Brinkhaus v. Pavy

26 So. 176, 51 La. Ann. 1327, 1899 La. LEXIS 570
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1899
DocketNo. 13,138
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 So. 176 (Brinkhaus v. Pavy) 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
Brinkhaus v. Pavy, 26 So. 176, 51 La. Ann. 1327, 1899 La. LEXIS 570 (La. 1899).

Opinions

The opinion of th,e court was delivered by

Bkeaüx, J.

Two creditors of the defendant, whose claims are secured as to their payment by mortgage, claim priority in rank over the property mortgaged, and in this suit the rank of these mortgages-is to be determined.

Gumbel & Co. were the commission merchants of the defendant for many years. They became the holders of promissory notes dated March 25th, 1892, representing thirty-six hundred dollars, bearing interest and signed by defendant Colomb, as maker, payable respectively in January and February, 1893, identified with an act of mortgage of the same date as the date of the notes.

Gumbel &■ Go. retained the right, expressed in the mortgage deed, of applying the net proceeds of defendant’s crop “and of all products shipped and of payments of money‘to the payment of any indebtedness which may now be due, or which may hereafter become due to the said mortgagees by the said mortgagor’s open account.”

In April of 1892, Wm. Brinkhaus took a mortgage on defendant’s property, i. e., the same property which was mortgaged to plaintiff (Gumbel & Co.) in March preceeding, as security for the payment of the sum of two thousand and thirty-one and 75-100 dollars, and interest.

The defendant, (Colomb,) on February 5th, 1894, executed another mortgage to plaintiffs (Gumbel & Co.) for the sum of twenty-one hundred dollar’s. The act of mortgage covered a lien on the crop for-that year-. The amount of the mortgage was payable on the 1st of January.

The first mortgage of plaintiffs (Gumbel & Co.) is first in rank, unless Brinkhause, who holds the second mortgage in order of date, sustains his position here that plaintiffs (Gumbel & Co.) have eon[1329]*1329sented to a novation or have received payment of their first mortgage growing- out of the imputation of payment as’ made.

In one of their petitions plaintiffs (Gumbel & Go.) reserve their rights of action on their second mortgage and claim exclusively on; their first mortgage. In another of their pleadings they aver that the-note for $2,100 and the mortgage by which it is secured, are paid under the imputation of payment to be made by them.

The following is a narrative of the facts touching the question of novation and of imputation of payment:

In March, 1894, Colomb, the defendant, who resides at. some distance in the country, came to the city of New Orleans to make a settlement with plaintiffs (Gumbel & Go.), and to get them to make him a loan of money. to enable him to cultivate his crop. He asked plaintiffs to let him know the amount of his indebtedness. The-amount was about $1,100. ,

Here, thede fendant swore that plaintiffs (Gumbel & Go.) asked him to give them a mortgage for the balance he owed and for an advance-which they finally consented to make of one thousand dollars. Then-defendant (Colomb) executed a mortgage for twenty-one hundred' dollars. In this mortgage it was stipulated that Gumbel & Go. would havé the right at such time as they should choose to impute the proceeds of the mortgagor’s crop consigned by him to any debt then or-thereafter due by the mortgagor: A stipulation similar to that contained in the act of mortgage of the year 1892.

At this point the testimony greatly varies.

Colomb, the defendant, swore that plaintiff agreed to merge the old debt into the new and to accept the second mortgage in lieu of the first. He was examined as a witness on two different days. On the-first day he swore as follows:

Q. “On that day, did Mr. Gumbel ask you anything about- what mortgages were on your property ?” (This was the day on which the-mortgage was executed.)

A. “No, sir; if he did, I don’t recollect it.”

Q. “On the day that you had the conversation and executed the-mortgage before George C. Preot, did you notify Mr. Gumbel that William Brinkhaus had a mortgage on your property?”

A. “No, sir; I did not tell him.”

Q. “How long after that did Mr. Gumbel or any member of the [1330]*1330firm ascertain that Mr. Brinkhaus had a mortgage on your property ?”

A. “That I cannot answer.”

On the second day he swore:

“He (Gumbel, Sr.) said to me that he did not care to make any advances to me because, he said, he had learned that I had given a mortgage on my property to Mr. Brinkhaus. Then I returned the next day with Mr. Moise. Then I said to him, ‘cannot you make me advances with which to make my crop?’ He said: ‘I don’t care much to do so.’ 1 said to him: ‘I expect, although I do owe Brinkhaus, to be able to make a crop to pay you.’ ”

This testimony is not consistent, and we, in consequence, arrived at the conclusion that plaintiffs knew nothing of the Brinldiaus mortgage. This is the only testimony regarding notice of a prior mortgage.

One of the firm of Gumbel & Co., on this subject, swore that the agreement was arrived at with the distinct understanding that the plaintiffs (Gumbel & Co.) would accept a mortgage of two thousand ,one hundred .dollars “which would rank the same as our previous •mortgage”' and that at the time nothing was said by defendant (Colomb) about a mortgage held by Brinldiaus, of which plaintiffs (Gumbel & Co.) had never heard.

The other member of plaintiff’s firm swore that at the time his firm took the mortgage of February, 1894, they were led to believe by defendant (Colomb) that it would be the mortgage first in rank, •.and that the act was signed with that understanding; but that much to their surprise, about a week afterwards they received a mortgage certificate showing that there was another mortgage anterior to their last mortgage.

With reference to the consideration for which this mortgage was .executed, this witness testified that the defendant (Colomb) owed -plaintiffs (Gumbel & Co.) about one thousand one hundred dollars, ■and with the one thousand dollars advanced at the time the last mortgage was executed, was the only amount due them.

He also swore that they agreed with defendant to grant him an additional amount of one thousand dollars, taking a note of twenty-one hundred dollars, provided the records, as they existed when they took the preceding notes, were clear.

This witness also testified: “Our agreement was 1o hold them until [1331]*1331tlie recordation of the $2100 mortgage, to see whether the records were clear. If they were, we would return them; if they were not, we would hold them.”

It follows: though plaintiffs did consent to accept a second mortgage in lieu of the first, it was done without a full knowledge of the facts.

Had Bumbel & Co.’s second mortgage been first in rank as the first mortgage was, the notes, in our view, would have been extinguished.

A number of letters were introduced in evidence. In one of these letters the defendant (Oolomb) requested plaintiffs (Gumbel & Co.) to send him the notes identified with the first act of mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 176, 51 La. Ann. 1327, 1899 La. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkhaus-v-pavy-la-1899.