Central Sav. Bank & Trust Co. v. Oilfield Supply & Scrap Material Co.

12 So. 2d 819, 202 La. 787, 1943 La. LEXIS 930
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 8, 1943
DocketNo. 36811.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 819 (Central Sav. Bank & Trust Co. v. Oilfield Supply & Scrap Material Co.) 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
Central Sav. Bank & Trust Co. v. Oilfield Supply & Scrap Material Co., 12 So. 2d 819, 202 La. 787, 1943 La. LEXIS 930 (La. 1943).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The holder and owner of a certain promissory negotiable chattel mortgage note instituted suit against the endorsers in due course, for value thereof, in solido.

The defense is that the holder of the note, knowingly and through “extreme negligence” permitted the mortgaged chattel to be sold under a subordinate lessor’s claim and lien and intentionally did not intervene in the suit by the lessor against the maker of the note, and deliberately refrained from notifying the defendants of the seizure, thereby depriving them of an opportunity to preserve the collateral security, and as a result thereof, the mortgaged • chattel was lost and thus the holder of the note failed in its obligation and duty to protect the collateral security, so that the endorsers could be substituted thereto, upon paying the holder of the note.

The plaintiff moved to strike out of the defendants’ answer the averments setting up the above plea and the trial judge ordered them stricken out. The plaintiff then moved for a judgment on the face of the pleadings and the district judge rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, as prayed for.

The defendants appealed.

The Court of Appeal held that there is no legal recognition of a motion to strike in our pleadings and practice and, therefore, the trial court had erroneously sustained it. The court, after considering the petition and the defendants’ entire answer, concluded that the defendants were primary obligors insofar as the plaintiff was concerned and that, in view of the provisions on the face and back of the note waiving presentment for payment, demand and notice of nonpayment, and agreeing to the extensions of the time of payment, without notice thereof, the holder of the note was under no duty or obligation to intervene in the suit by the lessor, and w'as not obliged to notify the endorsers in order *792 that they might do so, since the “defendants do not deny that the referred to lessor’s privilege primed the chattel mortgage, nor is it alleged that the chattels’ value was in excess of the amount of rent due.” The court stated “It is inferentially said that plaintiff’s tardy action in the respect mentioned, resulted in financial loss to defendants * * * ” and “ * * * it appears that the collateral was lost to one acquiring a superior lien thereon and its diversion for the benefit of the superior lien or accomplished by forced sale.” A rehearing was refused. 12 So.2d 815.

The defendants then applied to this Court for a writ of certiorari or review, which was granted.

The judgment of the Court of Appeal annulling the judgment of the district court, insofar as jt sustained the plaintiff’s motion to strike out, is manifestly correct, as such procedure is foreign to our pleadings and practice. Babst v. Hartz et al., 161 La. 427, 108 So. 871; State ex rel. Sutton et al. v. Caldwell, Mayor, 195 La. 507, 197 So. 214, and Stanley, Atty. Gen. v. Jones, 197 La. 627, 2 So.2d 45.

The statement by the Court of Appeal that the defendants did not plead the chattel mortgage was superior in rank to the lessor’s lien and that the value of the chattel or security lost by the deliberate failure of the plaintiff to assert those rights or to notify the defendants, in order that they might do so is not borne out by the record. As ' this is a case where judgment was rendered upon the face of the pleadings, all well-pleaded allegations' of fact must be accepted as true.

The petitioner alleged that it was the holder and owner, for value, before maturity, of a certain promissory note executed and signed by Lee Avenue Ice Company, through T. D. Livingston, dated Máy 15, 1940, payable to the order of the Oilfield Supply & Scrap Material Company, a commercial partnership domiciled in the City of Alexandria, Parish of Rap-ides, Louisiana, and assigned and transferred by the payee through its partners, as endorsers, to the petitioner, with recourse, in the sum of $572, payable in twelve monthly installments, on the 15th of each month, beginning June 15, 1940, and secured by a chattel mortgage and vendor’s lien; that the maker failed to pay the installment due on September 15, and under the acceleration clause, the entire balance due on the note matured; that the maker and endorsers of the noté waived presentment, demand, protest and notice of nonpayment, and the endorsers further agreed to extensions .of time of payment, without notice to them; and that the petitioner reserved all rights against the maker of the note. It prayed for judgment against the co-partnership and the individual partners; in solido, without asking for any recognition of its chattel mortgage.

The defendants in their answers admitted the execution of the note by the maker and their endorsement thereof, at Alexandria, Rapides Parish, on May 15, 1940. They averred that the chattel mortgage was filed and properly recorded in the records of the office of the Recorder of Mortgages, Ouachita Parish, La., on *794 May 24, 1940; that the chattel, one New Allis-Chalmers Power Unit, upon which the vendor’s lien and chattel mortgage was reserved, was delivered to the place of business of the purchaser thereof and maker of the note at Monroe, Ouachita Parish, on May 27, 1940; that the lessor of the purchaser of the machine and maker of the note seized the chattel for nonpayment of rent and had it sold during the month of October, 1940; that the petitioner had knowledge of the seizure by the lessor under a writ of fieri facias and ample opportunity to intervene and assert its rights as a holder of the chattel mortgage note and to advise the defendants, as the endorsers, in order that they might take affirmative action to protect the security; that the petitioner did not make any effort to protect the chattel and through extreme negligence and laches, permitted it to be sold without notice to the defendants, and, eight months later, informed the defendants that the chattel had been sold at public sale to satisfy the lessor’s rent, which outranked and primed the chattel mortgage; and that the defendants were relieved of their obligations as endorsers of the note, due to the holder’s extreme negligent failure to assert its rights under the chattel mortgage or to notify the endorsers, in order that they might do so, because the value of the chattel or security thereby lost was sufficient to pay the claim of the plaintiff, representing the balance due on the note.

It will be noted that the chattel mortgage was executed on May 15, 1940, and recorded at the domicile and residence of the mortgagor and maker of the note in Ouachita Parish, on May 24, 1940, and that the chattel was not delivered to the purchaser’s place of business until May 27, 1940. Under our well-settled jurisprudence, a chattel mortgage, which is recorded prior to the date that the mortgaged chattel is placed in the lessor’s premises, primes the lessor’s lien. Smith et al. v. Bratsos, Allied Store Utilities Co., Intervener, La.Sup., 12 So.2d 245; Union Bldg. Corp. v. Burmeister, 186 La. 1027, 173 So. 752; Youree v. Limerick, 157 La. 39, 101 So. 864; In re Ruston Creamery, Inc., 190 La. 681, 182 So. 715, and T.L.R. Vol. 13, pages 324 and 325.

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12 So. 2d 819, 202 La. 787, 1943 La. LEXIS 930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-sav-bank-trust-co-v-oilfield-supply-scrap-material-co-la-1943.