Chrysler Credit Corp. v. Walker

488 So. 2d 209
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 23, 1986
DocketCA 2724
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 488 So. 2d 209 (Chrysler Credit Corp. v. Walker) 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
Chrysler Credit Corp. v. Walker, 488 So. 2d 209 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

488 So.2d 209 (1986)

CHRYSLER CREDIT CORPORATION
v.
Debra Polk WALKER and Wallace Walker.

No. CA 2724.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

January 15, 1986.
On Rehearing April 23, 1986.

*210 Roger B. Jacobs, Jacobs, Loeffelholz & Trestman, New Orleans, for plaintiff.

Kim A. Gandy, New Orleans, for defendants.

Edmund T. Wegner, Jr., New Orleans Bar Ass'n and the Notaries Ass'n of New Orleans, New Orleans, amicus curiae.

Before REDMANN, C.J., and SCHOTT and BARRY, JJ.

REDMANN, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from the dismissal of its suit for a deficiency judgment after executory process and an award to defendants of damages and attorney's fees. Defendants answered the appeal, asking increased damages, attorney's fees for the appeal, and costs.

I.

La. C.C.P. 2635 provides that one seeking executory process "shall submit with his petition the authentic evidence necessary to prove his right to use executory process...," including "authentic evidence of: ... (3) The act of mortgage ... on movable property importing a confession of judgment whether by authentic act or by private signature duly acknowledged." Executory process was wrongly obtained here because the act of mortgage by private signature was not "duly acknowledged." It purports to be an acknowledged act within La. R.S. 13:3720, but we hold that it is not because it was in fact executed in the presence of only one witness. (Defendants testified without contradiction that the person who signed as the second "witness" was simply called into the room, after they had signed, to add her signature to the document.)

R.S. 13:3720's language is anomalous in that it gives authentic force to acts "purporting to be [sic] attested by two or more witnesses...." One cannot reasonably accept that language as meaning, however, that the witnesses need not really be witnesses as long as the act "purports to be" signed by two witnesses. The statute only makes an act "purporting to be" thus witnessed, etc., "accepted, prima facie, and without further proof, as being true and genuine...." The statute thus excuses one from having to prove that the witnesses were indeed witnesses, but it does not prevent an opponent of the act to prove the contrary. And in our case, the contrary was proved.

To be "authentic evidence" because acknowledged within R.S. 13:3720, an instrument must in fact have been witnessed by the two or more "witnesses." Webster's *211 New International Dictionary (2d ed.) defines witness in this context as

"one who is called on to be present at some transaction so as to be able to testify to its having taken place, as one who witnesses a will, deed, or marriage; specif, a person who sees the execution of an instrument and subscribes it to confirm its authenticity by his testimony."

One is not a witness to a written act who did not see the signing of the act by the principal actors. See General Investment, Inc. v. Thomas, 311 So.2d 95 (La.App. 4 Cir.1975).

The act of chattel mortgage was therefore not "duly acknowledged," and thus was not "authentic evidence" as required by C.C.P. 2635. The use of non-authentic evidence to obtain a sale by executory process defeats the creditor's right to a deficiency judgment. League Central Credit Union v. Montgomery, 251 La. 971, 207 So.2d 762 (1968). We therefore affirm the refusal of deficiency judgment.

II.

Plaintiff alternatively argues that the trial court's award of damages was improper. Plaintiff contends that the best the debtors could get was a rejection of plaintiff's demand for a deficiency judgment; and that, if any damages are recoverable, a credit must be allowed for defendants' use of the van. Defendants, on the other hand, ask for an increase in damages.

Plaintiff's July 13, 1981 petition for executory process recited: "Petitioner shows payment due on May 20, 1981 has not been paid and all succeeding installments have not been timely and fully paid," reciting a "balance due, the sum of $9,041.03." Plaintiff's August 28, 1981 petition for deficiency judgment similarly alleged the "original principal amount" owed on the note was $9,041.03. Plaintiff's January 15, 1982 motion for summary judgment annexed its New Orleans collection manager's affidavit "That all payments were made on the said mortgage and note, until the payment due May 20, 1981, at which time there was a balance of $9,041.03." Thus, although one claiming payment may have the burden of proving it (as plaintiff strongly urges in its brief), the judicial admission by plaintiff of payment up to May 20 relieved defendants of proving payments earlier than that date. See Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Herron, 234 So.2d 517 (La.App. 3 Cir.1970). The consequence is that defendants' proof of two payments of May 29 and June 30 proves not merely that payments were made but that they are attributable to the May and June payments.

That proof therefore establishes that, on July 13, 1981, the recital quoted in the preceding paragraph from the petition for executory process was false. Moreover, because the corporate plaintiff is charged with knowledge of the payments it received and deposited before filing for executory process, the record establishes that plaintiff knew that that recital of its petition for executory process was false.

(We do not reach the question of whether deficiency judgment is defeated by a showing that non-essential allegations in the petition for executory process were known to be false.)

The seizure and sale that occurred here was thus not merely procedurally incorrect but unfounded, for although the May 20 payment was nine days late and the June payment was ten days late, plaintiff accepted them as it had accepted other late payments. Indeed its own witness testified that it would have stopped its enforcement activity had defendants brought their note current (as we have indicated the evidence shows they did). See Sternberg v. Mason, 339 So.2d 373 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1976), writ denied 341 So.2d 901 (La.1977). We also cannot ignore the probability that the trial judge discounted some of plaintiff's evidence regarding contacts with defendants, or deemed defendants justified in doing so, in view of the faulty communication between plaintiff's offices regarding defendants' account. We therefore reject plaintiff's argument that the maturity of the remaining payments had been accelerated *212 when the May 20 (or June 20) payment was not paid when due. This case thus differs from Ford Motor Co. v. Breaux, 406 So.2d 313, 316 (La.App. 3 Cir.1981), which reasoned that "damages [are] negligible due to the fact that proper seizure of the automobile could have been ... achieved by a writ of sequestration" under C.C.P. 3571, without executory process. Sequestration was not proven to be available here because the debt was not proven to be matured by proper acceleration.

The trial judge awarded $7,000 damages for "loss of vehicle," without setting forth his calculation of that amount. The basic measure is the value of the vehicle, subject to a credit for whatever is owed to the creditor who wrongly caused the loss of the vehicle. The value of the vehicle in our circumstances is the van's price when new, reduced by some reasonable credit for its use (not for its being no longer a "new" vehicle offered by a dealer).

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Bluebook (online)
488 So. 2d 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chrysler-credit-corp-v-walker-lactapp-1986.