FIRST NAT. BANK OF JEFFERSON PARISH v. Samuels
This text of 618 So. 2d 444 (FIRST NAT. BANK OF JEFFERSON PARISH v. Samuels) 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.
Opinion
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF JEFFERSON PARISH
v.
Indiana Francisca Vigil, Wife of/and Allen S. SAMUELS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
Marcus L. Giusti, Hannan, Drake & Giusti, Metairie, for plaintiff/appellee.
Thomas E. Schafer, III, New Orleans, for defendants/appellants.
Before GRISBAUM, GOTHARD and CANNELLA, JJ.
GOTHARD, Judge.
This appeal is from a deficiency judgment in favor of the First National Bank of Jefferson Parish and against the debtors.
The Bank held a promissory note executed by Indiana Vigil Samuels and Allen Samuels in the amount of $60,000, along with a collateral mortgage note. The collateral mortgage note was secured by two parcels of unimproved property in St. Tammany Parish. The Bank foreclosed on the property in executory proceedings in St. Tammany, and the two properties, appraised at $30,000, were sold for $25,500 at public auction on May 9, 1990. On October 26, 1990 the Bank filed an ordinary suit against the defendants, seeking a deficiency judgment for the balance of the note. After a trial of the merits, the trial judge found in favor of the Bank and gave oral reasons from the bench. He signed a judgment *445 on February 24, 1992, which awarded to the Bank $60,000, plus interest, costs, and attorney's fees, all subject to a credit of $23,048.18.
The defendants' appeal is based on the premise that the appraisal procedures in the judicial sale of the properties were invalid and negated the Bank's right to a deficiency judgment.[1] The issues raised are: 1) whether the creditor bank had conducted a diligent search to locate the defendants before appointing a curator to represent them in the executory proceedings; 2) whether the Bank's failure to serve upon the defendants (rather than a curator) the notice of seizure and notice to appoint an appraiser bars it from obtaining a deficiency judgment; and 3) whether the appraisal process was conducted in accordance with statutory provisions.
Appointment of curator
When Indiana Samuels and Allen Samuels executed the note in 1986, their mailing address was designated as P.O. Box 7000, Metairie, Louisiana, 70010. In 1988, Allen Samuels furnished the Bank with a financial statement showing his residence address as 2928 Ridgeway Drive, Metairie, Louisiana. In March, 1989, the Bank sent demand letters to both defendants at the Metairie post office box by regular mail and by certified mail. The certified letters were returned marked "Unclaimed," while those sent by regular mail were not returned.
Samuels' business address was listed with the Secretary of State as 2928 Ridgeway Drive. The Bank learned later that Mr. and Mrs. Samuels had separated in December, 1987 and Allen Samuels had moved.
The Bank filed suit on the note in the 24th Judicial District Court on April 10, 1989 and requested service at the Ridgeway Drive address. When Jefferson Parish Sheriff's deputies were unable to make service and a skip-tracer was unable to locate the defendants, the Bank had the ordinary suit dismissed without prejudice.
On July 12, 1989, the Bank filed a petition for executory process in St. Tammany Parish. Alleging that the defendants had apparently left Jefferson Parish and their whereabouts were unknown, the Bank had a curator appointed. On October 16, 1989 counsel for the Bank recalled the curator and canceled the judicial sale after being informed by an attorney representing Samuels in working out other loans that Samuels was not an absentee. The Bank requested service of the notice of seizure and sale and of the notice to appoint appraiser, again at the Ridgeway Drive address, but the deputies' attempts were unsuccessful, as were those of a skip-tracer. The Bank then wrote that attorney, requesting a current address but the attorney responded that he was not representing Samuels in the executory proceedings. On January 9, 1990, the Bank moved to appoint a second curator. The court appointed a Slidell attorney who received service of the notices and proceedings. After three appraisals had been made, the sale took place on May 9, 1990.
La. C.C.P. art. 2674 provides that the court shall appoint an attorney at law to represent an unrepresented defendant in an executory proceeding when the defendant is an absentee. La. C.C.P. art. 5251(1) includes in its definition of "absentee" a person "... whose whereabouts are unknown, or who cannot be found and served after a diligent effort, though he may be domiciled or actually present in the state;..." See also article 5091.
A defendant who is domiciled in Louisiana qualifies as an absentee only if his whereabouts are unknown to the opposing party and could not have been discovered after a diligent search. [Emphasis supplied.] Peschier v. Peschier, 419 So.2d 923 (La.1982). In Security Homestead Ass'n v. Fuselier, 591 So.2d 335, 338 (La.1991), a *446 suit for deficiency judgment, the Supreme Court reaffirmed its holding in Peschier and said:
... [W]e find the imposition of a diligent search requirement especially warranted in light of Mennonite Bd. of Missions v. Adams, 462 U.S. 791, 103 S.Ct. 2706, 77 L.Ed.2d 180 (1983), which held that constitutional due process concerns require reasonable diligence be exercised to locate a party whose address is "reasonably ascertainable." A creditor must make a reasonable and diligent effort to determine the whereabouts of a defendant domiciled in Louisiana to support an allegation that the defendant's whereabouts are unknown and to support the appointment of a curator.
The court held, at 341, that:
... when due to the improper appointment of a curator a defendant receives neither actual nor constructive notice of seizure or notice of the right to appoint an appraiser, the creditor will not be entitled to a deficiency, as the seizure was wrongful, the appraisal was defective and the defendant's due process rights were violated.
Security's efforts to locate the mortgagee's whereabouts were found to be inadequate. The homestead had merely checked the telephone director to verify the service address, when the sheriff's return stated the debtor had moved from that address. Security had his telephone number and could have obtained his new address.
In the case before us a controversy exists regarding the Bank's knowledge of Allen Samuels' residence. Samuels testified that he had separated from his wife in December, 1987 and had moved to an apartment complex he owned at 3207 Belmont Place, Metairie. Although Mrs. Samuels was not served, it is not alleged she also moved, and we conclude that she remained in the matrimonial domicile.
Howard Fussell, a Covington attorney, whom Samuels contacted briefly in September, 1989 and who had reviewed the suit with him, testified that he had recommended that Samuels accept service of the foreclosure and that he had given Samuels' address to the Bank's counsel, Michael Hannan. Hannan denied having received the address and testified that Fussell told him Samuels lived in Metairie but he did not have the exact address.
Samuels admitted in his testimony that his April 7, 1988 financial statement furnished to the Bank gave his address as 2928 Ridgeway Drive but explained that he had just moved out in December, 1987 and was not certain then how long he would remain in the Belmont Place apartment.
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618 So. 2d 444, 1993 WL 137280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-jefferson-parish-v-samuels-lactapp-1993.