Comegys v. Shreveport Kandy Kitchen

110 So. 104, 162 La. 103, 52 A.L.R. 931, 1926 La. LEXIS 2208
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 5, 1926
DocketNo. 27956.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 110 So. 104 (Comegys v. Shreveport Kandy Kitchen) 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
Comegys v. Shreveport Kandy Kitchen, 110 So. 104, 162 La. 103, 52 A.L.R. 931, 1926 La. LEXIS 2208 (La. 1926).

Opinion

BRUNOT, J.

John M. Comegys leased the premises known as 719 Texas street, in the city of Shreveport, La., to the Shreveport Kandy Kitchen, a business conducted under that name but owned and operated by G. F. Eltife. Before the expiration of the lease Eltife executed and recorded a chattel mortgage in favor of Fred Martel upon the property and fixtures he had placed in the leased premises. After the expiration of the lease Eltife continued to occupy the property at the same monthly rental. He paid the rent for the two months succeeding the expiration of the lease, but for three months thereafter he defaulted in his payments, and plaintiff sued for the sum due and provisionally seized all of the debtor’s property found on the premises. Fred Martel intervened, alleged that the rent sued for accrued subsequent to the expiration of the lease and subsequent to the recordation of his chattel mortgage upon the debtor’s property, and 'therefore his privilege, as mortgagee, upon the property seized, was superior to the privilege asserted by the plaintiff.

The learned trial judge held that when the lease expired and the lessee continued to occupy the premises at the same monthly rental, what is known as rreconductiori resulted, and the original lease, with the term thereof *105 changed, by operation of law, from two years to a monthly lease, was continued for an indefinite time, terminable, at the option of the lessor, by service upon the lessee of a notice to vacate. Judgment was therefore rendered in favor of the plaintiff and intervener and against the defendant for- the amounts of their respective claims, and in favor of the plaintiff and against the intervener, subordinating the lien of the intervener, as the holder of the chattel mortgage, to the plaintiff lessor’s lien.

From this judgment the intervener appealed. The Court of Appeal reversed the judgment in part. It decreed that the lien of the mortgagee was superior in rank and primed the plaintiff’s lien and privilege for rent accruing after the expiration of the lease. A rehearing was refused, and plaintiff thereupon applied to this court for certiorari or writ of review. The writ issued, and the record is now before us.

The sole question presented is whether or not the chattel mortgage became, effective at the date the lease expired and, from that date, was superior in rank to the privilege of the landlord upon the property of the tenant for the rent thereafter accruing.

Counsel for intervener contends that this question is directly and affirmatively answered by the Court of Appeal of Orleans in the case of Remedial Loan Society v. Fredrick Solis and Robert E. Trepagnier, Patrick J. Morris, Intervener, C. of A. Repts. vol. 1, 164, in which case the court held that:

“(1) A contract of lease which either party may terminate on giving 15 days’ notice does not fix its duration, and under article C. C. 2685, is one by the month.
“(2) Holding over after the expiration of each month creates a tacit reconduction from month to month and a new contract for each month.
“(3) A chattel mortgage yields a preference to a contract of lease and to every tacit re-conduction thereof made prior to recordation of the amount of mortgage, but enjoys a priority over every lease or tacit reconduction made subsequent thereto.”

Counsel for plaintiff differentiates the cited case from the case at bar. The only difference is that in one case there was a month to month lease; in the other the original lease was for two years, but this lease had expired and thereafter the occupancy of the premises was held under a tacit reeonduction from month to month. Counsel for plaintiff concedes that the principle of law involved is. the same. The Orleans Court of Appeal specifically held that a tacit reeonduction from month to month creates a new contract for’ each month, and that a chattel mortgage primes a lease or tacit reeonduction thereof made subsequent to the recordation of the mortgage.

In the case of Lyons v. Clark "Warehouse the Court of Appeal of the First circuit held that a chattel mortgage merely confers a privilege, while the lessor has not only a privilege but a pledge, with the right to retain the thing subject to the pledge until he is paid. In the case of Bernhardt v. Sandel, the Court of Appeal of the Second circuit held that a chattel mortgage, of record before the lessor’s privilege attached, was superior to that privilege.- Both of these cases may be found in Loyola Law Journal, vol. 4. In the case of Youree v. Limerick (Papas, Intervener) 157 La. 39, 101 So. 864, 37 A. L. R. 394, Justice Rogers, the organ of the .court, after quoting the pertinent part of section 4 of Act No. 198 of 1918, the Chattel Mortgage Act, said:

“The Court of Appeal in subordinating the plaintiffs’ claim to that of the third opponent, interpreted this provision of the statute as intending to give a prior recorded chattel mortgage superiority in rank over a lessor’s lien arising subsequently thereto. Its appreciation of the law is correct, but its application thereof to the present issue is incorrect. The statute, in express terms, provides1 that the chattel mortgage lien ‘shall be superior in rank to any privilege or lien arising subsequently there *107 to.’ No qualification nor exception is admitted. Clearly, then, the words ‘any privilege or lien’ include the lessor’s lien and privilege. In the ease of Lyons v. Clark Warehouse & Improvement Co., referred to. supra, the Court of Appeal for 'the First circuit, in construing the quoted provision of the statute, held that it applied only to ordinary liens and privileges and not to the lessor’s security for his rent, which is of a higher nature than a mere privilege carrying wjth it the right of pledge and retention. The answer to this argument is to be found in the recognition of the fact that the right of retention is merely an ancillary and remedial right. The law confers it upon the lessor for the purpose of adding to his security and of facilitating the enforcement of his privilege. The existence of the auxiliary right of retainer may make the privilege more effective, but it, nevertheless, retains its character of a privilege without advancing in rank. * * * This distinction was recognized and applied by the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans in the case of Roses v. Siggio, No. 7904 of its docket, decided May 17, 1920. The issue involved there was whether the lien and privilege of a workman and repairman, with the right to detain the article on which he had worked, took precedence over a chattel mortgage executed prior thereto. The court held that it did not. The organ of the court was Judge St. Paul (now one of the Associate Justices of this court).”

While the original opinion in the Youree Case was handed down by Division A, the whole court had the case before it on the application for a rehearing, and, as a rehearing was granted merely to correct “an error in the statement of facts made in our original opinion,” the legal conclusions announced therein were approved by the whole court and settled the jurisprudence of the state with reference to the priority of a chattel mortgage over any other lien or privilege upon the property subject to it, arising subsequent to the recordation of the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 104, 162 La. 103, 52 A.L.R. 931, 1926 La. LEXIS 2208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comegys-v-shreveport-kandy-kitchen-la-1926.