Investors' Mortgage Co. v. Aleman

145 So. 541, 176 La. 284, 1933 La. LEXIS 1538
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 29194.
StatusPublished

This text of 145 So. 541 (Investors' Mortgage Co. v. Aleman) 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
Investors' Mortgage Co. v. Aleman, 145 So. 541, 176 La. 284, 1933 La. LEXIS 1538 (La. 1933).

Opinion

LAND, J.

On May 9, 1923, the defendant, Henry R. Aleman, acquired Sweet Home plantation from Armour Fertilizer Works. A mortgage note for $35,000, and three mortgage notes for $6,114.18 each represented the credit portion of the purchase price.

The $35,000 mortgage note was indorsed by Charles H. Russell, third opponent.

Shortly after Aleman acquired this plantation, he sought to obtain a loan of $35,000 through plaintiff, Investors’ Mortgage Company, represented by its agent, George H. De Russy, in order to retire the note for that amount indorsed by Russell, but failed to do so on account of defects in title. Later on Russell, as indorser of the $35,000 mortgage note, reopened negotiations for a loan through plaintiff, and finally plaintiff agreed to make the loan through the Prudential Life Insurance Company of America, stipulating that plaintiff should be paid a commission of $3,500.

The mortgage notes on the Sweet Home plantation securing plaintiff’s commission were not paid, and, when plaintiff had ex-ecutory process issued in this case, October 11, 1926, Charles H. Russell intervened, and, by third opposition, set up a note secured by mortgage on that plantation recorded on April 10, 1923; plaintiff’s mortgage having been recorded on July 23, 1925.

In other words, Russell, as third opponent, claims that his note is secured by mortgage on Sweet Home plantation senior in rank to plaintiff’s mortgage, and that he is entitled to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the property by preference.

The mortgage upon which the third opponent relies is a conventional mortgage granted by Henry R. Aleman in favor of Armour Fertilizer Works for the sum of $4,-139.65, represented by a promissory note dated Belle Alliance, La., May 1, 1920, signed by Aleman Planting & Manufacturing Company, Ltd., per II. R. Aleman, Pres., due on or before December 15, 1920, payable to the order of Planters’ Fertilizer & Chemical Company, New Orleans, La., owned and operated by Armour Fertilizer Works, indorsed by the Planters’ Fertilizer & Chemical Company, without recourse, credited with $1,000, and extended for one’year from January 17, 1923.

In answer to the petition and third opposition of Charles H. Russell, plaintiff asserts that the loan of $35,000 was made to *287 Henry R. Aleman, and its commission of $3,500 was agreed to, upon the conditions that all mortgage notes against Sweet Home plantation would be first surrendered to George H. De Russy, agent of plaintiff, for cancellation, so that the loan would be secured by a first mortgage, and plaintiff’s commission by a second mortgage on the property.

Plaintiff further asserts, in its answer to the intervention and third opposition of Charles II. Russell, that these conditions formed the very basis of the contract of loan, and were well known and agreed to by Russell and other interested parties; that Russell was not only acting as the agent for Henry R. Aleman, but was, in reality, a principal, because of his interest as indorser on the past-due mortgage note for $35,000 on the Sweet Home plantation; and that, under these circumstances, Russell is estopped from recovery on the mortgage note upon which he sues as intervener and third opponent.

The case went to trial upon these issues, and resulted in a judgment against plaintiff, and in favor of intervener and third opponent, ordering the sheriff to turn over to Charles H. Russell the sum of $5,860.03, held by the sheriff under the order of the court rendered on the intervention and third opposition in the executory proceedings, and condemning plaintiff to pay all costs.

From this judgment plaintiff prosecuted a suspensive appeal to this court, which was dismissed on technical grounds, and the case is now before us on a devolutive appeal taken thereafter by plaintiff.

The loan was executed on July 23, 1925. On that date, George H. De Russy, agent of plaintiff, obtained from the clerk of court of Assumption parish a mortgage certificate showing the mortgages of Armour Fertilizer Works on Sweet Home plantation, securing the note for $35,000, and the three notes for $6,114.18 each, which that company held; but the certificate failed to show the mortgage securing the note sued on by Charles H. Russell, third ■ opponent.

In addition to the mortgage note of $35,-000, and the three other mortgage notes of $6,114.18 each, Armour Fertilizer Works held certain notes of the Aleman Planting & Manufacturing Company, aggregating $7,000. One of these notes was secured by a mortgage on Sweet Home plantation, and is the same note which Charles H. Russell seeks to collect in his intervention and third opposition.

Armour Fertilizer Works wanted these notes aggregating $7,000 paid, before they would accept $35,000 from the loan in payment of their $35,000 mortgage note, indorsed by Charles H. Russell, and surrender for cancellation their three other mortgage notes for $6,114.18 each.

Charles H. Russell, third opponent, without the knowledge of plaintiff or its agent, George H. De Russy, paid Armour Fertilizer Works the $7,000, upon the condition that it would turn over to him the notes, which he admits he knew were securities; but he claims that he did not know, at the time, that one of them, the note he has sued upon, was secured by mortgage upon the Sweet Home plantation.

If Charles H. Russell, third opponent, warranted to. plaintiff that the Sweet Home plantation should be free of all prior mortgages *289 at the time the loan was executed, it is immaterial whether he acquired these securities before or after the loan was consummated on July 23, 1925. The fact that he may not have discovered that one of these securities was a mortgage note on the Sweet Home plantation until the executory proceedings were brought in this case, as he has testified, is no excuse whatever for the breach of his warranty, as it was his plain duty to have surrendered the note sue# upon by him for cancellation at all events.

If Charles H. Russell, third opponent, made to plaintiff such warranty, plaintiff had a perfect legal right to rely upon warranty so made, notwithstanding the mortgage certificate’s failure to show the senior mortgage which Russell asserts in this case.

The sole issue, then, in the ease is reduced to the single proposition: Did Russell warrant that the Sweet Home plantation should be free of all prior incumbrances at the date the loan was effected?

We are constrained to answer this question in the affirmative.

George H. De Russy, agent for- plaintiff, testified as follows: “Q. Did you ever have occasion to discuss this loan with Mr. Russell, if so under what conditions?

“A. Well, Mr. Aleman told me if necessary to discuss it with Mr. Russell, as he was relying on Mr. Russell for financial support and Mr. Russell was going to assist him in buying Sweet Home Plantation.
“Q. Subsequently to Mr. Aleman having given you that information and requested you to take the matter up with Mr. Russell, (with) whom, then did you continue the negotiations leading up to the formation of this lqan?
“A. Mr. Russell.”

This witness further testified: “Q. Did Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 So. 541, 176 La. 284, 1933 La. LEXIS 1538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/investors-mortgage-co-v-aleman-la-1933.