Meriwether v. New Orleans Real Estate Board

162 So. 208, 182 La. 649, 1935 La. LEXIS 1641
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1935
DocketNo. 33131.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 So. 208 (Meriwether v. New Orleans Real Estate Board) 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
Meriwether v. New Orleans Real Estate Board, 162 So. 208, 182 La. 649, 1935 La. LEXIS 1641 (La. 1935).

Opinions

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a petition of intervention in a con-, test between two transferees of mortgage notes of the same series, secured by a mortgage on certain real estate, over the proceeds of the sale of the property through foreclosure proceedings; the amount thereof being insufficient to pay both claims.

Plaintiff contends that intervener purchased the first six notes of the series, after their maturity, from their common transferor, and therefore took them subject to the same defense as could be urged against him, i. e., that transferor was estopped to compete in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property against his transferee, plaintiff herein, citing sections 52, 57 and 58 of-Act No. 64 of 1904, generally known as the Negotiable Instrument Law, and the case of Amite Bank & Trust Company v. *651 Standard Box & Veneer Co., Inc., 177 La. 954, 149 So. 532.

Intervener argues that the evidence shows that the notes were purchased by it for value, before maturity; that they were not bought from a common transferor, but a third party; that the evidence is insufficient to show that the plaintiff is a bona fide holder for value, in due course, of the 42 notes which he purchased; and that the funds should be prorated between them.

Assuming that plaintiff purchased its notes from the same transferor before the intervener did, and that plaintiff is a bona fide holder in due course, for value, and that intervener purchased his notes after their maturity, a view most favorable to the plaintiff, but without deciding these issues concerning which we express no opinion, we shall pass to a consideration of the question of whether or not intervener is entitled to share in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale of the property.

In the case of Begnaud v. Roy, 21 La. Ann. 624, the court said:

“The defendant, who is the holder and owner of two of a series of notes secured by a mortgage, obtained an order of seizure and sale against the property mortgaged.
“Before the sale, the plaintiff, who holds another of the notes secured by the same mortgage, filed a third opposition, claiming the right to be paid by preference out of the proceeds of the sale of the property mortgaged, because she acquired her note before its maturity, and that the defendant acquired his notes subsequently and after their maturity.
“There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff ordering the sheriff to pay her the amount of her claim by preference, and the defendant has appealed.
“We had occasion to examine this question recently, and we held that the transferees of portions of a mortgage debt are entitled to be paid, pro rata, out of the proceeds of the property mortgaged without regard to the time when they were transferred. We adhere to that position. See Perot v. Levasseur, 21 La. Ann. 529.” (Italics ours.)

In the case of Reine v. Jack, 31 La. Ann. 859, the court said:

“The fact that the person holding a series of mortgage notes after transferrifig some of them can not be allowed, in the event of the inadequacy of the proceeds, to compete in the distribution with the person holding the transferred notes, is not the measure of the rights of transferees, inter sese. Adams v. Lear, 3 La. Ann. 144; Perot v. Levasseur, 21 La. Ann. 529. Nor do we think the fact that one of the holders acquired after maturity makes his position an exceptional one, as we consider to have been correctly decided in Perot vs. Levasseur. The equitable or 'quasi equitable estoppel applied to one who had transferred in Salzman v. His Creditors, 2 Rob. [241] 243, is in no sense an *653 equity against the note in the hands of a transferree; nor is such transferree subject as the holder of, the note to the estoppel, which, as applied in the Salzman and other cases, is not a defense to the note, but simply an estoppel, good against a transferrer when he seeks to compete with his transferree, but not applicable to transferees between themselves.” (Italics ours.)

In Leonard v. Brooks, 158 La. 1032, 1039, 105 So. 54, 56, we said:

“The first and general principle of law that governs this case is that the holders of several promissory notes of one or the same series, secured by the same mortgage or lien hre on equal footing, and are entitled to share equally or ratably in a distribution of the proceeds of a sale of the property, if, in a foreclosure of the mortgage or lien, the proceeds be not sufficient to pay all of the notes. Florance v. Orleans Nav. Co., 1 Rob. 224; Petrovic v. Hyde, 16 La. [223] 225; Adams v. Lear, 3 La. Ann. 144; Ventress v. His Creditors, 20 La. Ann. [359] 361; Perot v. Levasseur, 21 La. Ann. 531; Begnaud v. Roy, 21 La. Ann. 624; Howard v. Schmidt, 29 La. Ann. [129] 130; Mechanics’ Building Ass’n v. Ferguson, 29 La. Ann. [548] 550; Reine v. Jack, 31 La. Ann. [859] 860.
“ ‘Where a mortgagee transfers to different persons portions of the mortgage debt, they will be entitled to payment, pro rata, out of the property mortgaged; no preference results from any difference in the dates of the transfers.’ Adams v. Lear, 3 La. Ann. 144; Ventress v. His Creditors, 20 La. Ann. [359] 361; Perot v. Levasseur, 21 La. Ann. 531; Reine v. Jack, 31 La. Ann. [859]. 860.
“Therefore, a person who acquires from the original mortgagee a mortgage note belonging to a series of notes secured by the same mortgage or lien has no right to assume that his note will be paid in preference to the remaining notes.”

See, also, Chatten v. Knoxville Trust Co., 154 Tenn. 345, 289 S. W. 536, 50 A. L. R. page 543, and Herman v. Pfister, 2 La. 455, 459.

The jurisprudence is well settled that, if the holder of a series of mortgage notes secured by mortgage on certain real estate sells some of them and retains the others, and subsequently the property securing all of the notes is sold at foreclosure and fails to bring sufficient money to pay all of the notes, that the vendor of the notes cannot compete with his vendee in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale. Salzman v. His Creditors, 2 Rob. 241; Ventress v. His Creditors, 20 La. Ann. 359; Barkdull v. Herwig, 30 La. Ann. 618; Abney v. Walmsley, 33 La. Ann. 589; Citizens’ Bank v. Maureau, 37 La. Ann. 857, 864; Butler v. Clarke, 44 La. Ann. 148, 10 So. 499; State Nat. Bank v. Bryant & Mathers, 49 La. Ann. 467, 478, 22 So. 89.

The above cases, however, are not apposite in the instan* case, because this is *655 a controversy between transferees or vendees and not a contest between the vendor or transferor and his vendee or transferee. The theory on which the transferor is prevented from participating in the proceeds against his transferee is based upon an equitable estoppel. The courts have declared that it is inequitable- for a transferor to compete with his transferee for the proceeds of the sale when that amount is inadequate to pay both.

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162 So. 208, 182 La. 649, 1935 La. LEXIS 1641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meriwether-v-new-orleans-real-estate-board-la-1935.