Highland Lumber Supply Co. v. Young

38 So. 2d 638, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 666
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 24, 1948
DocketNo. 7223.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 638 (Highland Lumber Supply Co. v. Young) 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.

Bluebook
Highland Lumber Supply Co. v. Young, 38 So. 2d 638, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 666 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

After opinion had been prepared in this case, the appellant, Robert J. Newson, filed motion to dismiss the appeal or remand the case for further proceedings on the ground that the questions raised and tendered for decision in the case on its merits had, since the case was argued and submitted, become moot. The basis of the motion, as reflected from the allegations thereof, is that Lot No. 188 of the Cedar Grove sub-division to the City of Shreveport, on which appellant herein has two special mortgages, and against which plaintiff, appellee, is asserting material man's lien and privilege, allegedly superior to defendant's mortgages, had been recently sold in foreclosure proceedings on a mortgage that in rank primed said asserted lien and privilege and also defendant's mortgages. The conclusion to be drawn from these allegations is that the lot above described may no longer be proceeded against by the parties to the present litigation since it has been sold under a mortgage superior in rank to the claims of each.

The allegations of the motion were verified by affidavit of the mover. Appellee, through counsel, answered the motion and denied the allegations of fact therein set forth. This answer is also verified by affidavit.

It is manifest that a serious difference exists between the appellee and appellant, Newson, as to what happened and the legal effect thereof in the foreclosure described in the motion.

While it is true, as said in Ruffo et ux. v. Marcotte,161 La. 147, 108 So. 316, 317, that courts "do not sit to decide moot and abstract propositions, either of law or of fact, but only actual controversies at issue between interested parties", it does not clearly appear that the questions submitted for decision in the instant case are definitely moot. In the Ruffo case the judgment debt involved was paid during pendency of appeal, but not the cost. The court declined to dismiss the appeal as tendering a moot question since the cost had not been paid. And, so it is in the present case.

If, for no other reason, dismissal of the appeal does not lie on the ground that the questions tendered therein are moot, because liability for costs remains to be determined.

We do not feel warranted in remanding the case in order to take testimony on the issue raised by the motion and answer thereto. Such a course would necessarily prolong final decision in the case and also *Page 640 incur additional cost, both of which always should be avoided if possible.

The motion is denied in all respects.

On the Merits.
The primary question tendered for decision in this case is whether mortgages held by the defendant, Robert J. Newson, against lots in the City of Shreveport, Louisiana, formerly owned by Ogden A. Young, prime the material man's lien of the plaintiff, which was registered subsequent to registry of said mortgages.

On and prior to October 10, 1947, Ogden A. Young owned unimproved lots Nos. 188 and 189 of the Cedar Grove sub-division in the City of Shreveport, Louisiana. On that date he and his wife executed a mortgage on said lots to Newson for $2,750.00 to secure payment of a note for that amount, due in ninety days. And on November 29, 1947, Young and his wife executed to Newson another mortgage on said lots for the sum of $1,100.00 to secure payment of a note for that amount, due January 10, 1948. It is declared in both mortgages that the money advanced on said notes was to be expended in the construction of improvements on the said lots. Both mortgages were promptly recorded in the records of Caddo Parish.

It appears that while improvements were being placed on one of said lots, plaintiff herein sold and delivered to Ogden A. Young, at the locus of the improvements, building material of the value of $926.69 that was used therein. The first delivery of this material was on August 6th, and the last was on December 18, 1947. Evidence of the lien asserted by plaintiff was recorded January 13, 1948. On January 6, 1948, Ogden A. Young sold and conveyed the lots with improvements thereon to Benjamin R. Young, the price of the sale being $2,000.00 cash, and the assumption by the purchaser of the two mortgages to Newson.

Newson filed foreclosure proceedings on his mortgages in the District Court of Caddo Parish and thereafter, on January 16, 1948, plaintiff instituted suit to foreclose its lien and impleaded as defendants, Newson, Ogden A. Young and his wife, and Benjamin R. Young. It is prayed therein, inter alia, that the asserted lien be recognized and decreed to be superior in rank and to prime the Newson mortgages. Personal judgment is asked against Ogden A. Young and his wife for the price of the material sold to him.

Of the several defendants, Newson only made appearance and resisted the suit. He first filed and urged exceptions of no cause and no right of action. These were referred to the merits and finally overruled. His answer to the merits is in the nature of general denial.

The case was tried and submitted on March 2, 1948. On the 31st of March, prior to judgment being rendered, Newson filed a plea attacking the constitutionality of Act 298 of 1926 and other acts relating to a material man's liens "insofar as subsequently recorded liens, filed after a valid mortgage has been foreclosed upon by executory process, are concerned". The plea also states that said acts violate article 19 of section 19 of the Constitution, as amended by the adoption of Act 35 of the year 1938. This plea of unconstitutionality was not passed upon nor mentioned by the lower court in its written reasons for judgment.

There was judgment against Ogden A. Young for the price of the building material with recognition of the asserted lien against lot 188 and the improvements thereon. The judgment decreed said lien to be superior in rank to the mortgages to Newson, and ordered sale of the lot with improvements to pay the amount of the lien. Newson appealed.

It developed on trial that none of the improvements were placed on lot 189 and, for this reason, it was held that the asserted lien did not affect that lot.

The exceptions are predicated upon two legal propositions, the first being that as executory proceedings had been filed by Newson the lien holder should have intervened in those cases and asserted therein its alleged superior rights and not have instituted an independent action to have the same recognized and enforced; and, secondly, that the evidence of the purported *Page 641 lien, as recorded, was inadequate to serve as such and did not meet statutory requirements.

It is provided in Section 12 of Act 298 of 1926 that in addition to the lien therein created, the material man has a personal action against the owner for the price of material sold and delivered to him. This necessarily implies that in a suit to enforce the lien the holder thereof has the right to ask for personal judgment on his claim, as was done in the present case. This being true, the course adopted by the plaintiff appears free from reasonable legal objection. Anticipating that a controversy would arise between it and Newson, the mortgage holder properly impleaded Newson as a party defendant in order to give him opportunity to assert his rights under the mortgages and to tender the issue of their rank as against the lien, and he did so. We have not been cited to any law that would preclude plaintiff from proceeding as it did. Had it not made Newson a party to the suit, Newson would have found it necessary to come into the case by third opposition, either before judgment or after judgment, when the property had been seized and advertised for sale to pay the lien.

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Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 638, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highland-lumber-supply-co-v-young-lactapp-1948.