Louisiana Mortg. Corporation v. Pickens

182 So. 385, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 334
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1938
DocketNo. 1869.
StatusPublished

This text of 182 So. 385 (Louisiana Mortg. Corporation v. Pickens) 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
Louisiana Mortg. Corporation v. Pickens, 182 So. 385, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 334 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

On October 3, 1932, the Virginia-Carolina Chemical Corporation secured a judgment against the plaintiff, the Louisiana Mortgage Corporation, Inc., for $1,422.25, interest and attorneys fees. At that time Thomas G. Trotti, one. of the defendants here, was the president and manager of the plaintiff corporation. On April 24, 1933, Trotti was ousted by the directors of said corporation as president and manager, but he remained as a director. Two days later, a writ of execution issued on the judgment of. the Virginia-Carolina Chemical Corporation, and several notes belonging to plaintiff corporation were seized and sold to satisfy the judgment. Among the assets so seized and sold, was a mortgage note executed .by the defendant, Willie Pickens, in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $680.53, dated April 24, 1928, payable on demand, with interest and attorneys fees.

It is alleged by the plaintiff in this suit, and the proof shows, that the Virginia-Carolina Corporation, the judgment creditor of plaintiff, was enabled to locate, seize and sell these assets of plaintiff because of the information and assistance given by Trotti to the attorneys of the judgment creditor. The evidence further shows that, as a consideration for thus divulging to the attorneys of the judgment creditor, the whereabouts of the assets of plaintiff corporation, Trotti was to receive 25% of the amount realized on the judgment. In payment of this commission, the judgment creditor, which had become the purchaser of the Pickens note at sheriff sale, assigned and transferred to Trotti this note on the 23d day of September, 1933.

Trotti held this Pickens note and collected small amounts thereon until June 27, 1934, at which time he secured a loan from Wilmer J. Boudreaux, another defendant in this suit, for $325 for which amount Trotti executed his note in favor of Boudreaux, payable six months after date, and as security for the payment of the note, Trotti pledged to Boudreaux the Pickens note, and another small note. At the time that the Pickens note was pledged to Boudreaux by Trotti, there was a balance due thereon of $475.61.

After Trotti’s note to Boudreaux came due, the latter advertised for sale the pledged Pickens note under a clause in the Trotti note authorizing this procedure in default of payment, and at the private sale of the pledged note, Boudreaux became the purchaser. In this suit, plaintiff seeks to be declared the owner 'of this note on the ground that it was illegally acquired by Trotti in an attempt on his part to derive a secret profit out of the assets of the corporation of which he was an officer by accepting this Pickens note as his individual profit for divulging the where *387 abouts of the assets of the corporation to a judgment creditor, the .result of the illegal transaction giving Trotti a profit out of the assets of the corporation not shared by the other stockholders. Plaintiff also seeks to recover possession of the note from Boudreaux on the ground that he acquired same in bad faith and after maturity, of the note, and prays for a judgment against Trotti and Boudreaux for the respective amounts that they collected on the note while same was in their possession. Judgment was also prayed for against Pickens for the balance due on the note, and Trotti having subsequently gone into bankruptcy, his trustee was also made a party. Pickens having died before the suit was filed, no appearance was made for him. Neither did the trustee appear. The suit is therefore against Trotti and Boudreaux.

Both of these defendants filed exceptions of no cause or ■ right of action, the one filed by Boudreaux being sustained. Plaintiff took an appeal from the judgment which . sustained the exception, and this court reversed the judgment and remanded the case. 167 So. 914. After the remand of the case, it was tried on the answer filed by Trotti and Boudreaux, and the trial resulted in a dismissal of the suit as to both of these defendants. The case is again before us on an appeal taken by the plaintiff.

There are three principal issues presented by the facts and the pleadings in the case: (1) Whether or not Trotti acquired the Pickens note by illegal practices and by perpetrating a fraud on plaintiff corporation as an officer thereof; (2) if Trotti did acquire the note illegally as to plaintiff’s rights therein, the amount collected by him on the note during the time it was in his possession; and (3) whether or not Boudreaux came into possession of this Pickens note when he took it in pledge without any knowledge of the methods used by Trotti in acquiring it and as a holder in due course for value.

(1) Defendant Trotti admits either in his answer or in his testimony that he acquired the Pickens note from the judgment creditor of plaintiff in payment of the commission of 25% which he was to receive for assisting the creditor in locating and seizing the assets of the plaintiff corporation in satisfaction of the judgment. But ha contends that at the time he entered into this arrangement to divulge the assets of the corporation to the creditor for a commission of 25% on the amount realized, he had been ousted as the president of the corporation. However, he admits that he was still a director in the corporation, and actually had charge and possession of these notes and other assets of the corporation at the time -of the seizure.

There was nothing illegal or improper in the action of Trotti in informing the judgment creditor of his corporation as to the location and nature of the assets of the corporation, nor .in turning over to the sheriff these assets under the writ of execution held by the sheriff. He could have been forced to do this by proper legal proceedings. But it was clearly a breach of the duty that he owed the corporation and its stockholders for him to profit individually and personally by this transaction kept secret from the other officers and stockholders and in which profit they did not share. This is what we held when-the case was previously before us. See 167 So. 914, supra. Therefore, when Trotti acquired this note, he acquired it for the benefit of the plaintiff corporation, and as between plaintiff and Trotti, the latter held the note from September 23, 1933 to June 27, 1934, as' the property of the plaintiff, and any and all amounts collected, by him on the note during that time inured to the benefit of the plaintiff.

(2) The next question to determine is the amount collected by Trotti on the note during the time he held it. The endorsements on the back of this note show that four payments were made on it during the time Trotti had possession of it. The first shows the payment of interest on December 5, 1933 to February 10, 1933, but the amount of interest then paid is not given. The prior endorsement shows interest paid to October 18, 1932, and the balance then due on the principal as $475.-61. Obviously, if the interest paid to Trotti on December 5, 1933 covered the interest from October 18, 1932 to February 10, 1933, at 8%, he collected at that time between eleven • and twelve dollars. The endorsements on the note show three other payments of $15 each, applied on the principal and the interest, while Trotti had the note in his possession; viz., March 18th and April 18th, and May 23d, 1934. This would make a total paid on the note while Trotti had it in his possession of from $56 to $57.

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Related

Louisiana Mortg. Corporation v. Pickens
167 So. 914 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 385, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-mortg-corporation-v-pickens-lactapp-1938.