H. Abraham & Son v. New Orleans Brewing Ass'n

35 So. 268, 110 La. 1012, 1903 La. LEXIS 743
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 1903
DocketNo. 14,265
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 35 So. 268 (H. Abraham & Son v. New Orleans Brewing Ass'n) 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
H. Abraham & Son v. New Orleans Brewing Ass'n, 35 So. 268, 110 La. 1012, 1903 La. LEXIS 743 (La. 1903).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

The New Orleans Brewing Association, a body corporate, executed bonds to the amount of $1,600,000, and secured same by mortgage on its property; the act of mortgage being passed before Joseph D. Taylor, notary public, on the 31st of May, 1890. Said bonds matured in 15 years, and bore 6 per cent, per annum interest, represented by coupons attached, payable semiannually at the office of the corporation. The corporation having passed into the hands of a receiver, a judgment was rendered in the course of the receivership proceedings ordering all the property of the corporation, including the property embraced in the mortgage, to be sold, and directing that the purchaser be required to retain in his hands the price of the sale, and assume, “in proportion to the amount of his bid,” the mortgage represented by the outstanding bonds. The property of the corporation was sold in globo, and was adjudicated to three persons, who in reality were a purchasing committee for the defendant. The part of the price attributable to that part of the property embraced in the mortgage was found to be $479,946.20. This amount the purchasers retained in their hands, as directed by the judgment ordering the sale. The act of sale to these purchasers, passed before Quintero, notary public, recited that said part of the price, $479,946.20, “has been retained by said purchasers, who took said property subject to the said mortgage before Joseph D. Taylor, of May 31st, 1890, reduced as aforesaid to-the sum of $479,946.20.”

At the time of these proceedings the plaintiffs were holders of $124,500 of the bonds; and the persons to whom the property was adjudicated at the receiver’s sale, and who retained in their hands the purchase price of $479,946.20, were the holders of $1,163,100 of the bonds. Of the remainder of the bonds, $230,000 had never been negotiated.

The $479,946.20 thus retained would pay 35.032 cents on the dollar of the mortgage-debt. The purchasers, shortly after the purchase, transferred the property to the defendant, the act of sale reciting as follows:

“And the said purchaser takes cognizance of the fact that certain of the properties herein transferred and numbered Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and Ninth in the description thereof are subject to a mortgage of $479,946.20 in favor of the holders of the said mortgage bonds of the ‘New Orleans Brewing Association,’ said sum of $479,940.20 being the amount to which the said mortgage securing said bonds was reduced, as set forth in said act of sale before-Lamar O. Quintero, Notary Public, of October 4th, 1899, by which the present vendors acquired said property; and the said vendors declare that of the total $1,370,000 face value of said bonds, they are the holders and owners of $1,163,100 face value thereof, and they bind themselves to transfer and deliver the-same to the said purchaser, the said ‘New Orleans Brewing Company,’ as soon as said purchaser shall have paid and discharged the said $295,000 of indebtedness herein assumed by it, such delivery or deliveries to be made when and as the bonds are released by the-payment of the notes which they are respectively pledged to secure as aforesaid;, and it is understood and agreed that in the meantime the said vendors shall continue to-be the holders and owners of said bonds, subject, however, to the obligation to account to the said purchaser, when it shall have performed its obligations in the premises, for any and all moneys they may have collected or received on account of said bonds- or the indebtedness of the said ‘New Orleans Brewing Association’ evidenced thereby. [1016]*1016Ajad tlie said purchaser also takes said properties subject to whatever obligations the present vendors may be subject to by virtue ■of the provisions of the said judgment of the Civil District Court of June 1st, 1899, under which they acquired the same.” t

The plaintiffs are asking in this suit that the $124,500 of bonds held by them be decreed to be due by the defendant for the full face amount thereof, and to be secured by mortgage for the said full face amount on the property acquired by the defendant ns aforesaid; and also are asking that the defendant be condemned to pay the accrued interest on the said bonds according to the full face value of the coupons attached to said bonds. The defendant pleads that the .$1,370,000 of mortgage bonds have stood on a footing of perfect equality, and have had equal claim to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property, and that as a consequence the bonds held by plaintiffs are entitled only to their pro rata .share of the $479,946.20, the price of the property, retained as aforesaid (that is to say, are entitled to 35.032 cents on the dollar, that being the pro rata which the said retained amount will pay on the $1,370,000 of bonds), and that the coupons have been reduced in the same proportion; and that defendant has not only not contested plaintiffs’ •claim for that much, but has been ready and willing to pay same as falling due.

The plaintiffs do not assail the receivership proceedings, and do not deny that the mortgage has been reduced from $1,370,000 to the amount of the purchase price of the sale retained by the purchasers. They admit that if the sale had been for cash they would have received only 35.032 cents on the •dollar, and also that they would have been entitled to no more if the purchasers had been third persons not holding any part of the bonds. Their theory is that the purchasers became their own creditors for the amount which the bonds held by them were entitled to receive out of the price of the •sale, and that, as no one'can be his own creditor, the bonds so held became extinguished, leaving the bonds held by other parties alone outstanding, and alone payable, out of the .$479,940.20 retained by the purchasers — an amount more than sufficient to pay, dollar for ■dollar, these bonds held by other parties.

By this operation these other parties, holders of only $206,900 of the bonds, would get $206,900 of the price of the mortgaged property, while the purchasers, holders of $1,-163,100 of the bonds, would get $273,046.20. That is to say, of the series of bonds, all of equal dignity, those held by plaintiffs would get 100 cents on the dollar, while those held by the purchasers would get a little more than 20 cents on the dollar. A theory that brings out such a result must needs be wrong, and the fallacy of it is not hard to find. It assumes that confusion extinguishes only the credit part of the obligation, whereas the fact is that it extinguishes also at the same time the debit part. “The debt and the claim are extinguished.” Mourlon, Comm, on Art. 1300, C. N. “Los deux droits — the two rights — active and passive” (Marcadé, on same article), “destroy each other.” Pothier, Obligations, No. 380. These purchasers, at the same time that they ceased to be creditors on the bonds, ceased also to be debtors on the assumption. The operation was that they, as debtors, paid Actively to themselves, as creditors, the pro rata amount coming to the bonds held by them out of the $479,946.20, and reduced by that much the amount of the purchase price retained by them, leaving in their -hands only the amount coming to the bonds held by others. So that plaintiffs are now claiming an amount which the vendors of defendant, in strict conformity with the terms and conditions of their contract, have already paid out. The payment, it is true, was Active; but, from the legal standpoint, it was not less real than if counted out in crisp bank bills or in golden dollars to the plaintiffs themselves.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 So. 268, 110 La. 1012, 1903 La. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-abraham-son-v-new-orleans-brewing-assn-la-1903.