Freeland v. Carmouche

148 So. 658, 177 La. 395, 1933 La. LEXIS 1702
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 1933
DocketNo. 31947.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 148 So. 658 (Freeland v. Carmouche) 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
Freeland v. Carmouche, 148 So. 658, 177 La. 395, 1933 La. LEXIS 1702 (La. 1933).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This is a pathetic case. It reveals some fraudulent transactions on the part of an attorney at law who has died, and who enjoyed a splendid reputation throughout his long career — twenty-eight years — -as a member of the bar.

On the 21st of March, 1930, W. J. Carmouche, a lawyer, who died at his residence in Crowley, La., on the 27th of October, 1930, signed an act of mortgage before H. Gordon Brunson, notary public, and two witnesses, to secure the payment of a promissory note for $4,000. The note also was signed by Carmouche, was made payable to his own order, on or before the 21st of March, 1931, and was indorsed by him. The mortgage was made, not in favor of a named individual, but in favor of the future holder of the note, which was described accurately in the act of mortgage, and was paraphed “Ne Varietur” by the notary public to identify it with the act. Carmouche negotiated the note on the day on which it was made — or possibly four days later — by delivering it to Thomas B. Freeland, as collateral security for a note for $2,000, which Carmouche owed to Freeland. He already held, as collateral security, a mortgage note made by a third party and owned by Carmouche1; and it was at Carmouche’s request that the mortgage note for $4,000 was taken by Freeland in substitution for the other mortgage note, which Freeland then returned to Carmouchq. The act of mortgage securing the $4,000 note was recorded on the 22d of March, 1930 — the next day after it was made.

On the 25th of March, 1930, Carmouche sent by registered mail, from Crowley, addressed to Dr. Minnie I. Faulk, at Monroe, La., an exact duplicate of the $4,000 mortgage note which Carmouche had delivered to Freeland. Carmouche, in a letter accompanying the duplicate or sham mortgage note, requested. Dr. Faulk to accept the note as collateral security for a note for $2,500 which Carmouche owed to Dr. Faulk, and to release and return to him other collateral securities which Dr. Faulk then held. Carmouche, in his letter to Dr. Faulk, falsely represented that the $4,000 note which ,he inclosed was the one referred to in the act of mortgage, dated the 21st of March, 1930, of which he inclosed a certified copy. He inclosed also, in his letter to Dr. Faulk, a mortgage certificate showing that there was no other mortgage on the property. Dr. *399 Paulk received the registered letter on the 27th of March, 1930, and, believing that the sham mortgage note of $4,000 was the only and original note described in the act of mortgage, accepted it in substitution for the collateral securities which she already held, and which she then returned to Carmouche. The sham mortgage note of $4,000 was actually signed and indorsed by Carmouche, and was actually paraphed by the notary public, H. Gordon Brunson, for identification with the act of mortgage dated the 21st of March, 1930. Brunson, who was also an attorney at law, and closely associated with Carmouche, and who died soon after Carmouche died, facilitated him in his fraudulent transactions, by leaving in his possession blank forms of notarial acts, signed by Brunson, as notary public, and blank promissory notes, with blank forms of paraphs printed across their face and signed by Brunson as notary public. These blank instruments, signed by Brunson as notary public, were found in Carmouche’s law office after his death. Neither he nor Brunson lived to testify in this suit.

On the 11th of April, 1930, Carmouche, or some one for him, presented to a deputy clerk of court, ex officio deputy recorder, a triplicate copy of the mortgage note of $4,000, dated the 21st of March, 1930, and thereby procured the cancellation of the mortgage securing the note which Preeland then held, and of which Dr. Minnie I. Paulk held the sham copy. The note, which was presented for cancellation of the mortgage, corresponded in every detail with the note described in the act of mortgage, and was signed and indorsed with the genuine signature of Carmouche, and paraphed with the genuine signature of Brunson, as notary public, for identification with the act of mortgage. The deputy recorder, after canceling the mortgage, in good faith, marked the note “Canceled,” and attached it to the original act of mortgage in the archives of his office. In his testimony given in this suit, he said that he could not' remember positively that Carmouche was the one who brought the note to him and procured the cancellation of the mortgage, but that, according to his recollection, Carmouche was the one who brought the note to him and procured the cancellation of the mortgage. The note was not marked “Paid,” nor was the signature or indorsement erased or scratched out. In fact, there was no evidence or indication whatever that the note had been out of the possession of Carmouche from the time it was made until it was presented to the deputy recorder for cancellation of the mortgage. Preeland had no knowledge of the cancellation of the mortgage securing the payment of his note of $4,000 until after the death of Carmouche. Dr. Minnie I. Paulk also was ignorant of the cancellation of the mortgage until after the death of Carmouche.

On the 11th of April, 1 19301 — the day op which the mortgage securing the payment of the $4,000 note was frauduleptly canceled —Carmouche placed on record a mortgage on the same property to secure the payment of several notes aggregating $4,500. The mortgage and notes were dated the 7th of April, 1930. The act was signed by Brunson, as notary public, and by the same witnesses who had signed the mortgage securing the $4,000 note, dated the 21st of March, 1930. The new *401 notes, for $4,500, were payable to the order of Carmouehe and indorsed by him, and the mortgage was made not in favor of a named mortgagee but in favor of any future holder of the notes; and they were paraphed “Ne Varietur” by Brunson, as notary public, to identify them with the act of mortgage.

On the 14th of April, 1930, Carmouehe applied to Philip Lapleau for a loan of $4,-500 on the mortgage notes dated the 7th of April, 1930, and. showed Lapleau a certified copy of the mortgage securing the payment of the notes, and a certificate showing that the act of mortgage was recorded on the 11th of April, 1930, and a mortgage certificate showing that there was no other mortgage on the property. ,At the same time, Brunson furnished Lapleau an abstract of title and an opinion declaring that Carmouche’s title to the property was good. On these representations, Lapleau, in good faith, made the loan to Carmouehe for $4,500; and Brunson delivered the mortgage notes to Lapleau, and wrote the cheek for $4,500 for Lapleau to sign, and, when Lapleau had signed the check, Brunson received it from Lapleau for delivery to Carmouehe. All of this, of course, was without the knowledge of Freeland or of Dr. Faulk.

When the $4,000 mortgage note held by Freeland matured, which was after the death of Carmouehe and Brunson, Freeland brought this foreclosure proceeding against the ad-* ministrator of the estate of Carmouehe. A few days later the mortgage notes for $4,-500 held by Lapleau matured, and he also instituted executory proceedings against the administrator of the estate of Carmouehe. Lapleau filed also an opposition to Freeland’s foreclosure proceeding, prayed for an injunction to prevent the sale of the property in that proceeding, and obtained a temporary restraining order, on the ground that Free-land’s mortgage was canceled, and that Lapleau therefore had the only mortgage on the property. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 658, 177 La. 395, 1933 La. LEXIS 1702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeland-v-carmouche-la-1933.