Kaplan v. University Lake Corp.

381 So. 2d 385, 1980 La. LEXIS 6809
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 3, 1980
Docket64328
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 381 So. 2d 385 (Kaplan v. University Lake Corp.) 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
Kaplan v. University Lake Corp., 381 So. 2d 385, 1980 La. LEXIS 6809 (La. 1980).

Opinion

381 So.2d 385 (1979)

Sol KAPLAN et al.
v.
UNIVERSITY LAKE CORPORATION et al.

No. 64328.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

October 8, 1979.
On Rehearing March 3, 1980.
Rehearing Denied April 7, 1980.

*386 Floyd J. Falcon, Jr., Avant, Wall, Thomas, Riche & Falcon, Baton Rouge, William P. Stahl, Reynolds, Nelson, Theriot & Stahl, New Orleans, for defendant-applicant.

Ashton L. Stewart, Stewart & Preis, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-respondent.

DENNIS, Justice.

In this suit to enforce a mortgage on immovable property, both the trial and intermediate appellate courts rendered judgment for the plaintiff mortgage-holder, Kaplan, rejecting a plea of prescription filed by the defendant landowner, Guaranty Savings Assurance Company. We reverse, holding that the mortgage is unenforceable. Prescription on the debt underlying the mortgage was not interrupted by a pledge of contracts to sell securing the debt, as held by the lower courts, because the contract obligations had been revoked, leaving nothing in the pledgee's possession to serve as a constant acknowledgement of the prescribed debt.

Facts

University Lake Corporation obtained approval for a loan from the American Bank in 1963 for the purpose of developing a small residential subdivision on 15.19 acres of land in East Baton Rouge Parish. In connection with the loan, Lake Corporation executed a $144,000 hand note with itself as maker. The hand note was secured by the pledge of a $144,000 note which was paraphed "ne varietur" with an act of collateral mortgage on the land to be developed.

Lake originally planned to develop 18 residential lots fronting on a single street between two man-made lakes. The corporation had entered contracts to sell all 18 lots with its five principal stockholders and officers. In connection with the bank loan, Lake pledged to the bank the contracts to sell the 18 residential lots to secure the ne varietur note.[1]

American Bank advanced Lake a total of $132,000. The original plan of development fell through and was replaced by an apartment complex plan, which called for landfilling the entire development instead of digging man-made lakes. The bank began to press Lake for payment of the loan. Lake sold a 60% undivided interest in the property under development to Ingram Contractors, Inc. on November 3, 1964 in return for Ingram's agreement to do the landfill necessary for the apartment complex. Lake asked for forbearance in view of Ingram's landfilling operations and paid only interest on the loan for the next eighteen months. On June 24, 1966 the bank sold the obligation represented by the hand note with all its accompanying security devices to Seymour Weiss for $133,848.

Sol Kaplan and the National American Bank, as executors of the Succession of Seymour Weiss, filed suit on the notes and security devices on November 15, 1974. By this time the property subject to the collateral mortgage had changed hands a number of times until it was acquired on June 15, 1971 by Guaranty Savings Assurance Company. In taking title to the property Guaranty assumed all mortgages extant against the property.

Following a trial the district court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs, Kaplan, *387 et al., in the amount of $132,000 and ordered enforcement of the collateral mortgage against the property. On appeal, the court of appeal affirmed, adopting the trial court's written reasons. We granted writs to review the decisions below with respect to the issue of prescription. After reviewing the record and considering the parties' arguments on all issues, we affirm the judgment below as to the money judgment, but reverse on the issues of prescription and enforceability of the collateral mortgage.

Issues to be Decided by this Court

The central issue in this proceeding is whether prescription was interrupted on the note secured by the collateral mortgage. If prescription was not interrupted, it is clear that the liberative period has elapsed.[2] A decision of this issue calls upon us to answer or reappraise two questions: (1) Does prescription run in favor of the debtor whose debt is secured by a pledge, or does it in fact remain interrupted, as long as the pledgee possesses the thing pledged? and (2) When the thing pledged is the obligation of a third person, does revocation of the obligation remove it from the possession of the pledgee?

1. A Brief Reappraisal of the "Constant Acknowledgment" Rule

This Court will continue to apply the rule that prescription does not run in favor of the debtor whose debt is secured by a pledge, and that it remains interrupted, as long as the thing pledged is in the possession of the pledgee. However, it is not the contract or act of pledge that interrupts prescription, but rather the detention by the pledgee of the thing pledged, such possession serving as a constant acknowledgment of the debt and hence a constant renunciation of prescription.[3] See Succession of Picard, 238 La. 455, 115 So.2d 817 (1959); Scott v. Corkern, 231 La. 368, 91 So.2d 569 (1956). This rule, which may be referred to as the "constant acknowledgment" rule, has also been recognized by French commentators. 2 pt. 2 M. Planiol, Traite Elementaire de Droit Civil, § 2462. Moreover, the rule has become interwoven in our security devices law, and the financial and legal communities have come to regard it as one of the unique advantages of the collateral mortgage. Nathan and Marshall, The Collateral Mortgage, 33 La.L.Rev. 497 (1973). Clarification of the rule is needed, however, in view of the prevailing confusion about the meaning of Picard. See Comment, Pledge, Prescription and the Succession of Picard, 10 Loy.L.Rev. 82, 84 (1959).

2. Clarification of the "Constant Acknowledgment" Rule and Succession of Picard

When the pledgee loses possession of the thing pledged, prescription is no longer interrupted, despite the pledgee's continued detention of the written evidence of the thing pledged. Confusion on this point may have arisen because we held in Succession of Picard, supra, without fully explaining our rationale, that the pledgee's detention of a pledged promissory note after it had prescribed served to interrupt prescription of the primary debt. We should have pointed out that the pledgee in that case did not *388 lose possession of the thing pledged. The thing pledged was the promisor's obligation to pay as specified in the promissory note.[4] When an action is barred by prescription, the civil action is extinguished, but a natural obligation still subsists. La.C.C. art. 1758(3). In contrast to civil obligations, natural obligations do not give rise to a right of action. Nevertheless, they are not completely devoid of legal consequences. La.C.C. art. 1759; 1 C. Aubry & C. Rau, Droit Civil Francais, § 297 (La.St.L.Inst.Transl.1965). For this reason it is said that prescription constitutes an obstacle, since the creditor cannot effectively sue for the performance of the obligation, but does not extinguish the obligation itself. Aubry & Rau, supra, § 314. Therefore, in Picard it was the pledgee's continued detention of the obligation pledged, subsisting as a natural obligation, which interrupted prescription, not merely his possession of the promissory note instrument.[5] The instrument, a corporeal thing, was merely evidence of the incorporeal obligation pledged. It was not the thing pledged. La.C.C. arts. 460, 2481, 3156.

3.

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381 So. 2d 385, 1980 La. LEXIS 6809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaplan-v-university-lake-corp-la-1980.