First Nat. Bank v. Lagrone

117 So. 741, 166 La. 625
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 4, 1928
DocketNos. 28764, 29096
StatusPublished

This text of 117 So. 741 (First Nat. Bank v. Lagrone) 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
First Nat. Bank v. Lagrone, 117 So. 741, 166 La. 625 (La. 1928).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The First National Bank of Ruston had three judgments against J. M. Lagrone, for a balance exceeding $10,-[629]*629S00, and for interest, attorneys’ fees and costs; and the Bank of Winnfield had a judgment against him for $3,333 and interest, attorneys’ fees, and costs. The judgments were rendered by the district court for Grant parish, where Lagrone had his domicile. The two banks obtained writs of fieri facias, on which the sheriff of Caddo parish undertook to levy upon 250 shares of stock in a corporation called Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Inc., represented by two certificates of stock in the possession of the widow of .the late William Edenborn, in Caddo parish. Mrs. Edenbom was made garnishee, and was served with interrogatories, individually and as the representative of the William Edenborn estate. She had taken possession of the estate unconditionally and was therefore subject to all of the obligations and entitled to all of the rights of the deceased. Answering the interrogatories, Mrs. Edenborn denied that she was indebted to Lagrone, but admitted that she held in her possession a stock certificate No. 16, for-50 shares of stock in the Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Inc., issued in the name of Lagrone’s wife, Mrs. Della Bright Lagrone, and stock certificate No. 17, for 200 shares of stock in the Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Inc., issued in the name of J. M. Dowden. She averred that she understood that J. M. Lagrone had no interest in the 50 shares of stock standing in his wife’s ■ name, but understood that he owned the 200 shares standing in the name of J. M. Dowden. She averred that both certificates of stock were held by her in pledge to guarantee the performance by Lagrone of certain obligations under a contract with the late William Edenborn, dated May 20, 1923; and she annexed a copy of the contract to her answers to the interrogatories. Each bank filed a petition to traverse the answers of the garnishee, and a rule upon her to show cause why the two certificates representing the 250 shares of stock should not be surrendered to the sheriff of Caddo parish to be sold to satisfy the banks’ judgments. The banks prayed for and obtained service of the rule upon J. M. Dowden and upon Mrs. Lagrone, as well as upon the garnishee. The banks alleged in their petition for the rule that the 50 shares of stock standing in the name of Mrs. Lagrone had been transferred to her by her husband without any consideration, by a fraudulent dation en paiement, made for the purpose of shielding the stock from the pursuit of the creditors of Lagrone, and particularly the two banks, and that the pretended dation en paiement was null, -not only because it was made without any consideration and was fraudulent, but also because the stock was never delivered to Mrs. Lagrone. They alleged that the 200 shares of stock standing in the name of J. M. Dow-den also belonged to J. M. Lagrone, as understood by the garnishee, and that the stock was placed in Dowden’s name merely to aid Lagrone in avoiding the payment of his debts, and particularly the banks’ judgments. They averred that Lagrone did not owe the deceased, .Edenborn, any obligation, under their contract, that would support a pledge of Lagrone’s stock; that every obligation in favor of the deceased had been fulfilled by the organizing of the corporation styled Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Inc.; and that if any obligation on the part of the Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Inc., remained unperformed the performance thereof was under Edenborn’s control until he died and thereafter under the control of Mrs. Eden-born, as bwner of the controlling stock in the corporation.

Answering the petitions of the two banks, Mrs. Edenborn insisted that the pledge of the 250 shares of stock to guarantee the performance of Lagrone’s obligations under the contract was a valid pledge, and that the stock was not subject to seizure and sale so long as the contract remained unfulfilled, and, [631]*631in any event, not to the prejudice of the pledgee.

Mrs. Lagrone excepted to the jurisdiction of the court, ratione personae, and, with reservation of the exception, pleaded that the banks’ proceeding was a collateral attack upon the authentic act of dation en paiement, transferring the stock to her, and that the banks had no just cause or right or action; and, answering the rule, with reservation of her exceptions, she relied upon the act of dation en paiement as the evidence of her ownership of the 50 shares 'of stock.

J. M. Dowden did not answer the rule, or make any appearance in the case.

The proceedings of the two banks were consolidated, by agreement to try one of the cases, with the understanding that the judgment to be rendered should control both. The court gave judgment in favor of the banks, ordering the 250 shares represented by the two stock certificates delivered to the sheriff of Caddo parish, to be by him sold to satisfy the banks’ judgments, but subject to the pledge in favor of Mrs. Edenborn to secure the performance of the obligations of J. M. Lagrone under his contract dated May 20, 1923. It was therefore further ordered that the sheriff should, after transferring the stock to the purchaser at public sale, by indorsement on the stock certificates, return them to Mrs. Edenborn to be retained by her in pledge to secure the obligations of Lagrone under his contract of May 20, 1923.

Mrs, Lagrone appealed from the decision. J. M. Lagrone also asked for an appeal, although he was not theretofore a party to the proceedings making Mrs. Edenborn garnishee and seizing the stock certificates. The district judge refused to grant Lagrone an order of appeal, but, on his application to this court for mandamus, he was granted a right of appeal. Eirst National Bank v. Lagrone, 164 La. 907, 114 So. 832. Thereupon the two banks took a devolutive appeal. Mrs. Eden-born did not appeal, but, after filing a brief in this court in which she argued and prayed that the judgment should be affirmed, she filed an answer to the appeal, contending that the stock seized by the banks was not subject to sale while held by her in pledge to secure the obligations of Lagrone under his contract with Edenborn, dated May 20, 1923. J. M. Lagrone also filed an answer to the appeal taken by the banks, in which he joined in the contention and prayer of Mrs. Eden-born that the stock should not be sold — even subject to the pledge in favor of Mrs. Eden-born.

.It is conceded that the 200 shares of stock standing in the name of J. M. Dowden belong to Lagrone, and that Dowden has no interest in them; and the record leaves no doubt that the dation en paiement by which Lagrone undertook to transfer the 50 shares of stock to his wife is null, not only because it appears to have been made without any lawful consideration, but because there was no delivery of the stock to the pretended transferee. Lagrone simply took the stock certificates for the 250 shares, which had been issued originally in his name, and which were already pledged to Edenborn to secure Lagrone’s obligations under the contract dated May 20, 1923, and had the certificates canceled, and had a new certificate issued in Dowden’s name for 200 shares and another certificate issued in Mrs. Lagrone’s name for 50 shares, and returned both certificates to Edenborn to be retained in pledge to secure Lagrone’s obligations under his contract of May 20, 1923. Neither Dowden nor Mrs. Lagrone was present or had anything to do with the canceling of the old or the issuing of the new stock certificates.

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Bluebook (online)
117 So. 741, 166 La. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-lagrone-la-1928.