Commercial Nat. Bank of Shreveport v. McDaniel

156 So. 43, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 831
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1934
DocketNo. 4846.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 156 So. 43 (Commercial Nat. Bank of Shreveport v. McDaniel) 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
Commercial Nat. Bank of Shreveport v. McDaniel, 156 So. 43, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 831 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TADIAFERRO, Judge.

Defendant, a colored man, on May 8, 1923, purchased 40 acres of land in Bossier parish from R. V. Kerr, for which he agreed to pay $341; to represent the price he executed, his three promissory notes, due, respectively, one, two, and three years, with 8 per cent, interest from date. The notes were secured by mortgage and vendor’s lien on the land, were payable to the order of the maker and were by him indorsed in blank. The act of sale and mortgage was recorded in the mortgage records of Bossier parish on the day of its execution. It was reinscribed therein September 28, 1933. Said notes were acquired by G. W. Smith, a merchant of Bossier parish, and the one first maturing was paid by defendant in his hands, and was delivered to defendant. Thereafter, the record not disclosing the date or near date, Smith pledged the other two notes to plaintiff as collateral security to his own note obligation to it. This occurred, however, prior to May 7, 1928, because on or before this date the two notes were withdrawn from the plaintiff bank, on trust receipt by Smith or his counsel, in order to have a renewal indorsement thereon signed by defendant, who then lived in Bossier parish. Smith, presumably, defaulted on his obligation to the bank, and on May 8,1933, the present suit on the two mortgage note's was filed. The suit is to foreclose the mortgage by ordinary process. Plaintiff alleges that it is the holder and owner of said notes for value; and that they were acknowledged by the maker, defendant herein, on May 7,1933.

Defendant first filed pleas of prescription of five and ten years, respectively, as to the notes sued on, and the mortgage and vendor’s lien sought to be foreclosed. The mortgage was reinscribed after this plea was filed and the petition amended to show such fact. These pleas were referred to the merits of the. case.

*45 Defendant then answered, with reservation of rights under his plea of prescription. He admits execution of notes sued on and mortgage and vendor’s lien securing same, and admits that he wrote his,name on hack of the two notes on May 7, 1928, for the sole purpose of acknowledging same, hut specially denies that there was any notation or in-dorsement of extension of maturity of the notes thereon when he signed the acknowledgment, and denies that there was any understanding or agreement 'between him and the holder of said notes as to any extension of time to pay the notes. He specifically denies that plaintiff is the holder of the^notes in good faith and before maturity. He affirmatively avers that he paid the first two notes maturing while held and owned by G. W. Smith, who failed, after many promises to do so, to deliver to him the second one paid, which, he avers, occurred in 1925. He explains that on May 7, 1928, when the notes were presented to him to acknowledge, he again asked Smith to deliver the paid one to him, to which Smith replied that he did not exactly know how he stood with him at the time, but urged him to acknowledge the note, stating that in the fall he would settle up with him. Other reasons are assigned for him having signed, though reluctantly, the acknowledgment of the note he had paid. He further says, in the alternative, that should it be found that said note was not paid by him, that it, as well as the third one of the series, sued on, is prescribed on its face because more than five years have elapsed since the acknowledgment of May 7, 1928.

On the day the case was tried, plaintiff filed a plea of estoppel against defendant’s plea of payment of one of the notes sued on. In view of the decision we have reached in the case, it is unnecessary that we pass on this plea. There was no action below on this plea prior to final judgment. While the case was under advisement of the court, defendant filed an exception of no cause and no right of action, and therein again pleaded that the evidence of plaintiff’s mortgage having perempted for want of timely reinscription, its force and effect terminated, and that it was null and void as evidence of a mortgage or privilege, even between the parties.

The demands of plaintiff were rejected. This appeal is prosecuted by it.

Plea of Prescription.

It appears that the note of G. W. Smith, to which the notes sued on were attached as collateral security, held by plaintiff bank, was past due on or before May 7, 1928, because on or before this date he and his attorney, A. M. Wallace, Esquire, a reputable member of the bar of Bossier parish, appeared at the bank and the matter was discussed with Mr. P. O. Willis, one of the bank’s vice presidents, who died before this suit was tried. Mr. Willis agreed to accept renewal note from Stnith due the following fall, but required that the collateral notes be acknowledged by the maker, defendant herein. Both notes contain the following indorsements thereon, viz.:

“-interest paid to-
“- Note extended to 11-15-28
“The indebtedness‘shown by the within is hereby acknowledged this May 7th, 192S.
“[Signed] Claudius McDaniel.”

Two different stamps were used in impressing these notations or memoranda upon the back of the notes. One covered the extension and the other the acknowledgment. Whether the notation showing that the maturity of the note had been extended to November 15, 1928, was placed thereon' when the acknowledgment was, is the most seriously disputed question of fact in the ease. Counsel, of defendant concede that if it was placed thereon before.defendant affixed his signature below, the acknowledgment that the plea of prescription as to the notes is not well founded, because this suit was filed several months before November 15, 1933. Defendant is positive there was nothing on the back of the notes about an extension when he signed the acknowledgment on May 7, while Mr. Wallace is equally certain that the notation was stamped thereon by Mr. Willis or an employee of the bank and the numerals “11-15-28"’ written in with ink before the notes were withdrawn on trust receipt for defendant’s signature. Eor some reason, not touched on in or out of the record, neither side called Mr. Smith as a witness. He was available to both sides. His testimony would have material bearing upon this issue. The failure to call him, under the circumstances of the case, should not be weighed against one side more ■than the other.

Defendant charges that the extension mem-oranda were crowded in between his original indorsements near the top of the notes and the first line of the stamped acknowledgments he signed, after he signed the acknowledgments, but a critical examination of these stamped indorsements discloses nothing suspicious as to their arrangement. The alignments are regular and identical on each note, and the space between defendant’s original *46 signature and the words “interest paid to,” and the space between the words “note extended to” and the top line of the acknowledgment, on each note, is practically the same. This impels us to believe that the stamped indorsements were placed on the notes, in point of time, in the order in which they appear on the notes. If this were not so, the stamped acknowledgments would have likely been closer to defendant’s original signatures than they now are.

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 43, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-nat-bank-of-shreveport-v-mcdaniel-lactapp-1934.