Boyd v. Farmers-Merchants Bank & Trust Co.
This text of 433 So. 2d 339 (Boyd v. Farmers-Merchants Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Felton BOYD, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
FARMERS-MERCHANTS BANK & TRUST CO., Defendant-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
Sylvia R. Cooks, Lafayette, for plaintiff-appellant.
Champagne, Colomb & Brumbaugh, George J. Champagne, Jr., Lafayette, for defendants-appellees.
*340 Before FORET, CUTRER and DOUCET, JJ.
CUTRER, Judge.
Plaintiff filed suit to set aside the judicial sale of his home alleging as grounds the defendant bank's breach of an agreement to provide plaintiff financing and its subsequent purchase of the property on behalf of plaintiff's estranged wife. From an adverse judgment, plaintiff appeals. We reverse.
Plaintiff, Felton Boyd, and his former wife, Ethel Demouchet Boyd, defendant, acquired jointly a lot upon which was situated the family home. This property, located at 848 St. Martin Street, Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, is the subject of the present action. Plaintiff and defendant parted and, thereafter, Mrs. Boyd filed for separation and division of the community assets. In a separate proceeding a judgment was rendered directing a sale of the community asset to effect a partition. Said judgment enjoined the parties from encumbering the property which was relatively free of encumbrances.
Plaintiff secured the services of Mr. Terry Theriot, a local attorney, to assist in protecting his interest in the subject property and to aid him in obtaining a loan from the defendant, Farmers-Merchants Bank and Trust Company (Bank), in order to make a bid at public sale of the property. (It should be noted that plaintiff's need for counsel's assistance was accentuated by the fact that plaintiff is illiterate.) On July 3, 1978, plaintiff submitted a loan application wherein it was stated that the reason for seeking the loan was to buy the community property at public auction and plaintiff would then offer, as security, a mortgage on the house and lot. The financial statement which accompanied the loan application placed the value of the offered security at $18,000.00. Subsequently, Mr. Theriot conferred with Bank official, Mr. Chester Guidry, to clarify the fact that the injunction prevented plaintiff from providing a direct mortgage on the property, thus other arrangements would have to be made to secure the loan. Approximately two weeks prior to the date said property was to be offered for sale, the Bank approved and agreed to loan the plaintiff Fifteen Thousand ($15,000.00) Dollars to be used exclusively by the plaintiff as "bid money" on the property. According to plaintiff, the approved sum was to be tendered to him on the day of the sheriff's sale.
The attorney for the plaintiff prepared a note and collateral mortgage in favor of the Bank, to be executed by the plaintiff subsequent to his successful bid on the property. The plaintiff appeared at the Bank on the morning of the sale to obtain the loan as approved. He had in his possession all the documents prepared in favor of the Bank. However, a representative of the Bank informed the plaintiff that his approved loan would not be honored.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Boyd had also approached the defendant Bank seeking financing for purchase of the family home. Approximately two weeks before the sale, Mrs. Boyd visited Mr. W.O. Clause, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Bank and a long-time acquaintance, at the officer's home. Mr. Clause appraised the property for Mrs. Boyd, assigning a value of $15,500.00. On the day of the sale, July 28, 1978, Mr. Clause accompanied Mrs. Boyd to the sheriff's office and purchased the property, having placed the sole bid in the sum of $5,200.00. Mr. Clause informed the sheriff that he wanted the property placed in Ethel Boyd's name. By act of credit sale dated August 2, 1978, Mr. Clause formally transferred the property to Mrs. Boyd who paid by a promissory note in the amount of $5,400.00 payable on demand at defendant's bank. Mrs. Boyd filled out a loan application on August 7, 1978, identical in form to the one provided to her estranged husband and, like plaintiff, offered as security a mortgage on the property sold at public auction. She listed the value of the house at $15,000.00. The loan was approved by W.O. Clause and other officers of the Bank.
Subsequent to the sheriff's sale, the plaintiff's share of the proceeds were tendered to him. He refused acceptance. This suit followed wherein named as defendants *341 were Mrs. Ethel Boyd, Farmers-Merchants Bank and Trust Company, W.O. Clause, individually and as a member of the Board of Directors of defendant Bank, and other directors of defendant Bank in their official capacity.
On the day of the trial, after presentation of the evidence and arguments on the merits, the trial judge rejected plaintiff's demands and dismissed suit. From that judgment plaintiff appeals assigning the following specifications of error:
(1) The trial judge erred in failing to find that the defendant, Farmers-Merchants Bank and Trust Company, breached a contractual obligation to extend the loan as approved; and
(2) The trial judge erred in failing to find that the defendants, W.O. Clause and Ethel Demouchet Boyd, were unjustly enriched and the totality of circumstances in this case are unconscionable, warranting rescission of the sale.
Regarding the terms of the agreement to loan, the Bank contends it was the parties' intention that plaintiff either provide the Bank with a mortgage on the property prior to judicial sale or secure the funds elsewhere to bid on the property and, in the event his bid was the highest, the Bank would then acquire a mortgage and provide financing. However, the record reveals that the lender knew of plaintiff's need for credit prior to the sheriff's sale and understood that the aforementioned injunction prevented plaintiff from encumbering the property pending partition. Nevertheless, defendant contends it was bank policy not to advance funds for purchase of property without first acquiring a mortgage. Assuming arguendo that the intended arrangement was that plaintiff would provide the Bank with a mortgage prior to purchase, notwithstanding the injunction, it would be impossible for the parties to know whether plaintiff's bid would be successful and, if so, what sum would have to be tendered. As pointed out in Capital Building and Loan Association v. Nicholas, 330 So.2d 364, 365 (La.App. 4th Cir.1976):
"[I]t would not be possible for an adjudicatee at public auction to have a cashier's check, a certified check, or a similar negotiable instrument at the bidding without knowing the exact sale price. Further it would be impracticable to require all bidders to carry money to cover whatever amount is needed to buy at public auction...."
Thus, if the arrangement were as suggested by defendant, it would be virtually impossible for the Bank to provide plaintiff with a negotiable instrument in an amount equal to the sale price. And, it would be unreasonable to expect plaintiff to carry cash (presumably in the sum of $15,000.00 as per the approved loan application) to the sheriff's sale when the possibility remained that plaintiff's bid would not be the highest and his motive for securing the loan would, accordingly, be vitiated.
The Bank's contention that plaintiff was to purchase the property, then provide a mortgage before financing would be available, is likewise not supported by the evidence.
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433 So. 2d 339, 1983 La. App. LEXIS 8632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-farmers-merchants-bank-trust-co-lactapp-1983.