Home Finance Service v. Linam

174 So. 389, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 231
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 1937
DocketNo. 16589.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 So. 389 (Home Finance Service v. Linam) 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
Home Finance Service v. Linam, 174 So. 389, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 231 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Henry L.. Heymann, now deceased and succeeded in this litigation by his widow as testamentary executrix, operating as Home Finance Service, was engaged in business in New' Orleans in the making of small loans, for which business he had duly qualified under Act 7 of the Extraordinary Session of the Legislature of 1928. He made a loan to William P. Linam, Jr., engaged then in the automobile tire and service station business at 614 North Rampart street in this city. On Linam’s default, Heymann, on June 8, 1935, obtained judgment against him in the sum of $231.55, with interest and attorney’s fees. On June 15, 1935, Linam, together with his father and a third incorporator, organized a corporation styled “A-l Tire Company, Inc.” and, in the articles of incorporation, transferred to the corporation, in exchange for all of the capital stock, certain listed movable property, including one Ford truck, *391 which was valued at $550 and which was referred to as “subject to chattel mortgage.” All, or most of this property, it is now contended, belonged to Linam, the judgment debtor. In the articles of incorporation it is not stated whether the $550 valuation of the Ford truck was the equity remaining over and above the amount of the chattel mortgage, or whether that was the gross value of the truck.

It Was not shown what part of the articles were transferred by Linam, what part by his father, nor what part by the third in-corporator. The new corporation continued to do business at the same location at which Linam had formerly conducted his business.

In April, 1936, under a writ of fieri facias issued in execution of the judgment against Linam, Jr., the Ford truck which had been transferred to the corporation was seized.

Thereupon the A-l Tire Company, Inc., by intervention and third opposition, claimed to be the owner of the said truck and prayed for the release of the seizure and also for a reservation of its right to seek redress “ex delicto” for the alleged wrongful seizure.

Into the proceedings also came “White System of New Orleans, Inc.,” another money-lending corporation, which claimed to be the holder of a note secured by chattel mortgage on the said truck — not the mortgage which had existed on the truck at the time of its transfer to' the corporation— but a new one which, on February 11, 1936, long after the transfer, had been executed and duly recorded in the mortgage office prior to the issuance of the writ of fieri facias under which the truck had been seized by the judgment creditor.

The White System of New Orleans, Inc., asked that the truck be not sold unless for a price sufficient to pay the note held by it and secured by the said chattel mortgage.

The chattel mortgage held by the White System was executed not by the A-l Tire Company, Inc., to which corporation the truck had been transferred by Linam, but by the said Linam, who had been the owner thereof prior to the transfer in the act of incorporation.

To the intervention and third opposition of the A-l Tire Company, Inc., Mrs. Mary Lauel Heymann, testamentary executrix of the estate of Heymann — he having died- — ■ made answer to the effect that the truck, although transferred to the A-l Tire Company, Inc., was still liable to seizure under the judgment against Linam, since it and the other property had been transferred for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of Linam’s creditors. Mrs. Heymann prayed that the said opposition be dismissed, that the said truck be thus subjected to the seizure under the writ of fieri facias, and that judgment for the amount of the debt be rendered against the tire company because of its having purchased all of the property of the said Linam.

In answer to the intervention of the White System, Inc., Mrs. Heymann prayed for a dismissal thereof, alleging that, at the time the mortgage held by it was executed, Linam, Jr., who had executed the mortgage, “was not the owner of the property described in the said chattel mortgage, but that said truck was on said date, Feb. 11, 1936, the property of the A-l Tire Company, Inc.” After this answer had been filed — in fact, on May 23, 1936 — the White System, Inc., realizing that the mortgage had been executed by Linam, although the truck had previously been transferred by Linam to the company, obtained from the A-l Tire Company a notarial act in which it acknowledged that, in executing the mortgage on February 11th, the said Linam had acted for and on its behalf as owner of the truck.

When the third oppositions came on for trial below, counsel for A-l Tire Company, moving to strike out the prayer of the seizing creditor for judgment against the said company, argued that that demand was not incidental to the subject matter of the third opposition, which had as its object, the release from seizure of the automobile truck which was-involved. He stated his motion to strike as follows: “I file a motion to strike out that portion of the answer where the duly qualified testamentary executrix takes the part of the plaintiff in reconvention insofar as same affects the A-l Tire Company, Inc., any personal liability on the part of the A-l Tire Company, Inc., for this reason. That under article § 375 of the Code of Practice of the State of Louisiana, it states: ‘In order to entitle the defendant to institute a demand, in reconvention, it is required that such demand, although different from the main action, be, nevertheless, necessarily connected with and incidental to the same’.”

The trial court sustained this motion. Thereupon the seizing creditor tendered *392 evidence which, it was contended, would show that the transfer had been made for the fraudulent purpose of placing the property beyond the reach of Linam’s creditors. Objection to this evidence was made, first, on the gróund that plaintiff, in his answers to the third oppositions, by referring to the “transfer” of the truck by Linam to the corporation, had estopped himself to contend that the said transaction was fraudulent and was not an actual “transfer” ; second, on the ground that plaintiff’s recourse should have been to the civil district court for a judgment setting aside the said “transfer”; and, third, that the doctrine which has been announced in several cases to which we shall later refer —that a creditor may look to the property of his debtor which has been transferred to a coi-poration for the purpose of defeating the rights of the creditor — is only applicable where the transfer is made for no other consideration than capital stock of the company.

These objections were sustained, the evidence was excluded, and judgment was rendered against Mrs. Heymann as the executrix of the estate of Heymann, recognizing the A-l Jire Company, Inc., as the owner of the truck, and in favor of the White System of New Orleans, Inc., recognizing it as the holder of the mortgage on the truck, and reserving the right of the tire company to sue the seizing creditor for damages. Mrs. Heymann has appealed.

We first consider whether a direct, independent action should have been brought to set aside the transfer — whether the revocatory action should first have been resorted to. The courts of this state have scrupulously guarded the rights of creditors against just such schemes as that which appellant contends was concocted to deprive her of her rights. There are many cases involving similar situations.

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Related

Velez v. Cronvich
447 F. Supp. 285 (E.D. Louisiana, 1978)
Koerkel v. Scallan
166 So. 2d 370 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 So. 389, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-finance-service-v-linam-lactapp-1937.