Central Bank v. Frost
This text of 552 So. 2d 508 (Central Bank v. Frost) 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, Appellee,
v.
Benton FROST & Oliece Arrant Frost Individually and d/b/a Frost Construction Company, Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*509 Billy Rex Harper, Jr., Jonesboro, Paul Henry Kidd, Monroe, for appellants.
Felix J. Bruyninckx, III, Monroe, for appellee.
Before FRED W. JONES, Jr., SEXTON and LINDSAY, JJ.
LINDSAY, Judge.
The defendant-in-rule, Arthur Britton, appeals the judgment of the trial court ranking Britton's mortgage on immovable property behind that of the plaintiff, Central Bank. We affirm.
FACTS
Arthur Britton, husband of Elizabeth Louise Mayo Britton, owned approximately 154 acres of land in Ouachita Parish. Ownership of the property was transferred to Prosperity Park, Inc., a corporation in which Mr. Britton owned all the stock. The corporation executed two mortgages on the property. The first was recorded in the mortgage records on July 18, 1977 and the second was recorded on May 11, 1978.
The Brittons were subsequently divorced. As a result of the divorce, Mrs. Britton was named owner of all the corporation stock and was named liquidator of the corporation. In 1981, Mrs. Britton, as liquidator of the corporation, sold the property to Paul Henry Kidd, a professional corporation.
In 1982, Mr. Britton paid Ouachita National Bank the amount owed by Prosperity Park, Inc. and obtained the corporation's mortgage notes. The corporation filed suit *510 against Mr. Britton, seeking to have the mortgages cancelled from the mortgage records, claiming that the obligation was extinguished through confusion when acquired by Mr. Britton. The trial court agreed and on February 10, 1983, ordered Mr. Britton's mortgages erased from the mortgage records of Ouachita Parish. The mortgages were erased from the records that same day. On March 23, 1983, Mr. Britton devolutively appealed the trial court judgment.
On February 18, 1983, while the delays for filing a suspensive appeal were still running, but before Mr. Britton filed his devolutive appeal, Paul Henry Kidd sold the property to a group of persons, including the defendants in this case, Benton and Oliece Frost. These buyers, in reliance on the public record, bought the property free of all encumbrances.
This court considered Mr. Britton's devolutive appeal and ruled that the trial court was clearly wrong in ordering that the mortgage inscriptions be cancelled from the public records. Prosperity Park, Inc. v. Britton, 440 So.2d 893 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1983). On December 28, 1983, pursuant to the judgment of this court reversing the trial court's order cancelling the mortgages, Mr. Britton caused the mortgages to be reinscribed in the public records.
On July 23, 1986, after the Britton mortgages had been reinscribed in the mortgage records, the Frosts mortgaged the property to the plaintiff in the present case, Central Bank. In April, 1988, Central Bank filed a petition for executory process to foreclose on the mortgage given by the Frosts. In connection with that proceeding, Central Bank obtained a mortgage certificate which listed the mortgages held by Mr. Britton. Central Bank then filed a rule to rank mortgages and privileges, naming Arthur Britton and his former spouse, Elizabeth Britton, as defendants-in-rule.
Following a hearing, the trial court ruled that at the time the Frosts bought the property in 1982, there were no mortgages or encumbrances affecting the property on the public records and therefore the Frosts were not bound by the mortgages held by Mr. Britton. The court further ruled that the Frosts obtained the right to alienate the property to any other party by conveyance or by mortgage. The court reasoned that cancellation of the mortgages, prior to the lapsing of the delay for taking a suspensive appeal, constituted a premature execution of the judgment. The court held, however, that by taking a devolutive appeal and not a suspensive appeal, Mr. Britton ratified the premature execution of the judgment ordering the erasure of the mortgages from the public records. By failing to suspensively appeal the order cancelling his mortgages, Mr. Britton assumed the risk that the property would be disposed of and his security rights in it would be lost. Because the Frosts had clear title to the property, the court found that they had the right to grant a first mortgage and, therefore, the mortgage which they executed in favor of Central Bank was superior to Mr. Britton's mortgages.
Mr. Britton filed a motion for new trial which was denied by the trial court. Mr. Britton then appealed the trial court judgment, claiming the trial court erred in ruling that the mortgage held by Central Bank and recorded subsequent to the reinscription of his mortgages, primed those which he held.
DISCUSSION
Mr. Britton argues that because the 1983 trial court judgment ordering the cancellation of his mortgages was executed prematurely and because the trial court was incorrect in ordering the mortgages cancelled, he did not loose his security interest in the property during the period in 1983 when his mortgages failed to be part of the public record. In addition, he argues that the mortgages were cancelled by fraud, error or mistake, and therefore, his mortgage rights to the property were not lost by the cancellation of the mortgages, and those mortgage rights remained viable, even against third party purchasers in good faith, such as the Frosts.
Mr. Britton is correct in his assertion that the 1983 trial court judgment was *511 prematurely executed when it was recorded and his mortgages cancelled.
In 1983, when Mr. Britton's mortgages were erased from the mortgage records, LSA-C.C.P. Art. 2252 provided:
A judgment creditor may proceed with the execution of a judgment only after the delay for a suspensive appeal therefrom has elapsed.[1]
The recordation of a judgment in the mortgage records constitutes a step in the execution of a judgment. Ortiz v. Demarest, 455 So.2d 1195 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1984), writ denied, 457 So.2d 1 (La.1984); Goldking Properties v. Primeaux, 477 So.2d 76 (La.1985); Maise v. Demarest, 483 So.2d 1193 (La.App. 4th Cir.1986).
If a judgment is recorded before the delay for taking a suspensive appeal has expired, and such an appeal is timely filed, the execution of the judgment is premature and is to be erased from the records. Denny v. Jefferson Construction Company, Inc., 164 La. 775, 114 So. 650 (1927).
In the present case, the recordation and execution of the trial court judgment was undertaken prematurely. The plaintiff argues, however, that because Mr. Britton filed a devolutive appeal, rather than a suspensive appeal, the premature execution of the trial court judgment was cured and any objections to the premature execution were waived. The plaintiff argues that because a devolutive appeal does not suspend execution of the judgment, the Frosts bought the property free and clear and were not bound by Mr. Britton's mortgages.
It is true that a devolutive appeal does not suspend the execution of a judgment. International City Bank & Trust Company v. Neyrey, 276 So.2d 808 (La. App. 4th Cir.1973). The premature recordation of a judgment is corrected and objections are waived when the lapse of time for the filing of the appeal passes. Premature recordation is at worst a relative nullity which is cured when the time for the taking of a suspensive appeal has run.
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552 So. 2d 508, 1989 WL 134303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-bank-v-frost-lactapp-1989.