Kyle v. Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Co.

68 So. 640, 137 La. 364, 1915 La. LEXIS 1999
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 8, 1915
DocketNo. 20698
StatusPublished

This text of 68 So. 640 (Kyle v. Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Co.) 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
Kyle v. Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Co., 68 So. 640, 137 La. 364, 1915 La. LEXIS 1999 (La. 1915).

Opinions

PROVOSTY, J.

In this suit the plaintiff, William Kyle, has sued out executory process against the defendant, the Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Company, a former owner of the property in question, for the accrued and past due interest upon a mortgage debt, upon an act of mortgage containing the pact de non alienando; and the present owner and possessor of said property, the South Bend Company, has enjoined the proceeding.

By three successive private sales, the said property, consisting of several sugar plantations, passed from John R. Todd to the Ellerslee Planting Company, from this company to Wm. F. Williams, and from the latter to the defendant in this suit, the Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Company; each of these successive purchasers assuming in turn to pay several notes aggregating $55,000, which John R. Todd had issued, and secured by mortgage on said property. The sale by Williams to the defendant, the Bayou Salé Planting & Drainage Company, was of date June 9, 1910, and the consideration of it, in addition to the assumption of said Todd-mortgage debt of $55,000, was $110,000 for which the purchaser, the Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Company, issued its three notes of $36,666, each, secured by vendor’s privilege and mortgage on the property. In making this purchase and executing the' notarial act of purchase, the said company acted through Its president, W. W. Wall. He, on March 7, 1911, acquired two notes of $10,-000 each, part of the John R. Todd mortgage notes of $55,000. On the 18th of April, 1911, he acquired from the plaintiff, William Kyle, two other notes of the same series, one for $20,000 and the other for $7,628. By the two notarial acts by which he purchased these four notes he subordinated the mortgage securing them to the $110,000 mortgage given by his company as hereinabove stated for the purchase price of the said property.

The plaintiff,-Kyle, at the same time that he transferred the said two Todd notes for $27,626 to W. W. Wall, agreed to purchase one of the $36,666 notes of the $110,000 mortgage, and this agreement had progressed to the point of a check having been given for the price when Kyle refused to consummate the purchase, having discovered that, while the said $36,666 note recited that the interest on it was payable annually, the act of mortgage securing it recited that said interest was payable at the maturity of the note, 10 years from date. The intention of the .parties had been that this interest should be payable annually, as stipulated on the face of the note, and the act of mortgage had not been made. to so recite simply through an error of the notary. In order to correct this error, and induce Kyle to purchase the $36,666 note, the Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Company authorized its president, W. W. Wall, to execute a notarial act so providing; and this notarial act was duly executed by Wall for his said company, and was duly recorded on September 27, 1911; and Kyle then completed his purchase of the $36,666 note.

When the interest for the first year matured on this note, it was not paid; and the plaintiff, Kyle, in November, 1912, sued out the executory process enjoined in this suit.

The grounds of the injunction are, that in March, 1911, a few days after W. W. Wall had acquired the two John R. Todd mortgage notes of $10,000 each, part of the $55,-000 John R. Todd mortgage, subject to which the successive sales of the property had been made, said notes were sold and transferred by Wall to P. H. Hardy; that in July, 1912, executory process was sued out by Hardy, [367]*367acting through his friend, George A. Hero, on said notes; that in September, 1912, in due course of said executory proceedings, said property was adjudicated at sheriff sale to the said Hero; that Hero, refusing to accept title, P. H. Hardy, the real party in interest, was substituted to him as adjudieatee, and title made out accordingly; that subsequently the said property was sold by Hardy at private sale to the South Bend Company, the plaintiff in injunction; that while, at the said sheriff’s sale, the said property passed to Hardy subject to the $110,000 mortgage, part of which was represented by the $36,-666 note held by Kyle, for the interest upon which Kyle had caused the said executory process to issue, it had passed subject to said mortgage only as recorded, that is to say, with the interest thereon payable only at the "end of 10 years, because Hardy, holder of' the two $10,000 mortgage notes of the Todd mortgage, for the payment of which the said sheriff’s sale was made, (had not been a party to the agreement of September, 1911, by which the interest on the said $110,-000 mortgage of the Bayou Sale Planting & Drainage Company had been made payable annually instead of after 10 years, and therefore the said two. mortgage notes held by him, for the payment of which the said sale was made, could not be affected by said agreement.

In answer to the foregoing, Kyle, the defendant in injunction, makes two contentions: First, that Hardy never was the own'er of said two mortgage notes, but was a mere person interposed for Wall, who continued to be owner of said notes, and as such was estopped from seeking to take advantage of the error in the act of mortgage which made the interest on the said three notes of $36,666 payable at maturity instead of annually, and was bound by the correction which had been subsequently made of said error, by means of which correction he had induced Kyle to purchase the said $36,666 note; and, second, that said property passed at said sale subject to the payment of said interest annually, even though Hardy was the true holder of said notes and the purchaser at said sale, because the certificate of mortgages read at the sale recited that said mortgage of $110,000 was the first upon the property, and bore interest payable annually, and the sheriff announced at the crying of the sale that the sale was being made subject to all mortgages which according to said certificate of mortgages ranked that of the seizing creditor; and that Hardy, in bidding at said sale, did so subject to the conditions thus announced by the sheriff.

When this case was before this court the first time, on exception of no cause of action (134 La. 232, 63 South. 886), the conclusion was reached that the rank of the mortgage creditors had to be determined from the order of the registry of the mortgages, and from the acts as recorded; and that the act by which the interest on the notes for $110,000 was made payable annually instead of in 10 years, could not affect the mortgage securing the two notes for $10,000 part of the John R. Todd mortgage, because recorded subsequently, and without the holder of these two $10,000 notes being a party to it; and that, therefore, the property had passed at the sale subject to the $110,000 only as bearing interest payable in 10 years. This court did not have before it then the questions at issue on the present appeal, namely: As to whether Hardy was the real owner of said two notes, or only the straw. man of W. W. Wall; and as to whether, regardless of what was in reality the order of the mortgages, the property did not pass at the sheriff’s sale subject to this interest on this $110,000 having to be paid annually, in view of the fact that the certificate of mortgages read by the sheriff at the sale so recited, and that the announcement was [369]*369made by tbe sheriff, at the crying, that the sale was being made subject to the mortgages as recited in the certificate of mortgages.

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Related

Fred Miller Brewing Co. v. Ascension Ice Co.
55 So. 369 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1911)
Kyle v. Bayou Salé Planting & Drainage Co.
63 So. 886 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)
Loucks v. Union Bank
2 La. Ann. 617 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1847)

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Bluebook (online)
68 So. 640, 137 La. 364, 1915 La. LEXIS 1999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyle-v-bayou-sale-planting-drainage-co-la-1915.