Laborde v. Dauzat

158 So. 2d 637, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 2137
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1963
DocketNo. 932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 158 So. 2d 637 (Laborde v. Dauzat) 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
Laborde v. Dauzat, 158 So. 2d 637, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 2137 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinions

HOOD, Judge.

Plaintiff, Guidry Laborde, instituted this suit against Dewey Dauzat, administrator of the Succession of Abelus N. Dauzat, deceased, for the sum of $2,000.00, with interest and attorney’s fees, being the amount alleged to be due on a promissory note exe[639]*639cuted by said decedent. He further prays for recognition of a lien and mortgage which purports to secure the payment of said note and which affects a tract of land owned by the estate of the decedent. Defendant Dauzat filed an answer and a re-conventional demand, in which he impleads Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Laborde as parties defendant, and prays for judgment decreeing that the note and mortgage sued on are simulated contracts and thus are null and void.

After trial on the merits, judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiff and against defendant, as administrator of said estate, for the sum of $300.00, with interest and attorney’s fees, recognizing the lien and mortgage claimed by plaintiff, and condemning said defendant to pay all costs. Plaintiff has appealed. Defendant Dauzat has answered the appeal praying that the judgment be modified by eliminating the recognition of the lien and mortgage and by relieving defendant of liability for costs.

The note upon which this suit is based is for the principal sum of $2,000.00. It was executed by the decedent, Abelus N. Dau-zat, in favor of “Mr. and Mrs. I. B. La-borde,” on January 21, 1953, and it is due and payable on January 21, 1958. The note is secured by and is paraphed for identification with an Act of Mortgage bearing the same date, which mortgage was executed by the decedent in favor of Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Laborde and affects a tract of land in Avoyelles Parish. In that instrument the mortgagor, Abelus N. Dauzat, declares that the indebtedness which it secures is “for services and advances to him during the past ten years.”

The maker of the note, Abelus N. Dau-zat, died on March 26, 1953, and Dewey Dauzat was appointed administrator of his succession on May 22, 1953. Guidry La-borde, the plaintiff in this suit, purchased the above-described promissory note from the payees, Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Laborde, on July 11, 1953, for the sum of $1,500.00, and the payees thereupon endorsed the note in blank.

On September 15, 1955, the administrator of the succession filed suit against Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Laborde and Guidry Laborde seeking to have the note and mortgage decreed to be null and void. That suit was tried, but no decision was ever rendered in it. This suit was instituted by Guidry La-borde on October 23, 1961, and thereafter, pursuant to rulings of the trial court and stipulations of counsel, the first suit was dismissed and all of the pleadings and evidence in that case were incorporated into and made a part of the record of the instant suit.

The first issue presented is whether plaintiff, Guidry Laborde, is a holder in due course of the note. Plaintiff contends that he is and accordingly it is argued that the defenses urged are not available to defendant. Defendant Dauzat, on the other hand, takes the position that plaintiff is not a holder in due course.

The evidence shows that the decedent, at his death, was survived by seven children, all of whom were of age of majority. Mrs. Guidry Laborde, plaintiff’s wife, and Mrs. I. B. Laborde, one of the payees on the note, are sisters, they being two of the surviving children left by the decedent. Their husbands, Guidry Laborde and I. B. La-borde, are brothers. Although an intense animosity has existed between some members of this family, both before and after the death of Abelus N. Dauzat, the record shows that the Guidry Laborde family and the I. B. Laborde family have always been friendly.

On December 17, 1952, the decedent executed a cash sale conveying to Guidry La-borde a five-acre tract of land, being a part of his farm, for a consideration of $125.00. Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Laborde signed that deed as witnesses. On the following day, December 18, 1952, the decedent executed a promissory note in favor of Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Laborde, which note was for the sum of $2,000.00, due in five years and secured [640]*640by an Act of Mortgage affecting the remainder of the decedent’s farm property. Both the sale and the mortgage were prepared by the same notary and were filed for record at the same time on December 18, 1952. A few weeks thereafter, on January 21, 1953, the $2,000.00 note which had been executed by the decedent was marked “Paid,” and the mortgage securing that note was cancelled from the Mortgage Records of Avoyelles Parish. On the same day, January 21, 1953, the decedent executed another note and mortgage for the same amount, made payable to the same payees, and affecting the same property, these documents being the note and mortgage on which this suit is based. This last mortgage, however, was not placed of record until March 27, 1953, which was the day after Abelus N. Dauzat died.

The Negotiable Instruments Law of this State provides that one of the requirements which must be met in order for a person to be a holder in due course of a promissory note is “That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.” LSA-R.S. 7:52. The law also provides that “To constitute notice of an infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.” LSA-R.S. 7:56.

The trial judge, in holding that plaintiff was not a holder in due course of the note, said:

“ * * * Under all of the surrounding facts which have been hereinbefore detailed it is a tax upon credulity to accept that plaintiff was not fully aware ■of the execution of the first note and mortgage and their subsequent extinction, or that he did not know fully of the status of affairs between decedent .•and Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Laborde, especially in view of his admission that he and his wife were friendly with the family. In the words of LSA-R.S. 7 :- 56, he must have had ‘knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.’
“However, it is not at all necessary that we rest on circumstantial evidence because the mortgage held by plaintiff states that Mr. Dauzat was indebted to Mr. and Mrs. Laborde in the sum of $2,000 (represented by the note) for ‘services and advances to him during the past ten years.’ Thus, on the face of the instrument itself, plaintiff was informed of the nature of the stated indebtedness and the possible, if not probable, infirmities inherent in it. To conclude otherwise would be simply blinding ourselves to reality, and the resolution that plaintiff is not a holder in due course is inevitable.”

We cannot say that the trial judge erred in reaching that conclusion. Accordingly, we find, as he did, that plaintiff is not a holder in due course of the note upon which this suit is based.

Defendant resists payment of the alleged indebtedness primarily on the ground that the note and mortgage on which the suit is based are fraudulent conveyances or simulations, and thus they are null and void. He contends that Mrs. and Mrs. I. B. La-borde “designed a fraudulent plan” to deprive the other children of decedent of their legitime, and that in furtherance of that fraudulent design Mr. and Mrs. I. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 So. 2d 637, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 2137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laborde-v-dauzat-lactapp-1963.