Alaynick v. Jefferson Bank & Trust Co.
This text of 451 So. 2d 627 (Alaynick v. Jefferson Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Michael H. ALAYNICK, M.D. and Robert L. Mimeles, M.D.
v.
JEFFERSON BANK & TRUST COMPANY.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*628 Douglas A. Kewley, Bruce A. North, Metairie, for defendant-appellant.
Lee R. Miller, Jr., Floyd Hennen, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Before BOUTALL, CHEHARDY and DUFRESNE, JJ.
DUFRESNE, Judge.
This is an appeal by Jefferson Bank and Trust Co., defendant-appellant, from an adverse judgment in the amount of $20,000, for converting to its own use a collateral mortgage note pledged by Bruce Coffman to Drs. Michael Alaynick and Robert Mimeles, plaintiffs-appellees, to secure a debt owed to them. Because we find that the bank breached its fiduciary duty owed to plaintiffs as their mandatary in using the note as its own security, we affirm.
The facts are these. In early 1979, Bruce Coffman was put in touch with Drs. Alaynick and Mimeles by a mutual friend in regard to a real estate speculation. After negotiations, the three men entered into an agreement on February 28, 1979, whereby in return for a loan of $75,000, Coffman agreed to repay $95,000. The additional $20,000, was referred to in the agreement as a "fee". The agreement further provided that a collateral mortgage for $145,000 on the property to be purchased would be recorded, a collateral mortgage note of $95,000, would be delivered to the doctors, and a second collateral mortgage note of *629 $50,000, would be held by Coffman. The bank was not a party to this agreement.
On the same date, these parties appeared at Jefferson Bank where Alaynick, Mimeles and Coffman all regularly did business, and signed respectively, and at different hours, the following documents, all dated February 28, 1979.
1. An unsecured promissory note for $37,000, for a loan to Mimeles, and signed only by him.
2. A promissory note for $37,500, for a loan to Alaynick, signed by him, and secured only by the personal endorsement of Coffman.
3. A promissory note for $50,000, for a loan to Coffman, and signed by him, but otherwise showing no security.
4. Two collateral mortgage notes payable to bearer in the amounts of $95,000 and $50,000, both signed by Coffman, and paraphed "ne varietur" with a collateral mortgage of $145,000, properly recorded on February 28, 1979.
The proceeds of the three loans apparently were used by Coffman to purchase the property. The $95,000 collateral mortgage note was pledged to the doctors, with Alaynick receiving actual possession. There is no evidence to show whether the $50,000 collateral mortgage note was given to the bank at that time or retained by Coffman. However, the $50,000 promissory note does not show any security as of February 28, 1979, and Donald Weekly, the bank officer who approved the loan, testified that to the best of his knowledge, the loan was unsecured when made.
Weekly left the employ of the bank about a month after this transaction, and the file was turned over to Richard Lee, another bank officer. Sometime in May, 1979, Lee noted that in his opinion the bank did not have adequate security on the three promissory notes. He contacted Alaynick and learned that the doctor held a $95,000 collateral mortgage note. He thereupon asked Alaynick to meet him at the bank, and at that meeting Alaynick surrendered the note to Lee and was given a receipt.
On May 21, 1979, several lots from the mortgaged property were sold. With the approval of the doctors, the entire proceeds of this sale were applied by the bank to pay in full the $37,500, Alaynick note, and to reduce the $37,500, Mimeles note to some $16,000.
On July 18, 1979, the bank had Coffman sign a "collateral pledge agreement" wherein he ostensibly pledged to the bank the original collateral mortgage notes of $95,000 and $50,000. Also, on July 18, 1979, the bank noted on Coffman's $50,000, promissory note that it was now secured by the collateral mortgage notes pledged to the bank that same day.
In February, 1980, the remainder of the mortgaged property was sold, and the net proceeds of some $75,000, were paid to the bank as holder of the two collateral mortgage notes. These funds were applied by the bank to satisfy the $50,000 Coffman note, the outstanding $16,000 on the Mimeles note, some $5,000 to satisfy an additional loan to Coffman to pay a sewerage district lien on the property, and interest on these various items.
The $20,000 "fee" owed by Coffman to the doctors was not paid, and after unsuccessful efforts to obtain this fee from the bank, Alaynick and Mimeles brought the present action.
After trial, the court rendered judgment in favor of Alaynick and Mimeles, and against the bank, in the amount of $20,000. The court found that the "bank was aware of the plaintiffs' preferential creditor status to the proceeds and converted the plaintiffs' security to its own use and benefit." The defendant bank now appeals.
Three errors are alleged on the part of the trial court:
1. It was error to find that plaintiffs occupied a preferential creditor status.
2. It was error to find that the bank converted plaintiffs' security to its own use.
*630 3. Because the bank was not a party to the agreement between Coffman and plaintiffs, it was error to hold the bank liable for the $20,000 fee.
These allegations are without merit.
Regarding the bank's first alleged error, the following legal principles are applicable.
A collateral mortgage consists of three parts: 1.) a promissory note, usually called the collateral mortgage note or "ne varietur" note, 2.) which is secured by a collateral mortgage, and 3.) which note and underlying mortgage are pledged to the creditor as security for an independent and distinct indebtedness, First Guaranty Bank v. Alford, 366 So.2d 1299 (La.1978). Moreover, because the pledge of the collateral mortgage note is contractual, the pledge secured only that indebtedness contemplated in the contract of pledge between the pledgor and the pledgeeCivil Code Art. 3133; Durham v. First Guaranty Bank of Hammond, 331 So.2d 563 (La. App. 1st Cir.1976). Finally, when properly recorded, the pledgee's ranking among other creditors of the pledgor is established on the date that the collateral mortgage note is pledged, or as more commonly expressed, "issued".
Applying these principles to the present facts, it is clear that as of February 28, 1979, the doctors held a valid collateral mortgage note to secure an indebtedness of $95,000. There was a recorded collateral mortgage on the property at issue, and the collateral mortgage note was properly paraphed to that mortgage. The agreement between the doctors and Coffman evidences an indebtedness of $95,000 and specifies that this indebtedness is secured by the pledge of the $95,000 collateral mortgage note.
The bank argues, to the contrary, that there was no connexity between the indebtedness and the collateral mortgage note so as to establish a pledge of the note to secure that indebtedness. We need only quote the following language from the agreement evidencing an indebtedness of $95,000, to show otherwise:
O. Bruce Coffman ... shall render unto Michael H. Alaynick and Robert L. Mimeles... a first collateral mortgage in the amount of $145,000.00 and a collateral mortgage note in the amount of $95,000.00.
This allegation by the bank is therefore groundless.
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