AMERICAN SEC. BANK OF VILLE PLATTE v. Dufour
This text of 465 So. 2d 162 (AMERICAN SEC. BANK OF VILLE PLATTE v. Dufour) 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
AMERICAN SECURITY BANK OF VILLE PLATTE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Raymond DUFOUR, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*163 Jules R. Ashlock, Ville Platte, for plaintiff-appellant.
Preston N. Aucoin, Gary J. Ortego, Fontenot & Mitchell, Clyde Fontenot, Ville Platte, Dubuisson & Dubuisson, James G. Dubuisson, Opelousas, for defendant-appellee.
Before DOUCET, LABORDE and YELVERTON, JJ.
YELVERTON, Judge.
The plaintiff appeals from the dismissal of its suit on a promissory note seeking the recognition of a collateral mortgage. We affirm.
American Security Bank of Ville Platte sued Raymond Dufour and Lillian Dufour on a promissory handnote dated February 20, 1981, payable to the bank in the amount of $127,545.12, claiming a balance of $20,537.35, asking also for recognition of a collateral mortgage dated November 3, 1978, affecting Lot 15 of Kennedy Estates Subdivision in Evangeline Parish, the mortgage, along with a collateral note for $20,000.00 for which it was given as security, having been pledged by the Dufours as security for the handnote. Based on the testimony of Stephen Deville and numerous exhibits, the trial judge concluded that sufficient evidence was present to mandate dismissal of the suit. The trial judge reached this conclusion reasoning that earlier transactions between the bank and the Dufours, which resulted in a reduction of the $127,545.12 handnote from its original amount to $20,537.35, amounted to a private disposition of mortgaged property without appraisement, in violation of the Deficiency Judgment Act, LSA-R.S. 13:4106-7, barring absolutely the bank's present claims. The bank appealed.
Defendant Raymond Dufour (who died shortly after this suit was filed) was a building contractor in Ville Platte, and in the late 1970s, while he was active and successful, he negotiated between ten and fifteen collateral mortgages and between seventy-five and one hundred individual handnotes with American Security Bank of Ville Platte in connection with his business. Most of these transactions were done through Stephen Deville, a lending officer for that bank. On February 20, 1981, there were a number of handnotes still outstanding that were beginning to get past due, so the Dufours signed a handnote for $127,545.12, consolidating all of the notes, using four pieces of collateral to secure the consolidation, three of them collateral mortgages on real estate, and the other a certificate of deposit. One of the collateral mortgages was on Lot 15 of Kennedy Estates. This collateral note and mortgage, and its continued use as collateral by the Dufours even after the property that it covered was presumably sold, figures prominently in this case.
The collateral note and mortgage for $20,000.00, describing Lot 15 of the Kennedy subdivision, was executed and given to the bank on November 3, 1978, the same day the Dufours bought the lot. About six months later, on May 11, 1979, the Dufours sold Lot 5 of that subdivision to Cloveis Lennett, for $30,000.00. The description of Lot 5 was a mistake; the parties intended to convey Lot 15. Lennett, using FHA money, paid Dufour, who in turn paid some other collateral notes due at the bank, but not the note and mortgage on Lot 15. However, on the back of the $30,000.00 check that Dufour endorsed to the bank, under his endorsement was written "Lot 15 Kennedy Estates Sub." Accordingly, as of May 11, 1979, the collateral note and recorded *164 collateral mortgage covering Lot 15 remained outstanding.
On March 5, 1982, the situation stood like this: Dufour still owed the bank most of the consolidation handnote, and the bank held as security for that note three collateral mortgage notes, including the mortgage on Lot 15 of the Kennedy Estates Property, plus a certificate of deposit. Because of Dufour's declining financial situation, he and the bank on March 5, 1982, executed two written agreements. By means of the first document (called an act of exchange but actually a giving in payment), the Dufours conveyed one piece of property (not the subject of any of the collateral mortgages pledged to secure the consolidation note), for a credit of $34,000.00, a part of which was credited against the February 20, 1981, promissory note. After this credit, and taking into account earlier payments on the note, the amount of the balance stood at $70,537.35. By another instrument dated that same day, March 5, 1982, likewise called an act of exchange but likewise being obviously a giving in payment, the Dufours transferred to the bank other property, which the parties agreed was worth $50,000.00, and which was apparently the subject of a collateral mortgage dated March 8, 1979, securing a collateral note in the amount of $60,000.00. This instrument contains the following language:
"As a further condition of this exchange, while reserving unto itself all courses [sic] of action against other mortgaged property, AMERICAN SECURITY BANK OF VILLE PLATTE covenants that it will not proceed against the homeplace of RAYMOND J. DUFOUR and LILLIAN DUFOUR, and AMERICAN SECURITY BANK OF VILLE PLATTE further covenants that it will not execute any judgment it may obtain against either the homeplace of the above named, or against them personally, and that once the mortgaged property against which judgment is obtained is sold, any judgments involving RAYMOND J. DUFOUR and LILLIAN DUFOUR, which are unsatisfied, will be cancelled."
When the credit given by means of this agreement was applied to the consolidation note, it left a balance of $20,537.35.
When these transfers were introduced into evidence, and all of the known facts of the case appeared to be in the record, the trial judge commented he thought the case was ready for decision, because "once a secured creditor takes security without passing it through a public sale, it extinguishes the debt." The trial judge then instructed plaintiff's counsel that he could offer additional evidence but that in his opinion "this stops the case." Plaintiff's counsel stated that he thought the trial judge was correct and did not produce any additional evidence.
In his reasons for judgment the trial court relied on La.R.S. 13:4106 for the proposition that once a creditor accepts mortgaged property without passing it through a public sale, the debt is extinguished for public policy reasons. The appellant on appeal now argues that the trial court erred in dismissing its claim.
La.R.S. 13:4106 states as follows:
"§ 4106. Deficiency judgment prohibited if sale made without appraisement
"If a mortgagee or other creditor takes advantage of a waiver of appraisement of his property, movable, immovable, or both, by a debtor, and the proceeds of the judicial sale thereof are insufficient to satisfy the debt for which the property was sold, the debt nevertheless shall stand fully satisfied and discharged insofar as it constitutes a personal obligation of the debtor. The mortgagee or other creditor shall not have a right thereafter to proceed against the debtor or any of his other property for such deficiency, except as provided in the next paragraph.
"If a mortgage or pledge affects two or more properties, movable, immovable, or both, the judicial sale of any property so affected without appraisement shall not prevent the enforcement of the mortgage *165 or pledge in rem against any other property affected thereby."
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
465 So. 2d 162, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-sec-bank-of-ville-platte-v-dufour-lactapp-1985.