Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1873

Mills v. Sheriff of East Feliciana

Mills v. Sheriff of East Feliciana
Supreme Court of Louisiana · Decided March 15, 1873 · Howell, Ludeling, Morgan
25 La. Ann. 142

Mills v. Sheriff of East Feliciana

Opinion of the Court

Morgan, J.

The ground upon which the plaintiff obtained her injunction in this case is that the sheriff of the parish of East Feliciana, has seized and is about to sell a certain piece of property belonging to her, by virtue of a fi. fa., and an order of seizure and sale directed to him from the Fourth District Court of New Orleans, which property,. *143she alleges, is her homestead, and is protected from seizure by the-homestead law of 1865.

There was a verdict and judgment in her favor and the defendants have appealed.

The property, the sale of which was injoined by plaintiff, was mortgaged to Beard, plaintiff in execution and seizure and sale, on the-eighth October, 1865. The homestead law was not passed until the-twenty-second ol December of that year. Consequently it does not control Beard’s right. Rousse v. Caradine, 20 An. p. 244.

It is contended that the mortgage was not recorded until after the passage of the homestead law, and that it is therefore governed by it. In this there is error. The right was created before the passage of the law, and existed when it was enacted. Subsequent legislation could, not destroy it. The mortgage existed independent of its registry. Registry is intended to protect third parties — -not parties to the contract.

It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of' the district court be avoided, reversed and annulled, and that the injunction herein issued be dissolved, appellees to pay the costs.

Reheariug refused.

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