Citizens Nat. Bank v. Gilsbar, Inc.
This text of 581 So. 2d 719 (Citizens Nat. Bank v. Gilsbar, Inc.) 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
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
v.
GILSBAR, INC.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
T. Jay Seale, III, Hammond, for plaintiff-appellant.
John C. Miller, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellee.
Before EDWARDS, WATKINS and LeBLANC, JJ.
LeBLANC, Judge.
This litigation involves a claim by plaintiff, Citizens National Bank (CNB), against defendant, New England Insurance Company, which allegedly maintains a policy of Lawyers Professional Liability Insurance insuring a particular unnamed insured for errors and omissions.[1]
On July 14, 1982, CNB made a loan to Circle Seven Farms, Inc., Alphonso Gomes and Juliane Elsner Gomes in the amount of $450,685.39, in return for which Circle Seven Farms, Inc. and the Gomeses executed a promissory note payable to CNB in that amount. The promissory note was secured by a collateral mortgage and a collateral mortgage note executed by the Gomeses on June 19, 1981, in the amount of $300,000.00. *720 This mortgage covered two tracts of land, an 80 acre tract and a 2.88 acre tract, both of which are located in Tangipahoa Parish.
The July 14, 1982, promissory note was further secured by a collateral mortgage and collateral mortgage note dated January 15, 1982, executed by the Gomeses and Circle Seven Farms, Inc. in the amount of $200,000.00. This mortgage covered the 2.88 acre tract mentioned above.
As a condition of the loan, CNB required a title examination opinion to be issued by defendant's insured certifying that the title to the property described above was good, valid and merchantable. Pursuant to this requirement, defendant's insured issued a title examination opinion letter dated September 11, 1981, to CNB. This title opinion certified that the Gomeses possessed a good, valid and merchantable title to the eighty acre and 2.88 acre tracts of land subject to the June 19, 1981 mortgage. Relying on this title opinion, CNB accepted the security set forth in the mortgages as collateral for the July, 1982 loan.
Subsequently, the Gomeses filed a petition for release under federal bankruptcy laws. Sometime between July 19, 1983, and September 30, 1983, CNB discovered through an abstract and survey that the Gomeses did not own the 2.88 acre tract in its entirety; the Gomeses had alienated 1.345 acres of the 2.88 acre tract prior to the execution of the collateral mortgages affecting this tract of land. At the same time that CNB discovered the problems with the 2.88 tract, it also learned of problems with the 80 acre tract of land. The abstract and survey revealed that a prior mortgage had been executed in favor of a third party in the amount of $65,000.00 and that the Gomeses had sold 1.36 acres of this tract and granted certain rights of way affecting this tract prior to execution of the collateral mortgage in favor of CNB.
CNB commenced foreclosure proceedings with respect to the 2.88 acre tract, this tract being seized on October 7, 1983. CNB subsequently purchased that part of the 2.88 acre tract that the Gomeses actually owned (approximately 1.535 acres) at sheriff's sale on November 30, 1983. CNB sold the 1.535 acres to a third party on December 15, 1983.
CNB did not institute foreclosure proceedings with respect to the 80 acre tract. The Gomeses transferred the 78.64 acres they actually owned to CNB pursuant to a dation en paiement dated April 24, 1984. CNB transferred this property to a third party pursuant to an act of exchange executed on August 24, 1987.
CNB filed suit in this matter on January 26, 1988, and filed an amending petition on March 11, 1988, which named New England Insurance Company as a defendant. CNB alleged that although it had sold the Gomes property which had been recovered pursuant to the foreclosure proceedings and the dation en paiement, CNB was not able to recover the entire amount owed by the Gomeses. CNB further alleged that the Gomeses are insolvent and that it has no further recourse to recover the remainder of the debt owed by the Gomeses. CNB alleged that as a consequence of the negligent acts and omissions of the defendant's insured, CNB has suffered a loss in the amount of $60,000.00.
Defendant filed a peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription which was sustained by the trial court. Judgment was rendered dismissing plaintiff's suit from which plaintiff has appealed.
The parties do not dispute that the applicable prescriptive period in this action is one year based on La.C.C. art. 3492 which provides, "Delictual actions are subject to a liberative prescription of one year. This prescription commences to run from the day injury or damage is sustained." However, the parties disagree as to when damage was sustained in the present case. Defendant contends that damage was sustained by plaintiff no later than September 30, 1983, when it obtained the survey which disclosed that the Gomeses owned less property than was described in the mortgages. On the other hand, plaintiff argues that it did not sustain damages until August 24, 1987, when it sold the 78.64 acres that the Gomeses had transferred to plaintiff; CNB contends that it did not know *721 until this time that sale of the previously mortgaged property would not generate enough funds to cover the Gomeses' debt.
The Louisiana Supreme Court has previously dealt with the issue of prescription in a legal malpractice action in Rayne State Bank & Trust v. National U.Fire Ins., 483 So.2d 987 (La.1986). In Rayne, the plaintiff bank made loans to two construction companies which were secured by mortgages affecting chattels. The two mortgages drafted by defendant attorney failed to state the location of the chattels involved, as was then required by the Louisiana Chattel Mortgage Act, "a defect which might have under some circumstances rendered the mortgages invalid as to the chattels." 483 So.2d at 988. Shortly after the bank made the loans, the debtors defaulted. In March of 1980, the bank was made aware of the possibly fatal defects in the mortgages. In January of 1981, the bank instituted foreclosure proceedings by executory process against the debtors. The debtors then filed bankruptcy proceedings. On January 27, 1981, in their capacity as court appointed debtors in possession with the avoidance powers of trustees, the debtors filed adversary proceedings against the bank to have the mortgages declared invalid. On April 28, 1981, the bank filed a third-party demand in bankruptcy court against the defendant attorney who prepared the mortgages. After settling with the debtors on October 2, 1981, the bank filed the malpractice suit in state court against defendant attorney in March of 1982. The defendant argued that prescription began to run in March of 1980 when the bank was informed of the defects in the mortgages. The Supreme Court rejected this argument, finding that prescription commenced when the bank sustained damages because of the defect in the mortgage, not when it merely acquired knowledge of the legal deficiencies. The court reasoned as follows:
Mere notice of a wrongful act will not suffice to commence the running of the prescriptive period. The reason is clear. In order for the prescriptive period to commence, the plaintiff must be able to state a cause of actionboth a wrongful act and resultant damages. Because the damage must necessarily occur after the wrongful act, prescription runs from that point and not from the date of the wrongful act. 483 So.2d at 995.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
581 So. 2d 719, 1991 La. App. LEXIS 1487, 1991 WL 91045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-nat-bank-v-gilsbar-inc-lactapp-1991.