Central Bank v. Bishop
This text of 353 So. 2d 1109 (Central Bank v. Bishop) 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
CENTRAL BANK, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Robert V. BISHOP, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*1110 Snellings, Breard, Sartor, Shafto & Inabnett by W. S. Shafto, Jr., Monroe, for plaintiff-appellant, Central Bank.
McKinley, Bruscato & Loomis by Anthony J. Bruscato, Monroe, for defendant-appellant, Robert V. Bishop.
Before PRICE, HALL and JONES, JJ.
En Banc. Rehearing Denied January 16, 1978.
HALL, Judge.
Central Bank sued Robert V. Bishop seeking a money judgment in the amount of $13,039.80 on an indebtedness allegedly evidenced by a hand note in that amount dated December 10, 1974, and seeking to foreclose a collateral mortgage securing a mortgage note in the amount of $10,000 dated July 7, 1971, allegedly pledged to the bank to secure the hand note. Plaintiff's petition alleged that the two notes had been lost. After suit was filed defendant, who had possession of the mortgage note, presented it to the clerk of court and had the mortgage canceled on the records. Thereafter, defendant answered plaintiff's petition denying the indebtedness and that the note had been lost, and pleading payment.
After trial, the district court held that plaintiff proved the existence of the indebtedness but failed to overcome the presumption created by defendant's possession of the mortgage note that it had been paid or released from the pledge. Judgment was rendered against defendant for the amount sued for but rejecting plaintiff's demand for enforcement of the mortgage. Both plaintiff and defendant appealed. For reasons expressed in this opinion, we affirm the money judgment against defendant but reverse the judgment rejecting enforcement of the mortgage and order its enforcement.
In March, 1973, defendant borrowed $12,000 from plaintiff evidenced by a $12,000 hand note secured by the $10,000 collateral mortgage note. The hand note was renewed on December 15, 1973, February 4, 1974, June 13, 1974 and December 10, 1974. On each occasion defendant signed a new note reflecting the pledge of the collateral mortgage note. The old notes were marked renewed or paid and delivered to the defendant as they were replaced by new notes. The note dated December 10, 1974 was for $13,039.80 which included the original principal amount of $12,000 plus unpaid or discounted interest and is the note upon which suit was filed.
*1111 The testimony of the bank employees, supported by bank records including copies of the hand notes and a computer ledger sheet, firmly establish that defendant never paid any amount on the December, 1974 note. Defendant himself testified that he could not say whether the debt had been paid, but assumed that the original $12,000 debt was paid in early or middle 1974 when other substantial indebtedness owed the bank was paid out of the proceeds of a loan closing. Defendant offered into evidence a photocopy of the December, 1973 note which was marked paid on January 11, 1974. After that date, however, as previously mentioned, defendant signed three renewal notes evidencing the continued existence of the indebtedness.
After the December 10, 1974 note became delinquent Mr. J. Dixon Johnston, the commercial loan officer who dealt with defendant, regularly and on numerous occasions pressed defendant for payment and mentioned the possibility of foreclosure on the mortgage. Defendant never disputed the indebtedness nor questioned the bank's right to foreclose. In the latter part of 1975, another loan officer, Mr. Daniel O. Otts, was assigned to work with Mr. Johnston in connection with the loan. In November, Otts made a reappraisal of the mortgaged property, defendant's home. Otts was driven to defendant's home by defendant in his pickup truck, inspected the home and was driven back to the bank. Otts testified that prior to going with defendant he checked out the hand note and the collateral file which contained the mortgage note, the bank's appraisal sheet, the legal description of the property and other documents. When defendant came to pick him up Otts placed the hand note in the collateral file and took it with him to defendant's home. The last time Otts remembered seeing the file was when it was on the seat of defendant's pickup truck. Defendant testified Otts had no file or briefcase with him when they went to the house but defendant did not dispute the fact that they both went to the house for the purpose of making a reappraisal.
Otts did not realize the notes were missing until the following morning when the note and collateral clerks came to inquire into the whereabouts of the notes and file. The bank's note control sheet and collateral control sheet, which were legal pads on which the clerks record information as to which notes are checked out by bank officers, reflected that the notes and file were checked out by Otts and were not returned. These sheets were kept for a limited time until bank examiners and auditors verified the location and existence of notes and then were destroyed and were unavailable as evidence.
Extensive efforts were made to locate the two missing notes. Otts immediately called defendant at his office but defendant was out of town. Otts asked a secretary in Bishop's office to thoroughly check the office and truck and also asked her to contact defendant and inform him of the emergency, which she did. Otts went to defendant's office, looked through it and the truck, and found nothing. The next morning Otts went back to defendant's office and was told by defendant that he had diligently searched for the file and notes but could not find them. Otts discussed the matter with defendant on numerous occasions thereafter and defendant never indicated that he had possession of either of the notes.
Other bank officials carefully checked all of the bank's commercial loan and note files to make sure the notes were not misfiled. The collateral register maintained by the commercial loan department showed the mortgage note should still be in the bank's possession and that it had not been released.
Suit was filed in June, 1976, about seven months after the notes were "lost". On October 26, 1976, defendant's deposition was taken and at this time he revealed he found the mortgage note in one of his files after suit was filed and the very morning of the deposition took the note to the clerk of court and had the $10,000 mortgage canceled on the records.
Two cases cited by the trial court, Fabian v. Justice, 228 So.2d 739 (La.App. *1112 4th Cir. 1969) and Hughes v. Hughes, 170 So.2d 251 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1964), are authority for the proposition that when a promissory note is returned to the maker there is a presumption that the note has been paid and the burden of proof shifts to the payee to prove that the note has not been paid, which burden may be met by an explanation of the maker's possession of the note. The trial court correctly held that the presumption was not applicable to the hand note because defendant did not have possession of it, that plaintiff proved by a preponderance of the evidence that defendant executed the December 10, 1974 note as evidence of the indebtedness then owed by him to the bank, and that such indebtedness was never paid.
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