American Brewing Co. v. Artigues

84 So. 571, 147 La. 155, 1920 La. LEXIS 1846
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 3, 1920
DocketNo. 23909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 84 So. 571 (American Brewing Co. v. Artigues) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Brewing Co. v. Artigues, 84 So. 571, 147 La. 155, 1920 La. LEXIS 1846 (La. 1920).

Opinion

O’NIBLL, J.

In the course of his business dealings, Louis Artigues became indebted to the xYmerican Brewing Company on an open account. The brewing company also held a promissory note for $3,200 signed by Artigues and secured by mortgage on his property. The property was insured against loss by fire, and the policy contained the usual loss payable clause in favor of the mortgagee. A fire occurred on the 11th of July, 1917, damaging the building to the extent of $295, the amount for which it was ascertained the damage could be repaired. The insurance company paid the amount of the loss to the mortgagee; and, with Artigues’ consent, the amount was placed to the credit of his open account. On the 18th of July, 1917, the firm of Bendisch & I-Iemandez, building contractors, entered into a contract with Artigues to make the repairs for $295. Thereafter the work was commenced, and was partly done when, on the 22d of July, 1917, only four days after the contract was signed, another fire occurred, damaging the building to the extent of $1,300 over and above the damage and destruction of a part of the work done by Bendisch & Hernandez. The latter contended that they had done all but worth $48 worth of the repair work when the second fire occurred. There is other evidence showing that they had done only about $20 worth of the work when the second fire occurred. It is conceded that the repair work to be done by Bendisch & Hernandez was not completed when the second fire occurred, and that the fire destroyed a part of the repairs which they had made. The insurance company refused to pay for the damage done to the repairs which had been made by Bendisch & Hernandez, on the ground that they were independent contractors, whose repair work was at their risk until completed. .Having agreed upon the adjustment of $1,300 for the additional loss, the amount was paid to the mortgagee, who, with the consent of Artigues, credited the amount upon his open account, instead of crediting it upon his mortgage note.

Six months thereafter the American Brewing Company foreclosed the mortgage by ex-ecutory proceedings; and on the 7th of March, 1918, the mortgaged property was sold by the sheriff at a price about $132 less than the amount required to pay the mortgage note, with interest, attorney’s fees, and costs.

The contract between Bendisch & Hernandez, contractors, and Louis Artigues, owner of the building, was not recorded until the 6th of March, 1918 — that is, the last day before the sheriffs sale.

Because of the registry of the contract, the sheriff insisted upon withholding $295 of the proceeds of the sale. Thereupon the American Brewing Company proceeded by rule against Bendisch & Hernandez and the recorder of mortgages to compel a cancellation of the registry of the contract in so far as it purported to operate as a lien superior to the mortgage held by the American Brewing Company.

After trial the rule was made absolute ordering the recorder of mortgages to cancel the inscription of the contract of Bendisch & Hernandez. The latter appealed to the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans. That court decreed that the judgment appealed from should be amended by adding thereto that the civil sheriff should pay to Bendisch & Hernandez, out of the proceeds of the sale made by him, the sum of $242 and the costs of the proceedings. The reason for directing the sheriff to pay to Bendisch & Hernandez only $242, instead of $295, appears to be that the Court of Appeal concluded that the contractors had done only $242 worth of the work when the second fire occurred. The case is before [159]*159us on a writ of review issued at the instance of the American Brewing Company.

Opinion.

The Court of Appeal recognized that the registry of the contract between Artigues and the firm of Bendisch & Hernandez did not give the latter a preference over the holder of the mortgage on the property, because the contract evidencing the debt was not recorded within seven days after it was entered into, as required by article 3274 of the Civil Code to confer such preference over a mortgage already recorded.

[1] The Court of Appeal assigned three distinct reasons for ordering the civil sheriff! to pay Bendisch & Hernandez $242 to the prejudice of the mortgage creditor. The first, reason given was that the mortgage creditor was a party to the contract. In(a subsequent opinion, however, given by the court in refusing a rehearing, it is explained that the reason for saying that the brewing company was a party to the contract between the contractors and the owner of the building was that the brewing company was furnished a copy of the contract. It is said that the brewing company’s failure to sign the contract was only an oversight, and that the company’s signature was unnecessary when the company permitted the work to go on under the contract, of which the company had knowledge. The ruling, in effect, was that the brewing company’s having actual knowledge that the contract was made and that the work was going on took the place of registry of the contract and gave the contractors the same right which a recorded lien would confer. We do not concur in that opinion. Liens or privileges are created only by law; and when the law declares that a lien shall not affect third parties unless it be recorded, actual knowledge on the part of third parties does not supply the want of registry. The American Brewing Company was not a party to the contract between Artigues and the firm of Bendisch & Hernandez. The br.ewing company did not agree to sign and was not called upon to sign the contract; and we see no reason for holding that the brewing company’s failure to sign the contract was merely an oversight.

[2] The second reason assigned by the Court of Appeal for requiring the sheriff to pay Bendisch & Hernandez $242, to the prejudice of the mortgagee, was that Bendisch & Hernandez were called upon by the brewing company, in making proofs of loss for the second fire, to make proof concerning the work done by them, and that their work was taken into consideration in adjusting the loss. The record shows conclusively and beyond dispute that the insurance company refused to pay anything for the partial destruction of the work that had been done by Bendisch & Hernandez. The brewing company, with a spirit of fair play, asked the attorney for Bendisch & Hernandez to furnish proof of the amount of work they had done at the time of the second fire, and agreed to pay to Bendisch & Hernandez any amount that the insurance company might allow for the destruction of the work done by Bendisch & Hernandez. But the insurance company declined to pay anything for the partial destruction of the work which had been done by Bendisch & Hernandez; and it-is not'contended that the insurance company was liable for the loss sustained by Bendisch & Hernandez. Of course, the work done by Bendisch & Hernandez was taken into consideration in adjusting the loss. But the purpose and result of taking it into consideration, so far as the insurance company wfis concerned, was to deduct the amount of the loss sustained by Bendisch & Hernandez from the total loss that resulted from the second fire. We are therefore constrained to hold that the second reason assigned by the Court of Appeal for the judg- ■ ment rendered is not well founded.

[161]*161[3]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 So. 571, 147 La. 155, 1920 La. LEXIS 1846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-brewing-co-v-artigues-la-1920.