Lotz v. Iberville Bank & Trust Co.

146 So. 155, 176 La. 579, 1933 La. LEXIS 1574
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 31521.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 146 So. 155 (Lotz v. Iberville Bank & Trust 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
Lotz v. Iberville Bank & Trust Co., 146 So. 155, 176 La. 579, 1933 La. LEXIS 1574 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

The plaintiff filed' three separate suits in the district court against the above-named defendants and as thedssues involved in each, with one exception, are identical, they were consolidated for the purpose of trial and were submitted and argued in this court as one case, and we shall so consider them in this opinion.

The principal issues in these cases were considered and disposed of in the case of Paul Polizzotto et al. v. Mrs. Berilah Richards Hart, 176 La. 564, 146 So. 151, this day decided. The *581 plaintiff here intervened in that ease and attacked the validity of certain notes and a mortgage made on February 27, 1922, by Mrs. Hart through her husband, Lewis B. Hart, as agent, by virtue of a power of attorney alleged to have been executed by Mrs. Hart. That mortgage operated against certain real estate situated in Iberville parish, which was transferred by donation propter nuptias to Mrs. Hart and which was subsequently sold by Mrs. Hart through her husband as agent to the present plaintiff, Mrs.- Lotz. In those suits, Mrs. Lotz brings direct actions against the holders of those notes and asks that it be decreed that they and the mortgage securing them are invalid, null and void on the identical grounds set up in the other suit.

There are also involved in these suits two other notes, each for $2,000, dated April 28, 1922, and secured by mortgage on the same property. These also and the mortgage securing them were made by Mrs. Hart through her husband as agent by virtue of the same power of attorney. The reasons for holding the first mortgage valid are applicable to the second mortgage and we shall not restate them here.

Mrs. Lotz alleges in these suits that the defendants are not bona fide holders of the notes in due course, that they acquired them with full knowledge of their infirmities. This point is disposed of by our holding that they were legally executed for a valuable and a valid consideration.

In passing we may state that the two $2,-000 notes dated April 2Sth, like those dated February 27th, were made and used to pay a debt due by Lewis B. Hart at the time he made the donation propter nuptias to Mrs. Richards. We so held in Hart v. Polizzotto, 168 La. 356, 122 So. 64.

We held in the suit No. 31520 that the $7,-000 mortgage was binding on Mrs. 1-Iart under the circumstances shown even though the proceeds of the notes were used to pay a debt due by her husband prior to the marriage. -The reasons for so holding in that case are applicable to the other notes and mortgage here attacked.

(2) Louis Ochs, one of the defendants, acquired the two $2,000 notes dated April 28, 1922, to which we have referred as the second mortgage notes made by Mrs. Hart, and one of the $2,000 notes secured by the other mortgage. In April, 1929, Ochs obtained a judgment on those notes against Mrs. Hart, the same to operate in rem only against the property mortgaged. Mrs. Lotz, the present plaintiff, who acquired the property in August, 1925, more than three years after the mortgages and the notes were made, attacks the validity of that judgment, alleging that it is null, void, and of no effect as to her for two reasons. Her first ground of attack is that although she is and was at the time Ochs brought suit on the notes the owner and in possession of the property against which the proceedings were brought, she was not made a party to the suit, was not notified or cited, and made no appearance therein. Her second ground of attack is that the proceedings were against Mrs. Hart when as a matter of fact she was dead at the time and her heirs were not cited.

There is no merit in the first ground of attack. The mortgages imported a confession *583 of'judgment and contained the pact de non alienando. Article 734 of the Code of Practice provides that:.

“When the creditor is in possession of such an act, he may proceed against the debt- or or his heirs, by causing the property subject to the privilege or mortgage to be seized and sold, on a simple petition, and without a previous citation of the debtor, in the manner laid down in the third paragraph second section, third chapter * * * of this Code; provided in all cases where the property of the debtor is under the administration of an executor, administrator, syndic, or other fiduciary officer, the proceedings may be conducted against such executor, administrator, syndic or other fiduciary officer.”

Ochs proceeded against Mrs. 1-Iart direct and ignored Mrs.' Lotz, who was then the owner in possession of the property.

The mortgage contains the following clause immediately following the description of the property:

“Which the said mortgagor binds and obligates herself and her heirs and assigns not to sell, alienate or encumber to the prejudice of this act.”

Under the settled jurisprudence of this state, the holder of a note secured by a mortgage containing the pact de non alienando may proceed direct against the original mortgágor and ignore the transferees of the property. The rule is otherwise where the mortgage does not contain such clause.

Taylor v. Pipes, 24 La. Ann. 553; Avegno v. Schmidt & Ziegler, 35 La. Ann. 585; Jefferson et al. v. Stringfellow et al., 148 La. 223, 86 So. 744.

The second ground of attack is likewise without merit. Mrs. Hart resided in New Orleans at the time the mortgage was made but moved to Terrell, Tex., where she resided until her death on August 6, 1927, practically two years prior to the date on which Ochs instituted his suit, which was in April, 1929. Mr. Ochs had no knowledge of Mrs. Hart’s death and on the trial it was admitted by counsel for all parties that her succession was never opened in this state. The hypothecated property was not under the administration of an executor, administrator, syndic, or other fiduciary officer (Code Prae. art. 734), nor had a single heir or any heirs accepted the succession. Code Prae. arts. 65, 66.

The plaintiff, assuming that Mrs. Hart, the mortgagor, was living, alleged that she was an absentee, a resident of Terrell, Tex., and not represented in this state. He prayed that an attorney at law be appointed to represent her. The court appointed Mr. Jas. Nicolosi, an attorney of the local bar, who accepted the appointment and at once addressed a letter to Mrs. Hart at Terrell, Tex., notifying her of the action. This letter was written on April 11th, and according to the postmark, reached Terrell on the 13th. Not having received a reply to his letter, Mr. Nicolosi filed answer to the suit on April 17th, denying generally and specially the allegations of the petition. After issue thus joined, the case was set for trial, taken up, tried, evidence adduced, and judgment was rendered for plaintiff and against Mrs. Beulah Richards Hart, in rem, only, for the amount sued for with recognition of plaintiff’s special mortgage on the property described *585 therein and ordering the same sold to satisfy plaintiff’s debt.

This judgment is attacked by Mrs. Lotz on the ground that the mortgage debtor was dead at the time these proceedings were had and for that reason plaintiff should have proceeded against Mrs. Neely, her sole heir.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 155, 176 La. 579, 1933 La. LEXIS 1574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lotz-v-iberville-bank-trust-co-la-1933.