Comeaux v. Savoy

146 So. 725, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1454
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1933
DocketNo. 1087.
StatusPublished

This text of 146 So. 725 (Comeaux v. Savoy) 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
Comeaux v. Savoy, 146 So. 725, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1454 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

Plaintiff leased to defendant thirty acres of land on a rental of one-third of the crop raised thereon for the current year 1930, 1931.

The principal crop to be grown on the property was sugar cane. To secure the necessary .advances to make the crop, defendant, Savoy, entered in to an agreement for a loan from the State Agricultural Credit Corporation. To represent the sum of $604 borrowed from the corporation, defendant executed ten promissory notes, on January 30, 1931, for different amounts, payable, November 15, 1931, bearing 8 per cent, interest, with a penal clause of 10 per eent. if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection.

To secure the payment of the notes with interest and attorney’s fees, defendant, Savoy, granted, by authentic act executed before La-caze P. Billeaud, January 30, 1931, a chattel mortgage on the following described movable property: “Four horse mules, named Johnnie, Jimmie, Bob and Toby; Two single plows; One Wilson wagon, one Disc, one harrow, one Moline; One middle breaker.”

The lien and pledge in favor of the Agricultural Credit Corporation for the money to be advanced on the prospective crop were recognized in the mortgage contract, in which plaintiff. Dr. R. Kossuth Comeaux, intervened, subordinating thereto his lessor’s privilege and all rights or claims he might have upon the crops and other property placed by the borrower on the leased-premises, with the exception of the seed cane retained by defendant. The entire proceeds of the sugar cane crop grown on the tract of land leased were applied by defendant to pay the notes.

The one-third share of Dr. Comeaux, plaintiff, in the proceeds amounted to $202.45 on which he received $38 in part settlement, from defendant.

Plaintiff, Dr. Comeaux, in suing Savoy for the $202.45, less the credit of $38 which were applied by defendant in the payment of these notes. In addition to that balance and coupled therewith, plaintiff is also suing Savoy for $100 on a promissory note dated January 17, 1930, due one year after date.

The defendant and his wife, Mrs. Gertrude Comeaux Savoy, appeared in the authentic act of mortgage and specially waived and re-' nounced their homestead exemption under article 11 of the Constitution.

The claim of plaintiff is that by the application of the proceeds of his share in the crop by defendant to the payment of the notes due the State Agricultural Credit Corporation, he has to that extent been subrogated by operation of law to all the rights of that corporation on the notes, less the credit of $38, above referred to.

The first question presented is as to whether plaintiff, by such payment, is entitled to this subrogation.

Article 2161, Civil Code, reads as follows:

“Subrogation takes place of right:
“1. For the benefit of him who, being himself a creditor, pays another creditor, whose claim is preferable to his by reason of his privileges or mortgages. * * *
“3. For the benefit of him who, being bound with others, or for others, for the pajunent of the debt, had an interest in discharging it.”

Before passing on the above quoted provisions of that article of the Code, under heading No. 1, we shall direct our attention to the claim of plaintiff under heading No. 3, which refers to payments made by one bound with others or for others.

As we have before stated, plaintiff appeared in the contract for the purpose of subordinating his lessor’s privilege to the lien recognized in the contract in favor of the State Agricultural Credit Corporation. Thereby, he merely agreed, in effect, that he would not assert his lien for his share of the crop, the proceeds of which could be applied by Savoy to the payment of the notes, if needed. If the crop failed, it is obvious that plaintiff was not bound to anything on the notes. He was not therefore bound with or for others so as to entitle him to legal subrogation on payment of the notes. Besides, it is declared in the act of crop pledge and mortgage, that Dr. R. K. Comeaux, lessor, “is not to be personally bound for the debt.” This declaration clears up the subject from all doubts and shows that under heading No. 3 of article 2161, plaintiff has no claim to the subro-gation granted therein.

It is different, however, under the other provisions of that article where it says that subrogation takes place of right, viz.: “For the benefit of him who, being himself a eredtor, pays another creditor, whose claim is preferable to his by reason of his privileges or mortgages.”

Payment by an ordinary creditor to a privileged or mortgage creditor is, under that article, entitled to the subrogation therein provided for. We do not understand that counsel for defendant disputes the correctness of this proposition which is in line with the following ruling of the court, in the case of Zeigler v. His Creditors, 49 La. Ann. 144, 21 So. 666, where it says: “The ordinary creditor paying the debt of the mortgage *727 creditor is subrogated of right to the mortgage.”

Counsel for defendant contends that the entire debt must be paid or its full payment must be made to effect a subrogation, but that a partial payment will not carry stib-rogation.

In the case of Walmsley & Company v. Theus, 107 La. 417, 31 So. 869, the court held, as follows: “A creditor who, by making a partial payment to another holding a prior special mortgage on certain property, has become legally subrogated pro tanto to the rights of the latter, is subrogated subordinately to the rights of that creditor to be paid the balance of his debt.”

Here, the proof shows that Dr. Com-eaux who was an ordinary creditor of defendant made a partial payment up to the amount of his share in the crop through defendant to the State Agricultural Credit Corporation on the special mortgage it held on the property of defendant and under the ruling in above cited case, became, of right, subrogated to the rights' of that corporation for the amount thus applied to the debt. Under the doctrine so announced in that decision, if a balance had remained due on the mortgage notes by defendant, the subrogation resulting from that partial payment would have been subordinated to whatever balance that would have remained unpaid on the obligation. This is, however, not the situation here, as the total amount represented by the notes was satisfied. These notes were returned to the defendant by the Agricultural Credit Corporation which had received the payment and were marked, paid. When the partial payment was made by plaintiff, Dr. Comeaux, through defendant, by force of the law and of right, subrogation was effected in favor of plaintiff and the fact that the notes were marked paid and returned to defendant, the maker, could not prevent the legal subrogation.

The foregoing is recognized in the ruling of the court in the Theus Case, hereinabove referred to, and in which it was also said that the law took no notice of the origin of the money with which the payment is made, which carries legal subrogation with it as its effect.

Counsel for defendant contend that the entire debt must be paid to effect a legal sub-rogation. They quote Marcade and Cye. to that effect.

In the case of Walmsley v. Theus, 107 La. 417, 31 So.

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110 So. 86 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1926)
R. M. Walmsley & Co. v. Theus
107 La. 417 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)
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61 So. 218 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)
Iberville Bank & Trust Co. v. Dupuy
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Davis v. Loranger
8 La. App. 773 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1928)

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146 So. 725, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comeaux-v-savoy-lactapp-1933.