Boyter v. Shreveport Bank & Trust (In Re Boyter)

65 B.R. 944, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18999
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 16, 1986
DocketCiv. A. No. 86-0062, Bankruptcy No. 583-01360
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 B.R. 944 (Boyter v. Shreveport Bank & Trust (In Re Boyter)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyter v. Shreveport Bank & Trust (In Re Boyter), 65 B.R. 944, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18999 (W.D. La. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

STAGG, Chief Judge.

I INTRODUCTION

This appeal from the bankruptcy court presents a tangled web of issues involving suretyship, pledge, in solido liability, sub-rogation, and community property law. The threads of this web must be unra-velled, examined and, ultimately,-rewoven to achieve a just resolution under the Code.

Pledge and suretyship form part of the Louisiana Civil Code’s arsenal of security devices. Although these methods of financing are of ancient origin, courts, commentators and economic necessity have, through the years, consistently given them *945 new life. See Nathan, The Civil Code and Modem Methods of Financing, 50 Tul.L. Rev. 583 (1976). Considered in isolation, a pure pledge or a pure suretyship issue is easily resolved under the Code. When soli-dary liability overlays the suretyship or when more than one security device is used in the same transaction, dispute resolution becomes more difficult.

II FACTS

A 1978 COLLATERAL PACKAGES

On June 8, 1978, Ruben Clayton Boyter (“Boyter”) executed a collateral mortgage note to the order of future holder, due on demand, in principal sum of $77,500, with 10 per cent interest and collection costs. This note was paraphed for identification with an act of collateral mortgage of the same date (“First Collateral Mortgage”). This collateral mortgage covered a 29.12-acre tract of immovable property owned by Boyter and his wife, Mattie Faye Frizzell Boyter (“Mrs. Boyter”). Under former Civil Code art. 2404, the mortgage was executed by Boyter alone, acting as head and master of the community. Boyter pledged the collateral mortgage note to the Shreveport Bank and Trust Company (“Bank”) “to secure the payment of any note, interest and costs, as well as any other debt now due or which may hereafter arise or become due....”

Also on June 8, 1978, Boyter and Joseph Robert Cook (“Cook”) executed a collateral mortgage note to the order of future holder, due on demand, in principal sum of $77,500, with 10 per cent interest and collection costs. This note was paraphed for identification with an act of collateral mortgage of the same date (“Second Collateral Mortgage”). This collateral mortgage covered a 10-acre tract and a 29.26-acre tract of immovable property which were owned in indivisión by two marital communities, one existing between the Boyters and the other, between Cook and his wife. This mortgage was executed by Ruben Boyter and Joseph Cook under the former head and master provisions. This collateral mortgage note was also pledged by them to the Bank under the same terms as the First Collateral Mortgage note.

These notes, mortgages and pledges formed “collateral packages” which the Bank used to provide security for advances made to Boyter, individually, and to Alloy Casting of Louisiana, Inc. (“Alloy Casting”), a company in which Boyter and Cook were officers and shareholders.

On August 12, 1980, Mr. and Mrs. Cook sold their one-half interest in the 10-acre and 29.1-acre tracts covered by the Second Collateral Mortgage to Mr. and Mrs. Boy-ter. After this transaction, all of the mortgaged property was owned in its entirety by the Boyters. Additionally, in August 1980, John M. Goff (“Goff”) and G.O. Coleman (“Coleman”) became shareholders and officers of Alloy Casting.

B 1981 LOAN

On February 12, 1981, Alloy Casting, through one of its officers, signed a hand note in the principal sum of $77,500 payable to bearer at the Bank, with interest at 1 per cent above the Bank’s prime rate as adjusted quarterly. This note was endorsed by four of Alloy Casting’s shareholders: Boyter, Goff, Coleman and Grover G. Carlisle. These four endorsers were sureties for Alloy Casting and were bound in solido with the corporation for payment. The parties stipulate that “as among themselves as sureties[,] no endorser intended to be bound for more than his virile share.” The parties further stipulate that at the time Goff and Coleman signed the note, “They were on the advisory board of the Shreveport Bank & Trust, Mr. Goff was a CPA, and both he and Mr. Coleman were experienced businessmen.”

The face of this 1981 note states:

X This note is executed conformably to a separate agreement of pledge and is secured by the collateral described in that agreement.
X This note is secured by pledge of the collateral securities listed upon the reverse side hereof, and in the event of the failure of payment of this note in accordance with its terms, or in the *946 event of the breach of any covenant in any mortgage securing this note, then the holder is authorized to sell such securities at private sale and to apply the proceeds of such sale to the payment of the indebtedness due.

On the reverse side of the note, a section entitled “Pledged Collateral” provides:

The following collateral securities have been delivered in pledge to secure the payment of the obligations represented by the note of which this is the reverse side, and it is agreed that the transfer or assignment of said note together with such securities shall release the original payee from any responsibility with regard to such securities; ....

Listed below this pledge provision were the two collateral pledges of June 8,1978. The “Pledged Collateral” section was signed by Boyter alone.

In addition to the monies advanced to Alloy Casting, the Bank also made loans to the Boyters, individually. On July 10, 1981, Boyter executed a hand note for $24,-000 secured by a pledge of the collateral mortgages of June 8, 1978 covering the 10-, 29.26- and 29.12-acre tracts. On June 20, 1988, Boyter executed another note for $35,000. This note was secured by the pledge of a collateral mortgage note dated May 19, 1980 paraphed for identification with a mortgage of the same date in which Mr. and Mrs. Boyter granted an additional $150,000 collateral mortgage on the 29.12-acre tract.

C DEFAULT AND SUBSEQUENT PROCEEDINGS

When the Alloy Casting debt fell into default, the Bank called on the endorsers to pay the balance due. On May 2,1983, Goff and Coleman paid the Bank $77,500 toward the principal and $6,792.65 in accrued interest, as the amount owed by Alloy Casting on the corporation’s February 21, 1981 note. Goff and Coleman paid no attorney’s fees or other collection costs. The same date that they paid the note, Goff, Coleman and the Bank entered into an “Act of Sub-rogation” in which the Bank assigned its rights in the Alloy Casting note to Coleman and Goff. These parties also signed a second agreement which apportioned each party’s ownership interest in the collateral. This apportionment was required because the three tracts of land had been mortgaged and the notes pledged to secure numerous notes representing both the debt of the corporation and of Boyter, individually.

On May 4, 1983, the Bank, Goff and Coleman filed a petition for executory process against Alloy Casting and Ruben Boy-ter. The suit was brought on the two collateral mortgage notes of June 8, 1978.

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Bluebook (online)
65 B.R. 944, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyter-v-shreveport-bank-trust-in-re-boyter-lawd-1986.