American-La France & Foamite Industries, Inc. v. Town of Winnfield

168 So. 293, 184 La. 1043, 1936 La. LEXIS 1144
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 1936
DocketNo. 33400.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 168 So. 293 (American-La France & Foamite Industries, Inc. v. Town of Winnfield) 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-La France & Foamite Industries, Inc. v. Town of Winnfield, 168 So. 293, 184 La. 1043, 1936 La. LEXIS 1144 (La. 1936).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

On February 28, 1919, the town of Winnfield in Winn parish in this state entered into a contract with American-La France Fire Engine Company of Elmira, N. Y., for the purchase of one type 40 triple combination pumping engine, chemical engine and hose car Reg. No. 2548, for the price of $10,250, to be delivered within 120 days aft *1045 er the execution of the contract and acceptance by the company.

Under the terms of the contract, the sum of $250 was to be paid in cash within ten days after delivery and acceptance of the apparatus and equipment, and negotiable notes or warrants for the remainder were to be made, payable as follows: In three equal notes, one, two, and three years respectively, conditioned to bear 6 per cent, per annum interest from date of issue until paid.

The apparatus and equipment were delivered to the town of Winnfield July 22, 1919; the cash portion of the purchase price was paid; and negotiable notes of the town of Winnfield were then executed and delivered to the vendor for the unpaid portion of the purchase price, with interest at 6 per cent, per annum payable annually, and with reasonable attorney’s fees, in case payment was not made at maturity.

The present plaintiff, for valuable consideration, has become the holder and owner of all the rights of the American-La France Fire Engine Company, Inc., under the sale to the town of Winnfield, by legal .assignment and transfer.

The town of Winnfield has paid the American-La France Fire Engine Company, the original vendor, and the American-La France & Foamite Industries, the assignee, the sum of $10,756.99 on the apparatus and equipment purchased.

The account became unsatisfactory in the year 1934, and the present plaintiff sued the town of Winnfield on two notes, one in the sum of $3,623.75, with 6 per cent, interest thereon from May 15, 1930, until paid, and the other in the further sum of $2,918.09, with 6 per cent, interest thereon from July 1, 1930, until paid, less the sum of $175 paid there.on on September 1, 1931; and in the further sum of 10 per cent, of the aggregate amounts due in principal and interest on said amounts as a reasonable attorney’s fee, and for all costs of this suit, less the credits received thereon, to wit:

December 22, 1932, $300.00

January 3, 1933, $200.00

February 1, 1933, $250.00

February 28, 1933, $250.00

Plaintiff also claims a vendor’s lien and privilege on the apparatus and equipment sold to the town of Winnfield, and the recognition and enforcement of its lien according to law, by preference and priority over all other persons.

Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff company in the amounts prayed for; but the claim of plaintiff to a vendor’s lien and privilege on the property sold to defendant town was denied fbr the reason that the trial judge found that the fire apparatus and equipment so sold is public property dedicated to public use and is not subject to seizure and sale.

(1) In its answer the town of Winnfield specifically denies that plaintiff company is entitled to a vendor’s lien and privilege, and alleges that the property purchased is public property, held in trust for the public by the municipality and is exempt from seizure.

The contract of sale of the apparatus and equipment by plaintiff company to the town *1047 of Winnfield comes clearly within the provisions of Act No. 176 of 1916, entitled “An Act To authorize villages and towns in this State, to purchase fire apparatus or appliances for protection from fire; to issue negotiable certificates of indebtedness therefor, and to provide a means of payment out of any excess of revenues of future years.”

Section 1 of Act No. 176 of 1916 reads as follows: “Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Louisiana, that whenever the Mayor and Board of Aider-men of any town or village of this State, after providing for all statutory charges to be paid from the respective funds upon which they are imposed; all charges for services rendered annually under time contracts, and all necessary and usual charges provided for by ordinance or resolution, and they are of the opinion that the public interests of said village or town require a better protection from fire, said Mayor and Board of Aldermen shall have the power to purchase such fire apparatus and appliances for protection from fire as they may deem necessary, for said villages or town, not exceeding, however, in cost the sum of $5,000.00, the title to which property shall be vested in said village or town, and •may issue negotiable certificates of the said village or town in whole or in part therefor, said certificates to bear interest at a rate not to exceed 5% per annum, payable semiannually.

“Section 2. Be it enacted, etc., that the amount of certificates of indebtedness so issued shall not exceed in any,one case the sum of $5,000.00, and shall not be issued for a longer period than 10 years; that the said Mayor and Board of Aldermen be, and they are hereby authorized in order to pay said certificates of indebtedness to appropriate, dedicate, and set aside in whole or in part the excess of annual revenues of subsequent years above statutory, necessary and usual charges not in excess of the limitation fixed by the Constitution of this State provided, that such certificates of indebtedness shall not have any longer terms fixed for payment than ten years from the date of the contract of purchase, and provided further, that no dedication of future revenues shall be made to which, alone or with other prior dedications in force, shall exceed the estimated excess of revenues over the statutory, necessary and usual charges of the year in which the agreement or contract is made.”

Section 3 of Act No. 176 of 1916 repeals "all laws or parts of laws contrary to, or in conflict with the provisions of this Act.”

It is clear that Act No. 176 of 1916 is a general statute and is applicable to all villages and towns in the state, as to the purchase of fire apparatus or appliances for protection from fire. The rights of plaintiff company under its contract of sale to the town of Winnfield must, therefore, be determined by the provisions of this act.-

•We fail to find in Act No. 176 of 1916 any provision conferring a vendor’s lien and privilege on the vendor of fire apparatus or appliances to a town or village in this state.

Privileges cannot be extended by implication or analogy; they are never allow *1049 ed but when expressly granted by law; and then only by virtue of an exact compliance with legal requisites, essential to their creation and existence. Civil Code, arts. 3185, 3312. Privilegiae sunt strictissirnae interpretationis. Harrison v. Faulk, 2 La. 92, 93; Hagan v. Sompeyrac, 3 La. 154, 158; Union Bank v. Slidell, 11 La. 23, 28; Grant v. Fiol, 17 La. 158 and numerous other cases. 6 Louisiana Digest Annotated, Privilege, § 2, p. 220.

Besides, the requirement in Act No. 176 of 1916 that the price of fire apparatus and appliances purchased by a town or village shall be paid by the issuance of negotiable certificates of indebtedness out of "any

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168 So. 293, 184 La. 1043, 1936 La. LEXIS 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-la-france-foamite-industries-inc-v-town-of-winnfield-la-1936.