C. C. Hartwell Co. v. Miller
This text of 256 F. 273 (C. C. Hartwell Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This is an appeal from an order of the District Court in bankruptcy, made upon oppositions to the trustee’s account, and which disallowed the liens of appellants, and directed the payment of a mortgage claim out of the sale fund ahead of the claims of appellants. The liens were disallowed by the District Judge, because they were found to have been not seasonably filed.
“No privilege shall have effect against third persons, unless recorded in the manner required by law in the parish where the property to be affected is situated. It shall confer no preference on the creditor who holds it, over creditors who have acquired a mortgage, unless the act or other evidence of the debt is recorded within seven days from the date of the act or obligation of indebtedness, when the registry is required to be made in the parish where the act was passed or the indebtedness originated and within fifteen days if the registry is required to be made in any other parish of this state. It shall, however, have effect against all parties from date of registry.”
[274]*274As to materials furnished the owner, before a certain building contract was entered into on February 26, 1912, the mortgage of appellees would prime the claims unless a lien was acquired by the recording of the act or other evidence of the debt within seven days from the date of the act or obligation of indebtedness, as provided for by article 3274. Whitney-Central Trust & Savings Bank v. General Fire Extinguisher Co., 240 Fed. 631, 153 C. C. A. 429; Whitney-Central Trust & Savings Bank v. Luck, 231 Fed. 431, 145 C. C. A. 425; Hibernia Bank & Trust Co. v. C. F. Knoll Planting & Mfg. Co., 133 La. 698, 63 South. 288; Carolina Portland Cement Co. v. Southern Wood D. & F. Co., 137 La. 470, 68 South. 831; Wheelwright v. St. L., N. O., etc., Co., 47 La. Ann. 533, 17 South. 133; Allen-Wadley Lbr. Co. v. Huddleston, 123 La. 522, 49 South. 160; Shreveport Nat. Bank v. Maples, 119 La. 42, 43 South. 905. The record fails to show that any of the claims for materials furnished prior to February 27, 1912, the date of the recording of the building contract, were recorded so as to create a lien under the terms of article 3274, and the District Court rightly directed payment of the mortgage as against them.
Under this act the appellants, who furnished materials after the building contract was executed and recorded, acquired a lien for the portion furnished the building contractor, which they perfected as required by the act, within 45 days from the completion of the contract, and were entitled thereby to prime the mortgage. Brown v. Staples, 138 La. 602, 70 South. 529. The appellees, however, rely on subsequent provisions of the act to show that the appellants were remitted to the surety on the bond required by the act to be executed in favor of the subcontractors and material furnishers as their interest may ap[275]*275pear. The act further provides that if, at the expiration of 45 days, no recorded claims are filed, the recorder of mortgages shall, upon written demand of any party in interest, cancel and erase from the books of his office all inscriptions resulting from the recordation of the contract and bond. In the event there are recorded claims filed, the owner is required to file a petition in a court of competent jurisdiction citing all claimants and the surety on the bond for the assertion of all claims in concursus. The act then provides that, if no objection is made by any of the claimants to the sufficiency or solvency of the surety on the bond, within 10 days after the filing of the concursus, the clerk of the court shall give to any party in interest a certificate to that effect, and, on presentation of such certificate to the recorder of mortgages, he shall cancel and erase ,all inscriptions created by the recordation of said contract bond or said claim. If objection is made to the sufficiency or solvency of the surety, a summary method of hearing the objection is provided for.
Appellees claim that they are entitled to the benefit of the cited provisions of the act. It is not claimed that either the owner or the bankrupt filed a concursus. The contention is that the bankruptcy proceeding operated as one. Possibly if the appellants, in the bankruptcy proceeding, had been called upon by the trustee of the bankrupt to object to the sufficiency and solvency of the surety, and had failed to do so within the 10 days, the contention might prevail, though, in this instance, the bankrupt was the contractor and not the owner. However, an examination of the bankruptcy proceedings fails to reveal any proceeding or petition on the part of the trustee in which the appellants were either called upon, or given the right, to interpose the objection to the sufficiency or solvency of the surety on the bond, which the statute of Louisiana accords them, before they are remitted to the surety, as the only recourse for the collection of their claims. In this state of the record, we do not think the bankruptcy proceeding was a substitute for the concursus.
The order of the District Court should be modified, so as to provide for the payment out of the sale fund prior to the payment of the mortgage claim of those portions of the claims of appellants which are for materials furnished after the recordation of the building contract, and the cause remanded for the ascertainment of the proper amounts and the modification of the order accordingly and conformably to this opinion; and it is so ordered. Costs on appeal to be equally divided between appellants and appellees.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
256 F. 273, 167 C.C.A. 445, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-c-hartwell-co-v-miller-ca5-1918.