John Calder & Co. v. Creditors

44 La. Ann. 454
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1892
DocketNo. 11,025
StatusPublished

This text of 44 La. Ann. 454 (John Calder & Co. v. Creditors) 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
John Calder & Co. v. Creditors, 44 La. Ann. 454 (La. 1892).

Opinion

[457]*457The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

The Whitney National Bank is a creditor of D. R. •Oalder for $20,000, secured by first mortgage on the Orange Grove plantation. After fruitless efforts by the insolvent and the bank to effect a private sale of the plantation, the bank sued out executory process in the Civil District Court of this parish, under which the plantation was duly seized and advertised for sale to take place on March 19, 1892.

On the 15th of February, 1892, Oalder made, in the proceeding now before us, a cession of his property under the State insolvent law. Provisional syndics were duly appointed and qualified.

Thereupon the bank intervened in the insolvent proceedings, and, representing the necessities and circumstances of the case as indicated in the agreed statement of facts, which we reproduce further on, they took a rale upon the provisional syndics to show cause why the court should not make its order allowing the sale of the plantation to proceed UDder the order of seizure and sale as advertised, under the condition that the proceeds should be paid over to the syndics, and held by them as funds of the insolvency subject to the same mortgages resting on the plantation, and to be distributed by them according to law. The syndics appeared and showed cause against the rule ón two grounds, viz.:

1. That, under the law, the court is without authority or power to grant the relief demanded.

2. That no legal order for the sale of the property referred to in said rule can be granted until a definitive syndic is elected herein, and the cession made by the insolvents accepted by their creditors.

The case was submitted to the court under the following statement of facts:

“ 1. The Whitney National Bank of New Orleans held and owned, and still holds and owns, the note of D. R. Oalder, one of the above named insolvents, for $20,000, dated March 80, 1889, payable one year from date, and payment extended to January 1, 1891.

2. The said above described note was secured by first mortgage on the Orange Grove plantation, in Lafourche parish, Louisiana, owned by said D. R. Oalder, before H. N. Ooulon, notary public in said parish of Lafourche, and duly recorded; said mortgage contains the pací de non alienando.

[458]*458“8. On December 26, 1891, the said Whitney National Bank sued' out executory process on above mentioned note and act of mortgage, in the suit entitled Whitney National Bank vs. D. R. Oalder,’’ No. 84,586 of the docket of the Civil District Court for the. parish of Orleans, in which said parish said D. R. Oalder was resident and' domiciled at the time.

“4. In said proceedings, after due notices and delays, the writ of' seizure and sale issued and was placed in the hands of the sheriff of Lafourche parish for execution, and thereunder, after due notices and delays, the said sheriff seized, and then advertised for sale, according to law, the said Orange Grove plantation.

“5. After the issuance of said writ and the seizure of said plantation, as above recited, the said John Calder & Co. and the said D. R. Oalder filed their petition making a cession of their property to their creditors, under the insolvent laws of Louisiana, in the proceedings hereinabove entitled.

6. The insolvents surrendered as part of their assets seven sugar plantations under cultivation, one of which was the said Orange Grove plantation.

“ 7. The only funds surrendered by the insolvents, or since received by the provisional syndics, are $7000, part of the proceeds of the crop of 1891, made on said sugar plantations, or on some of them, and now applicable to the privileged or ordinary creditors of the insolvents.

“ 8. It will cost about $1500 a month to cultivate and keep up the Orange Grove plantation from now until July, 1892.

“9. If said Orange Grove plantation is not so cultivated and kept up, it will rapidly and largely deteriorate in value; the drainage will become obstructed with vegetation and earth; the labor will leave the place; the crop will be lost, and a heavy expenditure of money will be necessitated to restore the plantation to its present, earning capacity and value, and in consequence of such deterioration the plantation will sell for much less than could be obtained for it now.

“ 10. The opinion of persons who own or deal with sugar plantations is that they will not sell as advantageously later in the season as they would now; that while the plantation might sell for a little more later on, it would not, in all probability, sell for as much more as would have been expended in cultivating and keeping it up. And [459]*459if, in consequence of an unfavorable season, too much rain or too little, a crevasse or visitation of worms, the crop did not look well, the plantation would probably sell for much less than it would bring now.

“ 11. The syndics have not sufficient funds in the insolvency to cultivate and keep up all the plantations surrendered, even if they are permitted to use all the funds in the insolvency for that purpose. If they undertake to cultivate the places, they will be compelled to borrow money for that purpose; and if the plantations should not find a purchaser When offered for sale, then the syndics will be compelled to borrow largely in order to complete the crop and get back the sums so borrowed.

“ 12. The said Orange Grove plantation was offered for sale nearly six weeks preceding the cession of property herein, and the highest price offered in that time did not equal the amount of the mortgage resting on said plantation.

“13. The meeting of creditors for the election of a syndic will open in this case on March 21, 1892.

“14. If the Whitney National Bank is permitted to spll under its writ, as demanded in its rule, it is willing to advance the funds necessary to run the plantation until the date of the sale; and the provisional syndics are of the opinion that if such sale can be legally allowed by the court, it will be greatly to the interest of all concerned.

“Horace E. Upton and H. L. Lazarus,

Attorneys for Prov. Syndics.

“ White, Parlangb & Saunders,

Attorneys for Whitney National Bank.”

After hearing, judgment was rendered making the rule absolute and granting the order as prayed for, from which the provisional syndics prosecute the present appeal.

The ease really presents no issue, except the issues of law raised on the pleadings, viz.: to-wit: (1) whether, in any case, the court has power to order the sale of property surrendered before the election of a definitive syndic, and (2) whether it had authority to make the particular order here granted.

If the court had the authority to order the sale, the statement of facts exhibits conclusively a proper case for it's exercise. We deal with the substance, not the form of things. It is not of the slightest [460]*460consequence whether the order is applied for by the bank or by the provisional syndics. Both were before the court; both submitted the question to the court; both agreed upon the facts which rendered the sale necessary; and the syndics expressly told the court that they were

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Related

Barkley v. His Creditors
11 Rob. 28 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1845)

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Bluebook (online)
44 La. Ann. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-calder-co-v-creditors-la-1892.