments—or to guard against the supposition or forgery of acts, by which the interests of third persona might be affected, not to destroy the tacit lien which the law gives to workmen and others, ipso facto, by the labour or materials which they bestow.
If the contract before the notary, was necessary to the plaintiff’s recovery, the present defendant, might perhaps have resisted its introduction: but it does not appear necessary. It is admitted, in the statement of facts, that the work was done by the plaintiff, on the house, as charged, and that the sum is justly due him by Grodwin.—It requires the aid of no written instrument, to establish the consequent privilege, if it exist without any instrument: the defendant complain that no instrument was recorded.
It is ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the parish court be affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LAFON v. SADDLER
- Status
- Published