Continental Supply Co. v. Hoell

129 So. 522, 170 La. 898, 1930 La. LEXIS 1840
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketNo. 30257.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 So. 522 (Continental Supply Co. v. Hoell) 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
Continental Supply Co. v. Hoell, 129 So. 522, 170 La. 898, 1930 La. LEXIS 1840 (La. 1930).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

This is a revocatory action, brought by a creditor of J. H. and J. A. Williams, to annul a judgment obtained against them by their brother-in-law, Di\ P. A. Hoell, on their confession of judgment, in so far as the judgment affected the rights of the plaintiff in this suit, as a creditor of J. H. and J. A. Williams. The suit is founded upon articles 1969 and 1970 of the Civil Code, declaring that a creditor has a right of action to annul any contract made by the debtor in fraud of the creditor’s rights, or any act done by the debtor with the intent to deprive the creditor of the eventual rights which he has upon the property of the debtor.

The plaintiff, Continental Supply Company, held two judgments against J. H. and J. A. Williams, one of the judgments being for $4,-868.42, with interest and attorneys’, fees, and subject to two credits amounting to $816.88, and the other judgment being for $18,449.40, with interest and attorneys’ fees, and subject to a credit of $.1,044.99. The first judgment was obtained on the 12th of May, and the second on the 23d of May, 1928. The suits in which the judgments were obtained were filed on the 23d of April, 1928. The suit in which Dr. Hoell obtained the judgment complained of in this suit, for about' $11,225; with interest and attorneys’ fees, was filed on the 12th of May, 1928, the day on which the plaintiff in this suit obtained its first judgment against J. H. and J. A. Williams. They waived all delays and confessed judgment in favor of Dr. Hoell, and the judgment was rendered and signed, immediately; and on the same day a writ of fi. fa. was obtained by Dr. Hoell, under which the sheriff, seized all of the property of J. H. and J, A. Wih liams, consisting of their interest in an oil lease, and the drilling, machinery, .derricks, piping and equipment on the leased land. The claims on which the Continental Supply Company had obtained its judgments against J. H. and J. A. Williams were for the price of the drilling machinery, piping and equipment, which the Continental Supply Company Had sold to J. H. and J..A. Williams, and on a part of which the company had a .chattel mortgage and vendor’s lien to secure the amount of the larger judgment, and on another part of which the company had a vendor’s lien to secure the' amount of the smaller judgment. The company therefore had sequestered all of the machinery and equipment, except a small amount of piping and tubing which the company had no lien on; and the sequestered property was under seizure under the writ of sequestration when the sheriff levied the seizure under the writ of fi. fa. which Dr. Hoell obtained. The property being advertized for sale by the sheriff under the writ of fi. fa. to satisfy Dr. Hoell’s judgment against J. H. and J. A. Williams, the Continental Supply Company, as plaintiff in this revocatory action, obtained a writ of injunction and arrested the sale. The company then obtained writs of fi. fa. on its judgments against J. H. and J. A. Williams, and the sheriff again seized all of their property, which, after being duly adveVtised, was sold by the sheriff, and bid in by or for the Continental Supply Company in part satisfaction of its judgments against J. H. and J. A. Williams. The sale was made and completed *904 before the defendants, Dr. F. A. Hoell and J. H. and J. A. Williams filed their answer to this revocatory action. In their answer they denied that there was any fraud or fraudulent intent on their part, or intent on the part of Dr. Hoell to obtain, or of J. H. or J. A. Williams to give him, an unfair preference, in confessing judgment for the amount which they owed him, and averred that the confession did not give him a preference because the promissory notes which he sued on were secured partly by a mortgage on an eighth interest in the oil lease and partly by a mortgage on a sixteenth interest in the lease. They averred that the sheriff’s sale of the property of J. H. and J. "A. Williams to the Continental Supply Company, during the pendency of the revocatory action, was null, not only because the sheriff had no right to sell the property under a second seizure while the first seizure, levied by Dr. Hoell, was arrested by the injunction, but also because of certain alleged irregularities in the appraisement and in the matter of the certificate of mortgages on the property. They prayed that the demand of the Continental Supply Company should be rejected, that the injunction should be dissolved, and that Dr. Hoell should have judgment, as plaintiff in reconvention, against the Continental Supply Company, for the amount of Dr. Hoell's judgment against J. H. and J. A. Williams, approximately $11,225, with interest and attorneys’ fees. They prayed,, alternatively, that, if the court should not grant the relief first prayed for, then that Dr. Hoell’s conventional mortgages on the oil lease and equipment should be recognized and enforced, and ’that the property should be resold by the sheriff to satisfy the mortgages.

The district court gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Continental Supply Company, perpetuating the injunction, annulling Dr. Hoell’s judgment against J. H. and J. A. Williams, and the seizure levied thereunder, as far as it affected the rights of the Continental Supply Company, and rejecting Dr. Hoell’s reconventional demand for a judgment against the Continental Supply Company, and his alternative demand for recognition of a mortgage on three-sixteenths of the oil lease. The defendants have appealed from the decision.

The judgment annulling the judgment which Dr. Hoell obtained against J. H. and J. A. Williams by their confession, in so far as the judgment affected the rights of the Continental Supply Company, is correct. There was perhaps no actual fraud or intention to commit a fraud, in the ordinary meaning of the word; but the fact is that Dr. Hoell knew that suits for large sums had been filed against J. H. and J. A. Williams, that they were insolvent, and that the effect of his obtaining a judgment against them by confession and immediately seizing their property would be to give him an advantage over other creditors of J. H. and J. A. Williams. The law stamps such a transaction as a constructive fraud. Article 1984 of the Civil Code declares that any transaction between a debtor and creditor which gives the creditor an advantage over other creditors of the common debtor “shall be deemed to have been made in fraud of creditors” if the creditor in the transaction knew that the debtor was 'insolvent.

In Muse v. Yarborough, 11 La. 531, it was said:

“But if it be true, as alleged, that the confession of judgment which forms the basis of all the subsequent proceedings, was collusive and fraudulent, either because no debt was really due, or because the intention was to give to Yarborough an undue preference *906 over other creditors, and-that all the parties were conversant of the facts, then looking to the substance rather than forms, we may conclude that the employment of the sheriff and an execution was merely a species of machinery by which a fraudulent alienation was to be effected. It is sufficient to inquire into the character of the Judgment confessed, for if that was fraudulent, all the proceedings founded upon it were null and void between the parties; for, in the eye of the law, no difference exists between a voluntary conveyance of property for fraudulent purposes, and such an alienation disguised under the forms of judicial proceedings.”

In Marx v. Meyer Bros., 50 La. Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
129 So. 522, 170 La. 898, 1930 La. LEXIS 1840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-supply-co-v-hoell-la-1930.