Mahayna, Inc. v. Poydras Center Assoc.

693 So. 2d 355, 1997 WL 216681
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1997
Docket96-CA-2089
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 693 So. 2d 355 (Mahayna, Inc. v. Poydras Center Assoc.) 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
Mahayna, Inc. v. Poydras Center Assoc., 693 So. 2d 355, 1997 WL 216681 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

693 So.2d 355 (1997)

MAHAYNA, INC.
v.
POYDRAS CENTER ASSOCIATES, a Louisiana Joint Venture.

No. 96-CA-2089.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

April 30, 1997.
Rehearing Denied May 30, 1997.

*356 F. Frank Fontenot, Mark P. Dauer, Milling, Benson, Woodward, Hillyer, Pierson & Miller, L.L.P., New Orleans, for Appellant.

Karen H. Freese, Stone, Pigman, Walther Wittmann & Hutchinson, Baton Rouge, for Appellee.

Mark P. Folse, Baton Rouge, Amicus Curiae.

Before SCHOTT, C.J., and KLEES and ARMSTRONG, JJ.

SCHOTT, Chief Judge.

This dispute is between two creditors of Mahayna, Inc. over the proceeds of a judgment taken against Poydras Center Associates. The creditors are Whitney National Bank and Haywilk Galvanizing, Inc.. Whitney's claim is based upon its seizure of the proceeds under a writ of fieri facis. Haywilk's claim is based upon an instrument it alleges was a partial assignment of the proceeds by Mahayna. From a judgment in favor of Haywilk, Whitney has appealed. We reverse.

C. Peck Hayne owned fifty per-cent of the stock in Mahayna. In 1990 both Hayne and Mahayna were in financial trouble. In order to alleviate Mahayna's cash shortage, Hayne arranged a loan for Mahayna from Haywilk. Hayne and his brother each owned forty percent of the stock in Haywilk. Hayne was also an individual creditor of Mahayna. In the meantime, Hayne owed Whitney over one million dollars and had guaranteed loans of over another million dollars made by Whitney to Mahayna. On August 16, 1990, an agreement was confected among Mahayna, Hayne, and Haywilk.

The agreement is clear and unambiguous so that the trial court properly excluded the testimony of Hayne's brother, Frank, which Haywilk proffered to explain the agreement. The agreement consisted of a stock pledge and an assignment by Mahayna of its rights of recovery in a suit Mahayna filed in Civil District Court against Poydras Center Associates.

The agreement recites that Haywilk had loaned Hayne $150,000.00 and had taken notes for this amount which carried ten per cent interest until paid. It further recites that this loan to Hayne was for the benefit of Mahayna. The agreement begins with several paragraphs concerning the stock pledge by Mahayna as security for Haywilk's loan to Hayne. The portion of the agreement concerning the stock pledge is not at issue in this case. The problem is with the assignment. Immediately following the paragraphs concerning the stock pledge, the agreement provides:

AND AS ADDITIONAL SECURITY for the said loan, Mahayna, Inc. does acknowledge that it will benefit by borrowing from C. Peck Hayne the above specified funds under loan to him by Lender [Haywilk]; and in light of this and other good and valuable consideration, it does by these presents pledge and or assign, transfer, set over, and deliver unto said Lender, as security for the loans aforesaid, any and all sum or sums now due or owing said assignor, and all claims, demands and cause or causes of action of whatever kind and nature, which said assignor [Mahayna, Inc.] has or now has or may have against Poydras Center as now being asserted ... And, secondly, Mahayna, Inc. does by these presents pledge and/or assign, on a subordinate and secondary basis the said rights against Poydras Center to Borrower C. Peck Hayne for credit against the sums loaned or advanced by him to both Mahayna, Inc. and Today's Catch, Inc.
AND the said assignor hereby authorizes and directs Poydras Center ... with regard to any payments due and owing or *357 to become due and owing to assignor, that the same be made to Lender Haywilk ... which is hereby empowered to ask, demand, and continue prosecution of suit for collect, receipt, compound and give acquittance for the said claim ... (it being understood and agreed by Lender that in the event of collection by it of any sums in excess of the amounts due it by Borrower [Hayne] then said funds shall be subject to the successive assignment to C. Peck Hayne described above and shall be paid to him.)

Mahayna filed its suit against Poydras Center Associates in 1989. Mahayna assigned its interest in the suit to Haywilk in August 1990. In May 1992 Whitney seized Mahayna's interest in the suit pursuant to a writ of fieri facias. In June 1993 Haywilk intervened in the lawsuit and this constituted the first notice of the assignment to Poydras. After Mahayna obtained a judgment against Poydras in the trial court, Poydras appealed to this court which amended the amount of the judgment to $176, 411. Mahayna, Inc. v. Poydras Center Associates, (La.App. 4th Cir. 1995). That judgment became final when the Supreme Court denied writs on March 22, 1996. Poydras deposited into the registry of the court the amount due under the judgment leaving Whitney and Haywilk to assert their claims.

Whitney's first argument is that Haywilk acquired only a security interest in the lawsuit which was unperfected at the time of Whitney's seizure because Haywilk failed to file a financing statement as required by LSA-R.S. 10:9-302 until October, 1994. Haywilk argues that the agreement was not a pledge or security device but was a partial assignment of the judgment proceeds.

A pledge differs from an assignment in that an assignment vests title in the transferee. Simply because the word "pledge" is used in the agreement, the security transaction is not invalid as an assignment. First National Bank of Commerce v. Hibernia National Bank, 427 So.2d 569, 573 (La.App. 4th Cir.1983), citing American Bank & Trust Co. v. Louisiana Sav. Association, 386 So.2d 96, (La.App. 3rd Cir.1980). With an assignment, the transferee has the present and immediate right to pursue the underlying judgment and receive and apply funds to the indebtedness contemporaneously with the signing of the agreement; whereas with a pledge, the pledgee has to wait until the loan goes unpaid or matures in order to collect. First National Bank citing Dauzat v. Simmesport State Bank, 167 So.2d 681 (La.App. 3rd Cir. 1964).

In Dauzat, Gremillion financed a loan from Simmesport State Bank by assigning to the bank all payments he would receive from Atlas under a contract. Plaintiff, Dauzat, was paid with a check by Gremillion and deposited it with the bank for collection. The bank applied all money paid by Atlas to the balance of Gremillion's bank loan and none toward Dauzat's check. The court held that although the bank had obtained an assignment as security for the loan, the assignment nonetheless transferred ownership of the Atlas funds paid to the bank until Gremillion's indebtedness would be satisfied. The court found that the transaction was a valid assignment and transfer of ownership even though it was conditioned upon Gremillion not having repaid his loan prior to the payment of funds due Gremillion by Atlas to the bank. The court held that a contract of security may be in the form of a sale.

In Dupuis v. Faulk, 609 So.2d 1190 (La. App. 3rd Cir. 1992), conflicting claims were made for proceeds of a lawsuit brought by Earl Dupuis and his wife Dawn. One of the claimants, Broussard, relied upon an assignment to him by Dupuis. The assignment was made in connection with a loan by Broussard to Dupuis. Dawn Dupuis argued that her writ in assertion of her claim for past due child support payments had precedence over Broussard's assignment because the assignment had not been filed in the conveyance or mortgage records as required by R.S. 10:9-102 and was thus an unperfected security interest.

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Bluebook (online)
693 So. 2d 355, 1997 WL 216681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahayna-inc-v-poydras-center-assoc-lactapp-1997.