Fla. Gas Expl. v. Bank of St. Charles & Trust
This text of 435 So. 2d 535 (Fla. Gas Expl. v. Bank of St. Charles & Trust) 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
FLORIDA GAS EXPLORATION COMPANY, Drillamex, Inc., Barber Oil Exploration, Inc. and Mapco, Inc.
v.
BANK OF ST. CHARLES & TRUST COMPANY and
Bernard Mason, Jr. and Roland E. Smith.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*536 Liskow & Lewis, William R. Pitts, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Hurley & Hoffmann, Herman C. Hoffmann, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant and plaintiff-in-reconvention-appellant.
Before BOUTALL, KLIEBERT and GRISBAUM, JJ.
GRISBAUM, Judge.
The Bank of St. Charles and Trust Company, defendant and plaintiff-in-reconvention, appeals a declaratory judgment which upheld a mineral lease held by Florida Gas Exploration Company, Barber Oil Exploration, Inc., Drillamex, Inc., and MAPCO, Inc. (plaintiffs) and dismissed the Bank's reconventional demand which sought dissolution of plaintiffs' mineral lease, its share of the gas production from the property in question, and reasonable attorneys fees. The mineral lessees had filed an action for a declaratory judgment against the Bank and Bernard Mason, Jr. and Roland E. Smith (mineral lessors) to declare the plaintiffs' rights under a mineral lease valid after the Bank had acquired the property in question by foreclosing on a collateral mortgage by executory process. The trial court premised its judgment upon two grounds:
(1) It found substantive defects in the executory process proceedings by which the Bank had acquired the property.
(2) The description contained in the Bank's recorded collateral mortgage was insufficient and incomplete; it did not place the public on notice as to the size, extent, boundary, measurement, and description of the land mortgaged.
FACTS
On May 10, 1974 defendants, Bernard Mason, Jr. and Roland E. Smith, executed a collateral mortgage in favor of defendant *537 Bank of St. Charles and Trust Company on property they owned in St. Charles Parish. The collateral mortgage purported to secure a promissory note made payable on demand in the principal sum of $287,500 and bearing interest at the rate of 14 percent per annum from date. This collateral mortgage was recorded in the mortgage records in St. Charles Parish May 23, 1974. The mortgage contained, however, an incomplete description of the property mortgaged because an exhibit referred to in the mortgage was not, in fact, attached to the mortgage as recorded. Subsequently, on November 11, 1974 Mason and Smith, the debtors, executed a mineral lease affecting the same property to Florida Gas. The lease was recorded on July 7, 1975. Florida Gas assigned interest in the lease to plaintiffs, Drillamex, Inc., Barber Oil Exploration, Inc., and MAPCO, Inc., on December 5, 1975; this assignment was recorded February 3, 1976 in the conveyance records of St. Charles Parish.
Seeking foreclosure of its collateral mortgage due to nonpayment of the note, the Bank sued the debtors, Mason and Smith, on July 1, 1975 and a writ of seizure and sale was issued thereafter. (Suit No. 15978, Twenty-Ninth Judicial District Court, Parish of St. Charles). Compromise negotiations between the Bank and counsel for the debtors immediately commenced. There were several compromise closings proposed and cancelled because one of the debtors was unable to raise the necessary funds. Counsel for the debtors testified at the trial of this case that they entered into an "abeyance agreement" with counsel for the Bank in which the Bank would take no default against the debtors nor would the executory proceedings go forth without prior notification to the debtors' counsel. In contrast, counsel for the Bank testified that he did not agree to withhold the proceedings pending the settlement discussions. In any case, the property purportedly affected by the collateral mortgage was advertised on August 7, 1975 and September 4, 1975 and sold to the Bank at public auction on September 10, 1975. Counsel for debtors testified that at no time was his firm informed of a termination of the abeyance agreement.
It is important to note that the promissory note sued upon in the foreclosure proceedings (Suit No. 15978) in July 1974 was made payable to the order of Bank of St. Charles and payable on demand one year after date. However, the recorded collateral mortgage purportedly secured a note by Mason and Smith "drawn by him to his own order and by him endorsed" and "payable on demand." Further, the Bank's petition for executory process contained a complete property description rather than the incomplete description actually found in the recorded collateral mortgage.
On October 1, 1975 alleging various defects in the executory process proceedings, the debtors/mineral lessors filed a "Petition for Nullity of Judgment, Annullment of Sale, and Injunctive Relief." After a compromise agreement had been reached between the parties, on March 29, 1978 this nullity action was dismissed with prejudice on motion of the debtors/mineral lessors. The Bank thereafter sent a letter to the mineral lessees alleging their lease was terminated as a result of the sale and requested they furnish the Bank with a recordable act reflecting this termination of the lease. Subsequently, the mineral lessees filed this declaratory action which alleges that the Bank's letter of June 21, 1978 cast a cloud upon the lease and the plaintiffs' rights under the lease and seeks to have the cloud removed and their rights confirmed.
In its petition, Florida Gas urged that the mortgage did not supercede the mineral lease because (1) the description of the property in the collateral mortgage was insufficient to put third parties on notice, and (2) the foreclosure proceedings were null and void. The Bank reconvened seeking a judgment: (1) declaring the mineral lease to be terminated; (2) awarding it the proportionate share of the production attributable to the property less the Bank's pro-rated share of the cost of drilling, completing and operating the wells pertaining to the property; and (3) awarding of attorneys *538 fees for bringing the reconventional demand.
Following trial, the lower court granted judgment in favor of Florida Gas and against the Bank (1) declaring the executory process proceedings to be null and void; (2) declaring the mineral lease to be good, valid and continuing; (3) dismissing the Bank's reconventional demand; and (4) casting all costs to the Bank. In its reasons for judgment, the court indicated that the executory process proceedings were null and void because there was a variance in the note as described in the petition, and the note described in the recorded collateral mortgage, and also there was a variance in the property description in the petition and the property description in the mortgage. The court also found the incomplete property description in the mortgage was insufficient to put third parties on notice. Finally, the court held that the prescriptive bars urged by the Bank were not applicable.
On appeal the Bank specifies the following as error:
(1) The trial court erred in finding the property description was insufficient to put third parties on notice.
(2) The trial court erred in finding that plaintiffs' attack on the executory process proceedings was not barred by La.R.S. 13:4112 and Civil Code art. 3543.
(3) The trial court erred in finding that the executory process proceedings were null and void.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR ISUFFICIENCY OF THE COLLATERAL MORTGAGE PROPERTY DESCRIPTION
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435 So. 2d 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fla-gas-expl-v-bank-of-st-charles-trust-lactapp-1983.