Commercial Securities Co. v. Mattingly

26 So. 2d 37, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 416
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 1946
DocketNo. 2804.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 37 (Commercial Securities Co. v. Mattingly) 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 Securities Co. v. Mattingly, 26 So. 2d 37, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 416 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Plaintiff sues to recover of the defendant the sum of $121.19, together with interest at the rate of eight per cent. per annum thereon from April 1, 1942, until paid, and fifteen per cent. upon the total amount due as attorney's fees, with recognition and enforcement of a vendor's lien and the enforcement of chattel mortgage rights upon certain described gas heating equipment sold by the General Gas Corporation to the defendant, as evidenced by a certain chattel mortgage installment note for the sum of $223.20, dated November 25, 1940, signed by the defendant to the order of "Myself" and by the maker endorsed, payable at the office of Commercial Securities Co., Inc., of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and falling due and payable in 36 installments of $6.20, the first payable on the first day of January, 1941, and the remaining installments due on the same date of each succeeding month, which said note is marked "Ne Varietur" to identify it with an act of sale and mortgage acknowledged before Anthony P. Masso, Notary Public, on November 25, 1940.

Plaintiff avers that it is the holder and owner of the said note; that the installments due on said note commencing on April 1, 1942, and monthly thereafter, were past due, exigible and unpaid and that because of the acceleration clause contained therein, the entire unpaid balance amounting to $121.19, together with interest and attorney's fees, were past due and exigible and unpaid.

Making the allegation that plaintiff fears that the defendant will conceal, part with or dispose of the said merchandise upon which it enjoyed a vendor's lien and privilege and chattel mortgage rights, which merchandise was in the possession of defendant, during the pendency of the suit, plaintiff prayed for a writ of sequestration. The writ of sequestration was issued and executed.

The defendant filed a motion to dissolve the writ of sequestration on the ground that the affidavit of plaintiff's agent necessary to obtain the writ was false and untrue and that she was not indebted unto plaintiff for any past due installments upon the note, thereby making plaintiff's demand premature. A rule issued on the motion, which rule was fixed for trial on September 8, 1942, and tried and submitted on September 10, 1942. On October 14, 1942, judgment was rendered in favor of defendant and against the plaintiff making the rule absolute, setting aside or dissolving the writ of sequestration and reserving the right of defendant to sue for damages for the wrongful issuance of the writ. Plaintiff did not appeal from this judgment.

On November 21, 1943, some 131/2 months after the judgment dissolving the writ of sequestration heretofore issued, the defendant filed her answer in which she admitted *Page 39 the purchase of the merchandise, the execution of the note and the execution of the chattel mortgage securing the same. She denied that any installments on the note were past due, exigible and unpaid, thus making the balance on the note due and payable. In further answer, she specifically sets out that she is not indebted to plaintiff for any past due installments on the note; that all maturing installments on the note were paid within a reasonable time of their maturities, and that she is not in legal default by the terms of the contract, by operation of law, or by the action of plaintiff. She further averred that the alleged demand of plaintiff was premature. In further answer, she assumed the position of plaintiff in reconvention and seeks damages in the sum of $750 as resulting from the wrongful issuance of the writ of sequestration, itemized as follows: $500 for impairment of her credit as a merchant and for impugnment of her reputation for honesty among her creditors and the destroying of the good will of her business; and $250 as attorney's fees to obtain the dissolution of the writ of sequestration.

Prior to the trial of the case, plaintiff filed a plea of prescription of one year in bar of defendant's reconventional demand, which plea was overruled by the trial court on September 15, 1944.

On trial of the merits, there was judgment in favor of defendant and against plaintiff, dismissing plaintiff's demand as of non-suit, and granting defendant, as plaintiff in reconvention, and against plaintiff, defendant in reconvention, a judgment in the sum of $400. Plaintiff has appealed.

As the plaintiff failed to appeal from the judgment of October 14, 1942, setting aside the writ of sequestration and as this judgment is now final, we are not concerned with the merits or demerits of this judgment, and it does not enter in the discussion of the case on this appeal, save the effect of it on the plea of prescription filed by plaintiff and which effect will be hereinafter discussed.

On this appeal, there are three questions involved: 1st, the correctness of the judgment on the main demand, dismissing plaintiff's suit as in case of non-suit; 2nd, the correctness of the overruling of the plea of prescription filed by plaintiff in bar of defendant's reconventional demand; and, 3rd, the amount to be awarded on defendant's reconventional demand, if the demand is not prescribed. These questions will be discussed by us in the order named.

Main Demand.
[1] The suit was filed on July 29, 1942, on the basis that the monthly installment of $6.20 maturing on April 1, 1942, and the installments thereafter maturing, that is, on May 1, 1942, June 1, 1942, and July 1, 1942, were all past due and unpaid, thus maturing all future installments, at the time of the filing of the suit, leaving a balance due on the note of the sum of $121.19. Plaintiff, in oral argument and in brief, now admits that the installment due on April 1, 1942, has been paid, that the sum of $2.81 should be applied on the installment due on May 1, 1942. However, it contends that the unpaid balance of the note of $121.19 remains unchanged.

The evidence discloses that the General Gas Corporation, hereinafter referred to as the General Gas, sold to the defendant certain gas heating equipment for the sum of $235.50, on which defendant paid the sum of $12.30 in cash, and for the balance thereof defendant gave the note described supra, and granted a chattel mortgage on the property purchased and the vendor retained the vendor's lien thereon to secure the full and punctual payment of the said note. Regardless of the fact that the note called for the payment of the installments at the office of the plaintiff at Baton Rouge, defendant, from the beginning, remitted at divers times, not in accordance with the terms of the note or chattel mortgage, divers amounts to the General Gas, at its office in Thibodaux, ranging from $5.06 to $9.30, and in turn the General Gas remitted these sums to the plaintiff at Baton Rouge, save three remittances of $6.20, of March 25, 1942, June 25, 1942, and July 25, 1942. This custom of payment by defendant had existed for the period of eighteen months without protest by plaintiff or the General Gas. The payments of March 25, June 25 and July 25, 1942, were applied by the General Gas in payment of an open account due them by *Page 40 defendant. The applications of these payments to her open account were without the knowledge or consent of defendant.

In the record, we find an itemized statement of the account of defendant as reflected on plaintiff's ledger, concerning the note sued upon, showing sixteen payments in various sums, totalling $102.01, showing a balance due on the note of $121.19. We have checked these payments against the receipts and money orders filed in evidence, and find a credit of $9.30 not accounted for by the receipts or money orders. We also find the following money orders not credited 3/25/42, $6.20; 6-25-42, $6.20; 7-25-42, $6.20, and 8-4-42, $6.20.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 37, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-securities-co-v-mattingly-lactapp-1946.