Bankston v. Loranger Milk Plant, Inc.

17 So. 2d 332, 205 La. 290, 1944 La. LEXIS 673
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 7, 1944
DocketNo. 37051.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 332 (Bankston v. Loranger Milk Plant, Inc.) 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
Bankston v. Loranger Milk Plant, Inc., 17 So. 2d 332, 205 La. 290, 1944 La. LEXIS 673 (La. 1944).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

To insure payment for all milk sold by producers to it, each distributor of that product within this state is required by Act No. 318 of 1940 to furnish a bond or other security, the security to be approved by the Commissioner of Agriculture and Immigration of the State of Louisiana and to be filed by him and retained in his office subject to public inspection. Pursuant to that requirement, the Loranger Milk Plant, Inc., as principal, and so referred to hereinafter, executed a bond on September 9, 1941, in the sum of $5000 with the New Amsterdam Casualty Company of Baltimore, Maryland, as surety.

On September 24, 1942, thirty-seven milk producers joined in instituting a suit (No. 10,774 on the docket of the District Court) to recover the total sum of $9519.33, the petition describing the indebtedness to be for “milk sold and delivered to the said Loranger Milk Plant, Inc., at Hammond, Louisiana, from March 31, 1941, up to and including April 25, 1942, as will more fully appear by an itemized account attached hereto and made a part hereof.” They pray for a solidary judgment against said prin *295 cipal and surety on its bond in the full sum of $5000, with 5% per annum interest from judicial demand until paid, plus statutory penalties and attorneys fees. Additionally they ask judgment against the principal in the further sum of $4519.33, together with interest thereon from judicial demand.

The principal, Loranger Milk Plant, Inc., through its liquidator, answered by denying all of the allegations of the petition; and, to quote its special averments, “further answering and in reconvention and intervention your liquidator shows that if any recovery is made upon said bond in question then and in that event that the proceeds thereof should be turned over to him as liquidator for the purpose of distribution according to law in such cases made and provided, showing that this bond constitutes assets of the Loranger Milk Plant, Inc., that he is the legally qualified liquidator and as such is entitled to recovery and distribution of the proceeds thereof together with' other assets of the liquidation he represents.”

The surety entered a general denial to the allegations of plaintiffs.

On November 16, 1942, almost two months after the above suit was commenced, the surety deposited in the registry of the district court the sum of $5000, the amount of its bond. Also, on that day, it filed an interpleader proceeding, praying “that the hereinabove named individual claimants and L. M. Cook, as Liquidator of the Loranger Milk Plant, Inc., be cited to appear herein and to assert their claims against the fund so deposited and that if there be anything in excess of the amount due to the claimants, that such excess up to the -penalty of the bond be returned to petitioner, and petitioner further prays for judgment against all the hereinabove named parties and against Harry D. Wilson, Commissioner of Agriculture and Immigration, dismissing it from all liability of whatsoever nature and kind under said bond and against all persons who might or could have a claim thereunder.”

In the interpleader proceeding, the thirty-seven plaintiffs named in the first suit tendered a joint answer in which they pray for judgment against the surety in accordance with their original demands.

The two causes were consolidated, tried together, and decided as one suit. There was judgment in favor of twenty of the thirty-seven claimants against the principal and surety, in solido, in the sum of $5000, pro-rated in the amounts set opposite the respective names of those twenty, together with 5% per annum interest thereon from judicial demand. Further, the surety, individually, was condemned to pay to the mentioned twenty as penalties an additional amount of 3% per month from August 1, 1942, until paid, on the sum due to each, plus 10% of the sum, interest and penalties as attorneys fees. Also, there was judgment in favor of all thirty-seven claimants against the principal, individually, for the amounts set opposite their respective names, with 5% per annum interest from judicial demand. Additionally, the reconventional demand of the principal and the interpleader proceeding (No. 10,882) brought by the surety were ordered dismissed; and the principal and surety were cast in solido for *297 all costs of court, except the costs of the reconventional demand for which the principal alone was held liable.

Both the principal and the surety were granted orders of suspensive appeal; however, only the appeal of the surety was perfected.

In the brief of appellants’ counsel, we find the following:

“The New Amsterdam Casualty Company is concerned with fulfilling its obligations fairly and equitably. Its $5000 bond should be distributed among the thirty-seven milk dealers and not given to only twenty. In making this contention, it can have no selfish purpose since it admits its liability for the full amowit of the bond and, therefore, could gain nothing by the method of its distribution.” (Italics ours)

There can be no question, in view of that statement, that the full amount of the bond ($5000) is due and owing by the surety to some or all of the thirty-seven claimants who instituted the first above mentioned suit. As to whether it was properly pro-rated by the trial judge among only twenty of them is a matter that is not before us for consideration and one about which appellant can now have no legal complaint. None of the claimants have appealed or filed answer to the surety’s appeal; and it must be said that the judgment as to them has been acquiesced in and is final. Grapico Bottling Works v. Liquid Carbonic Co, 163 La. 1057, 113 So. 454; Stubbs v. Bain, 173 La. 544, 138 So. 96; Goldberg v. Banta Bros., 183 La. 10, 162 So. 786; Cox v. First Nat. Bank in Arcadia, 195 La. 963, 197 So. 616.

There is merit, however, in the challenge of the surety to that part of the judgment which condemns it to pay an additional amount of 3% per month from August 1, 1942, until paid, on the sum due to each claimant. This penalty was imposed under the authority of Act No. 37 of 1921, Ex. Sess, the title and first section of which read:

“An Act to require bond companies to make an adjustment and payment within sixty days after notice of all just and legal demands against them for shortage, defalcations and misappropriation of funds by those for whom they are or may become surety, and to provide penalties for the violation of this act and to repeal all conflicting laws.
“Section 1.

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17 So. 2d 332, 205 La. 290, 1944 La. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankston-v-loranger-milk-plant-inc-la-1944.