Coyle v. Geoghegan

174 So. 366, 187 La. 308, 1937 La. LEXIS 1171
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 26, 1937
DocketNo. 33647.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 174 So. 366 (Coyle v. Geoghegan) 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
Coyle v. Geoghegan, 174 So. 366, 187 La. 308, 1937 La. LEXIS 1171 (La. 1937).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Plaintiffs brought suit against the defendant to recover $2,100, the value of 14 rent notes, each for the sum of $150, which notes it is alleged the defendant had illegally converted to his own use.

Defendant filed exception of no cause and no right of action, which was sustained, and the suit dismissed. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The basis of the exception is that plaintiffs’ petition does not show that they ever owned the notes alleged to have been converted by defendant, and therefore have no cause or right to demand the notes or their proceeds.

Plaintiffs are the widow and two children (one of whom is a minor represented by his mother as natural tutrix) of Charles A. Coyle, deceased. It is shown by the petition that Charles A. Coyle owned at the time of his death certain commercial property on Magazine street in the city of New Orleans; that the property belonged to the community which existed between the said Coyle and his wife; and that after the death of Coyle his widow was recognized by judgment rendered on August 3, 1932, as the owner of an undivided one half interest therein, and his two children as the owners of the other half. The petition also shows that at the time Charles A. Coyle acquired the property he took it subject to a recorded *311 lease contract executed by D. A. Palmisano, a former owner thereof, in favor of Charles Handelman, which lease contract was dated April 1, 1926, and ran for a period of 126 months from its date. It therefore expired on September 30, 1936. The consideration for the lease was $150 per month, the monthly payments being represented by 126 negotiable notes.

At the time Charles A. Coyle acquired the property it was encumbered by two mortgages, one for $20,000 in favor of the Conservative Homestead Association, which is referred to as the first mortgage, and one for $9,000, which is referred to as the second mortgage. It is alleged that the $9,000, mortgage note “had been assigned and endorsed over to A. D. Geoghegan,” the defendant in the present suit, and that the rent notes above described were pledged “to A. D. Geoghegan as additional security for the payment of the note identified with the second mortgage.” It does not appear from the petition when or by whom the 14 rent notes involved in this suit were pledged to Geoghegan as additional security for the payment of the $9,000 second mortgage note. But the petition shows that the pledge was made prior to the date on which these plaintiffs acquired the property, and that the rent notes never went into their hands.

As we , have said, these plaintiffs were recognized as owners and sent into possession of the property by judgment on August 3, 1932. The petition shows that they accepted the property subject to the recorded lease contract and subject to the two mortgages .above described. Plaintiffs alleged that they were unable to pay the mortgages, and on February 24, 1934, transferred the property by dation en paiement to the Conservative Homestead Association, the holder of the first mortgage. In order that the homestead association might acquire unencumbered title to the property, Geoghegan, this defendant, who owned the second mortgage note and who held the rent notes in pledge, authorized the cancellation of his mortgage. This was done by the recorder of mortgages. It is further alleged that, prior to the date on which plaintiffs transferred the property to the homestead association, an agreement was entered into by and between the association and the defendant, Geoghegan, that he was to purchase the property from the association, which agreement was carried out; and that the $9,000 mortgage note held by the defendant, to which the rent notes were attached as collateral, was marked “Paid” and “accordingly the pledge of the rent notes was thereby terminated.”

Paragraph XII of the petition reads as follows:

“That your petitioners were the owners of the said Magazine street property for a period of fourteen months, having acquired said property from the Succession of C. A. Coyle, and having retained title to said property until the Act of Sale Referred to in Article XI.”

The sale referred to in article XI of the petition is the dation en paiement made by plaintiffs to the Conservative Homestead Association. It is further alleged that the defendant, Geoghegan, retained the rent notes after the note to which *313 they were attached as collateral was marked “Paid.” Plaintiffs averred that they received no rent on the property for the period of 14 months during which they owned- it; that they had made a demand on the defendant to deliver to them the 14 rent notes which fell due during the period of their ownership, which demand was refused. They further alleged that the defendant, by illegally converting the said 14 notes to his own use, had damaged them to the extent of their value, which was $2,100, and prayed that they have judgment against him for that amount.

The original petition contains 21 paragraphs, some of which were amended by a supplemental petition.

After a careful reading of both the original and supplemental petitions our conclusion is that the judgment sustaining the exception of no cause and no .right of action is correct.

If plaintiffs were never the owners of the 14 rent notes, they have no cause of action against the defendant to recover the .value of them. That is conceded by their counsel. But he argues that the petition shows that plaintiffs owned them. The petition does not say so. In fact, the petition' as a whole negatives the theory of their ownership. They alleged that the lease ran for a period of 126 months and that they owned the property during 14 months of that period. So their only pretense that they owned the 14 rent notes involved is that they owned the leased property for 14 months during the period of the lease.

Counsel’s theory is set out in his brief on page 4. We quote what he says:

“Counsel submits that the petition as supplemented does disclose a cause of action. It fully sets out appellants’ ownership of the property and their ensuing right to the rent and/or rent notes; it fully sets out that the said notes were wrongfully converted by the defendant.
“The purchaser of immovable property in a conventional sale is entitled to the rents accruing on the property from the date of purchase and to any rent note that may have been given to represent such rents.”

It is true that the fruits of an immovable belong primarily to the owner of the property. But the owner of the property may by contract grant to another the enjoyment of the property during a certain time for a certain stipulated price. He may let out or lease it. C.C. art. 2674. A lease is a contract by which the owner of a thing grants to another the enjoyment of it at a fixed price. C.C. art. 2669. The lease is a real obligation which accompanies the property leased “in the hands of the person who acquires it.” C.C. art. 2015. Real obligations may be created in three ways, one of which is “By alienating to one person the immovable property, and to another, some real right to be exercised upon it.” C.C. art. 2012.

A recorded lease is an encumbrance, a burden upon the property that follows it into the hands of a purchaser.

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 366, 187 La. 308, 1937 La. LEXIS 1171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coyle-v-geoghegan-la-1937.