Byrd v. J. F. Meeks Lumber Co.

156 So. 93, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 845
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1934
DocketNo. 1370.
StatusPublished

This text of 156 So. 93 (Byrd v. J. F. Meeks Lumber 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.

Bluebook
Byrd v. J. F. Meeks Lumber Co., 156 So. 93, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 845 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

The exception of no cause or right of action was properly overruled.

Merits.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Byrd, offered Mr. Fred Tol-le, through his wife, to sell him two lots of ground near the city of Baton Rouge to build a home, if Tolle could find any one to furnish lumber to erect the dwelling.

The understanding between them was that if he found a party willing to advance the materials, she would sell him the two lots and that the furnisher of the materials would have a first mortgage on the lots to secure their payment and that she would have a second mortgage to secure the price of purchase for the two lots.

The defendant company, through Mr. Harold Meeks, having agreed to furnish .the building materials, plaintiff sold the two lots to Mr. Tolle. It was understood that the materials furnished would not exceed the sum of $600. The lots were conveyed by plaintiff to Mr. Tolle for $1,250.

In accordance with the agreement, .two acts of mortgage given on the property were drawn up, one for $600 in favor of defendant company, and one for $1,250 in favor of plaintiff, Mrs. McGehee.

The act of sale by plaintiff to Mr. Tolle and the mortgage by the latter to plaintiff were executed before Mr. Roland Kiser, an attorney of Baton Rouge, and notáry public, on October 30, 1930. The mortgage for $600 to defendant company, given by Mr. Tolle for the materials to be furnished, was also executed by Mr. Kiser, as notary, on June 1, 1931.

The sale to Mr. Tolle was recorded June 8, 1931; the two acts of mortgage were recorded June 11, 1931; and, as per agreement, the act for $600 to defendant company was recorded as the first mortgage and the other, in favor of plaintiff, for $1,250 as second mortgage.

It will be noted that the two acts of mortgage were recorded several months after the lots had been deeded to Mr. Tolle and so was the sale to him by Mrs. Byrd. This delay in recording the acts of mortgage was due to the request of Mrs. Byrd because she did not want the acts registered before all the lumber or materials had been delivered by defendant company, and also to the fact that some disagreement occurred between Mr. Tolle and defendant company in reference to the quality of lumber furnished. The parties in thus delaying the registry of these acts were acting, however, in a perfectly friendly spirit and without the- least desire, as far as the record shows, by either of them to take advantage of the other. On the contrary, the intention of the parties seems to have been that each might get what was *94 coming to Mm in tlie transaction, as the agreement had been evidently entered into to afford an opportunity to Mr. Tolle of acquiring a home on a small installment plan, to the defendant company to obtain security for the lumber to be furnished and to Mrs. Byrd, plaintiff, to secure a sale of her two lots of ground'.

It happened, however, that during the time these acts were withheld from recordation, as per the agreement, Mr. Ferguson, of Shreveport, instituted suit on a claim against Mr. Tolle, and obtained a judgment against him by default, which was recorded prior to the recordation of the two acts of mortgage and, as a consequence, took precedence over these acts, as a judicial mortgage. Mr. Tolle did not inform either Mrs. Byrd or defendant company of the suit which had been filed against him, nor of the judgment rendered thereon.

Mr. Tolle having failed in his payments, the defendant took out executory proceedings to have the building and the two lots of ground sold at public sale. Mr. Roland Kiser was then employed by defendant company as its attorney to represent it in these proceedings.

Mr. Kiser tells us in his testimony about a conversation he had in his office in the presence of Mr. Byrd, husband of plaintiff, and of Mr. Harold Meeks, agent of defendant and of Mr. Tolle. At that conference, Mr. Kiser says, he suggested that the records be run over to see if Mrs. Byrd had not perhaps sold the property. Tolle answered, it was not necessary, and upon being asked if judgment had not been gotten against him, answered, “I am just as clear as a whistle.” Mr. Byrd then said, Mr. Kiser testifies: “No, it is not necessary to do that, because this is, as I said, a’ good-will proposition. There is no money passing and we are just risking him for the whole thing any way, and it is all right like it is.” Mr. Harold Meeks, representative of defendant company, said nothing to show his disapproval in any way of the remarks by Mr. Byrd which indicated the spirit in which the transaction was considered by the parties.

It was on the morning of the day fixed for the sale of the property under executory process that Mr. Kiser discovered, on examination of the records, that the judgment against Mr. Tolle had been recorded.

He says he then suggested to Mr. Byrd, to use his own language, “not to hold the sale this morning and to see if we could not buy that judgment or get rid of it some way.” At that time, it must be observed, Mr. Kiser was representing the defendant company and, as a matter of fact,’ had been instructed to bid at the sale for defendant.

It will also be noted that in his suggestion for the postponement of the sale, the word “we,” meaning for plaintiff, Mrs. Byrd, and defendant company, was used by Mr. Kiser. This expression of Mr. Kiser is in keeping with what Mr. Byrd had previously said in reference to the transaction as being “a good-will proposition,” above quoted, in the conference in Mr. Kiser’s office, where Mr. Harold Meeks was present.

After the sale was postponed and re-advertised, Mr. Kiser says that with Mr. Byrd he got in touch with Mr. Tolle in reference to bankruptcy proceedings in which Mr. Tollo thought, erroneously, that he had obtained his discharge. There again Mr. Kiser acted in conjunction with Mr. Byrd.

Thereafter, Mr. Kiser, acting for defendant company, bought the judgment against Mr. Tolle for $150, being one-half of its amount.

Mr. Kiser says that after he had bought the judgment, he told Mr. Byrd that he could have title to the property if he would pay $150, that defendant company had paid for the judgment and the amount of its first mortgage on the property. He says this offer was declined by Mrs. Byrd.

The proposition to Mrs. Byrd shows, however, that Mr. Kiser considered that the purchase of the judgment had been made for her benefit also, if she desired to accept the offer tendered by defendant company.

If there can be any doubt that the defendant company took account of the interest Mrs. Byrd might have had in the extinguishment of the judicial mortgage which had taken precedence over her mortgage and that of defendant, such doubt must disappear in the light of the testimony of Mr. Kiser in reference to what he had in view, when, as the representative of defendant company, the property was bid in by him for the defendant at the public sale.

We have reference to a question propounded to Mr. Kiser, as to whether he had purchased the judgment for the account of defendant company. To this question, Mr. Kiser answered, as follows:

“Actually I did not purchase that judgment truly for the account of the Meeks Lumber Company, it was purchased for Mr. Byrd or Mrs. Byrd and the Meeks Lumber Company.”

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156 So. 93, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrd-v-j-f-meeks-lumber-co-lactapp-1934.