All State Credit Plan Houma, Inc. v. Fournier

175 So. 2d 707
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 24, 1965
Docket6400
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 175 So. 2d 707 (All State Credit Plan Houma, Inc. v. Fournier) 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.

Bluebook
All State Credit Plan Houma, Inc. v. Fournier, 175 So. 2d 707 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

175 So.2d 707 (1965)

ALL STATE CREDIT PLAN HOUMA, INC.
v.
Alvin FOURNIER d/b/a Al's Furniture and Appliance.

No. 6400.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 24, 1965.

*708 Francis Dugas, Thibodaux, for appellant.

Baron B. Bourg, Houma, for appellee.

Before ELLIS, LOTTINGER, LANDRY, REID, and BAILES, JJ.

LANDRY, Judge.

This matter concerns the rights of a seizing judgment creditor, as opposed to those of the intervening chattel mortgagee of their common debtor, to priority of payment *709 of their respective claims from the proceeds of the Sheriff's Sale provoked by the judgment creditor pursuant to which mortgaged chattels of the debtor were seized under a writ of fieri facias. After trial in the court below, judgment was rendered in favor of the seizing judgment creditor, All State Credit Plan Houma, Inc., plaintiff herein (sometimes hereinafter referred to as "appellee" or "plaintiff"). From said adverse determination, United Credit Plan of Thibodeaux, Inc. and United Credit Plan of Gretna, Inc., intervenors, (sometimes hereinafter referred to as "appellants" or "intervenors") has taken this appeal.

Succinctly stated, the facts leading to this present appeal are as follows: Plaintiff instituted action on a note given it by defendant, Alvin Fournier d/b/a Al's Furniture and Appliance, and after obtaining judgment thereon caused a writ of fieri facias be directed to the Sheriff of Lafourche Parish commanding said official to seize property belonging to said debtor in an amount sufficient to discharge appellee's claim. In obedience to the aforesaid writ, said Sheriff, through his duly authorized deputies, caused the contents of the debtor's display room in Raceland, Louisiana, consisting primarily of furniture and appliances, including radios, television sets and record players to be seized and an inventory thereof made.

Prior to the sale of the seized movables, appellants intervened in plaintiff's suit against Fournier setting forth intervenors' claim of entitlement to payment of several mortgages held by appellants on the seized chattels by priority out of the proceeds of the pending judicial sale. After the sale, plaintiff then ruled intervenors into court to determine the rank of their respective claims with the result hereinabove mentioned.

The sole issue presented by the instant appeal is the alleged inadequate or insufficient description of the movables intended to be covered by intervenors' several mortgages. While our learned brother below did not render written reasons for his decision, we understand from the oral argument of counsel he rejected appellants' claims of priority on the ground the chattel mortgages held by appellants did not describe the mortgaged effects with sufficient clarity and sufficiency to put third parties on notice of the existence of appellants' prior claims.

In his brief before this court learned counsel for appellants insists the descriptions contained in intervenors' chattel mortgages were adequate and sufficient to afford constructive notice to third parties and maintains the trial court erred in concluding otherwise. Alternatively, counsel for intervenors argues our esteemed brother below erred in failing to find that plaintiff had actual knowledge of intervenors' previously recorded chattel mortgages and was therefore legally charged with such knowledge irrespective of any defect in the descriptions contained in the recorded instruments. In the final alternative, astute counsel for appellants maintains the chattel mortgages in question were valid as a hypothecation or pledge of a "mass or assemblage of goods" to be kept at a particular location and therefore required no specific description of components authorized by LSA-R.S. 9:5352.

The record reflects that defendant, Fournier, was self employed as a retailer of household furniture and appliances consisting primarily of radios, television sets, washing machines, stereo musical equipment and other similar appliances generally sold in establishments of such nature. It further appears Fournier formerly operated from two locations, one in Paradis, St. Charles Parish, and the other in Raceland, Lafourche Parish, the Paradis location having been closed prior to trial of this matter below. Plaintiff and intervenors are all engaged in the business of financing institutions of the type operated by Fournier, both as to such dealers' purchases from manufacturers or distributors and also as well as the buying of accounts receivables from *710 retailers of this nature. Financing of purchases of such retailers from manufacturers or sales representatives is accomplished through what is known to the trade as "floor planning" which, we gather is an arrangement by which the lender advances the dealer funds to pay manufacturer's invoices when goods are shipped the retailer and, as security therefor takes a chattel mortgage on the goods in question. As the chattels are sold by the retailer, the privilege thereon is released by the mortgagee upon payment by the retailer of a predetermined sum. Apparently, the advantage to the financing agent is the interest charged on the "floor plan" mortgage from the date of the mortgage to the sale of the chattels in addition to the frequent purchasing from the retailer of the note and chattel mortgage given by the retail purchaser for the unpaid portion of the selling price.

In January, 1964, intervenors loaned Fournier money on several occasions, each loan being secured by a chattel mortgage on appliances described therein consisting mainly of television receivers, refrigerators, radios, washing machines and stereo sets. In each instance the brand name, type of appliance, model number and serial number of the mortgaged appliances were given. A typical example of the description employed by the mortgagee in each instance is exemplified in the following recital taken from the chattel mortgage given by defendant Fournier to intervenor under date of January 23, 1964, appearing at Page 25 of the Transcript as P-1:

   MAKE     ARTICLE        MODEL     SERIAL NO.
   Zenith    T. V.        12005C       68243
   Zenith    T. V.        12705Y3      51342
   Zenith    T. V.        12705R3      83549
   Zenith    T. V.        12735R3      99586
   Zenith    Stero (sic)  SL2420W3     29236
   Zenith    Radio        J506G        66140
   Zenith    Radio        J506G        66149
   Zenith    Radio        CT517        70357
   Zenith    Radio        CT517        70348

Intervenors acknowledge that each and every chattel covered in its several mortgages has a serial number containing six or seven digits but only the last five digits of each number was included on the chattel mortgages, the first one or two digits being purposely omitted because, as explained by one of intervenors' employees "our IBM being only able to pick up five numbers." In this regard distributor's invoices introduced in evidence by intervenors show the full serial numbers of each mortgaged appliance and reveal that in each instance the first one or two digits of each serial number were left off. For example the invoices show that the above described Zenith T. V., Model Number 12005 C bears Serial Number 9568243 instead of 68243 as listed in the hereinabove mentioned chattel mortgage.

The object of the statute relative to execution of chattel mortgages, LSA-R.S.

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 2d 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/all-state-credit-plan-houma-inc-v-fournier-lactapp-1965.