Liquid Carbonic Corporation v. Leger

169 So. 170, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 330
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1936
DocketNo. 1598.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 So. 170 (Liquid Carbonic Corporation v. Leger) 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
Liquid Carbonic Corporation v. Leger, 169 So. 170, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 330 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

The plaintiff sold to Oscar Leger a certain soda fountain, together with all accessories, and, at the time of the sale, retained a vendor’s lien, and the purchaser granted a chattel mortgage to secure the unpaid part of the purchase price. This sale and chattel mortgage act was promptly recorded prior to the installation of the soda -fountain in the drug store operated by Leger. Thereafter the lessor of Leger brought suit against him for past-due rent, praying for a writ of provisional seizure. There was judgment against Leger as prayed for, with the recognition of the lessor’s privilege. Thereafter a writ of fieri facias was issued, and all of the property as contained in the drug store was seized and advertised to be sold. All of the property seized was appraised by the intervener and third opponent and another druggist, and at the sale the sheriff sold the same in bulk or in globo. At the sale, in accordance with law, 'the sheriff read the certificate of mortgage, and upon which the chattel mortgage of the plaintiff was reported. The procés verbal clearly states that the sheriff made known to the prospective purchasers that the same was to be sold “subject to all mortgages and liens” in accordance with the certificate of mortgage. His deed of adjudication further sets forth that the property was sold subject to the mortgages with which the property was burdened and conditional that the purchaser or purchasers were-to pay whatever portion of the price exceeded the amount of mortgages. In other words, that the purchaser or purchasers were buying the property cum onere. Some time after this sale, the present- plaintiff instituted this suit by executory process to satisfy its claim, and Eloi Melancon, by intervention and third opposition, claimed the property free from all mortgages.

The third opponent, bases his claim to the property by virtue of the said adjudication previously referred to, and further avers that he is the bona fide purchaser at the sheriff’s sale; that, the property having been appraised in globo and having been sold en masse, even if the plaintiff herein had a vendor’s lien and privilege or a chattel mortgage, the vendor’s lien and all its mortgage rights were lost by the said sale in bulk. In answer to the demand of the third opponent, plaintiff sets up the defense that the third opponent was not a bona fide purchaser; that he had acted as appraiser of the said property; that the property was not definitely described so as to put plaintiff on guard that the property subject to its mortgage was to be sold; that it was contrary to the agreement had with the lessor, the seizing créditor, at which sale third opponent purchased said property; and that the third opponent purchased the property subject to the mortgage rights granted under the mortgage act.

There was judgment for the third opponent, and plaintiff has appealed.

The chattel mortgage on the soda fountain on which plaintiff seeks to foreclose was duly executed and recorded in *172 •the parish where the property is located. Under section 4 of Act No. 198 of 1918, the Chattel Mortgage Law, the recordation of this act of chattel mortgage on the property involved created a lien thereon in favor of the mortgagee from the time of .filing the act for record, and this filing for record and its recordation served as notice to all persons of such mortgage, and created a lien on the property in favor of the mortgagee superior in rank to any privilege or lien arising subsequently thereto. The effect of the recordation of this chattel mortgage against this property had the same effect with regard to the debtor as the mortgage of any other property has under articles 3397 and 3399 of the Civil Code, viz., the debtor could not sell, engage, or mortgage the same property to the prejudice 0⅝ the mortgage; if the mortgaged property goes out of the debt- or’s hands, the creditor can pursue it into whomsoever’s hands he may find it, and the creditor has the right of being preferred in the payment of his claim out of the proceeds of the sale of the property in accordance with the rank of his mortgage.

The third opponent, Melancon, relies on a purchase by him at sheriff sale of the mortgaged property under a fieri facias issued against the mortgage debtor and under which the mortgaged property was seized and sold in globo with other movable property without any separate appraisement and sale of the mortgaged property. It is claimed by the third opponent that whatever lien and privilege the plaintiff had on the soda fountain by reason of its recorded chattel mortgage was lost by reason of this sale of the mortgaged property confusedly with other movable property under the fieri facias without a separate ap-praisement and sale. In support of his claim he relies largely on the case of Baton Rouge Rice Mill, Inc., v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co., Inc., 164 La. 729, 114 So. 633, to the effect that the holder of a chattel mortgage against a movable which becomes immovable by destination loses his lien and privilege where the movable on which his chattel mortgage operates is sold with the immovable of which it becomes a part under a sheriff’s sale of the immovable without a separate appraisement. This case was followed and applied in the case of Bank of Winnfield v. Olla State Bank, 11 La.App. 640, 124 So. 621.

It was no doubt because of the holding in the above two cases cutting off the holder of a. chattel mortgage where the movable on which he had a mortgage was made an immovable by destination and sold confusedly with the immovable without a separate appraisement that prompted the Legislature to pass Act No. 166 of 1932, which reads as follows: “Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of Louisiana, That when any machinery, appurtenances or any other movable property whatsoever which is subject to and encumbered by a mortgage granted under the provisions of Act 198 of 1918, shall be moved to and located in or upon any immovable property, or installed therein or thereon in such a manner as to make same an immovable by nature or by destination, said machinery, appurtenances or other manufactured articles shall be and remain movable in so far as said mortgage is concerned, and shall not pass by the sale of the immovable property in or upon which same may be located, whether such sale be conventional or judicial; and no sale or mortgage of said immovable property shall in any manner affect or impair the lien of such chattel mortgage, or the remedies of-the holder thereof for its enforcement.”

There can be no doubt but that the Legislature has completely destroyed the effect of the cases above cited, and it is obvious that movable property covered by a duly recorded chattel mortgage cannot be affected in the least by a sale of such property along with an immovable of which it becomes a part by nature or by destination, whether that sale be conventional or judicial. Manifestly, if the above-quoted act had been in effect when the Baton Rouge Rice Mill v. Fairbanks, Morse Co. Case was decided, and any other cases for which that case might have served as a precedent, we would not now have these rulings on this point. Therefore, whatever authority that case might have had as a precedent for the present case was completely wiped out by the above act.

Moreover, it was clearly the intention of the Legislature in passing the above act to protect the holder of a duly recorded chattel mortgage against the loss of the lien by sales of the mortgaged property along with other property.

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Bluebook (online)
169 So. 170, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liquid-carbonic-corporation-v-leger-lactapp-1936.