Midland Discount Company v. Robichaux
This text of 184 So. 2d 93 (Midland Discount Company v. Robichaux) 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.
Opinion
MIDLAND DISCOUNT COMPANY, Inc.
v.
Alfred ROBICHAUX and Mrs. Ruth Robichaux.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*94 No appearance for plaintiff-appellee.
Garrett & Carl, Clifton S. Carl, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants.
Before REGAN, SAMUEL and HALL, JJ.
SAMUEL, Judge.
This is a suit for $1,687.20, the alleged balance due on a promissory note executed by the defendants on October 26, 1962, together with 8% interest from the maturity of the note until paid and 20% attorney's fees, both as provided in the note, and for all costs. Defendants, husband and wife, answered in the form of a general denial and affirmatively alleged that any indebtedness due by them on the note had been discharged in bankruptcy. Thereafter plaintiff contended it had accepted the note in reliance upon a materially false financial statement given by the defendants in writing with intent to deceive and therefore the discharge in bankruptcy did not release defendants from the obligation.
After trial there was judgment in favor of plaintiff as prayed. Defendants have appealed therefrom. In this court they contend: (1) plaintiff failed to bear its burden of proof in any respect as to the defendant-wife; (2) plaintiff failed to bear its burden of proving fraud and intent as to the defendant-husband; and (3) alternatively, even if plaintiff has proved fraud and intent, it has failed to prove reliance upon the financial statement.
Plaintiff is a moneylender and the note in suit represents a loan made by it to the defendants for the purpose of consolidating other loans. Mr. Robichaux first applied for the loan by telephone. Later he had other telephone conversations with plaintiff's manager and twice visited plaintiff's office talking with plaintiff's manager there. During these conversations, and particularly during the first one by telephone, he was required by the manager to state all of his outstanding obligations. He gave four such obligations, all to finance companies, in the total amount of approximately $900.00. Plaintiff checked Mr. Robichaux's credit through its loan exchange, which was concerned only with finance companies, and discovered he had *95 not disclosed two such companies to which he was indebted, Asher-Young in the amount of $649.41 and American Thrift in the amount of $229.00.
The manager then contacted Mr. Robichaux about the two obligations he had failed to disclose. Robichaux informed the manager he did not want to pay Asher-Young and that he was going to pay American Thrift himself. The manager was satisfied with this information and made no further check into Mr. Robichaux's financial condition. The loan was made and completed in one transaction. At that time both Mr. and Mrs. Robichaux executed the note and signed a chattel mortgage covering furniture and other household items. In addition, Mr. Robichaux filled in the handwritten portions of, and both defendants signed, a document marked "AFFIDAVIT". That document, which is the instrument plaintiff has contended is a materially false financial statement, is reproduced below as it appears in the record.
Mrs. Robichaux talked to no one connected with the plaintiff. She simply signed the documents when they were presented to her. She was a housewife who otherwise was unemployed and had no income or separate estate of her own.
The amount borrowed was $1,824.00. The note in suit was for that amount and was payable in 24 monthly installments of $76.00 each. After it had been signed plaintiff paid the balances due to the four finance companies about which Mr. Robichaux *96 had informed them and to a fifth company, American Thrift, all in the total amount of $1,134.30. The balance of the face amount of the note consisted of a $36.48 life insurance premium and plaintiff's "Discount Charge" in the amount of $653.72.
The discharge in bankruptcy was introduced in evidence by the defendants. It is regular in form and was not objected to or contested by the plaintiff. Plaintiff then proved that, in addition to the obligations Mr. Robichaux originally had informed plaintiff he owed to the four finance companies, and in addition to the Asher-Young and American Thrift debts, at the time the application and the loan were made, Mr. Robichaux was obligated as follows: (1) a vendor's lien and mortgage note held by Hibernia Homestead and signed by Mr. Robichaux and his two brothers with a balance of $4,341.01; (2) a mortgage note held by Alfonse Mortgage Company, also signed by Mr. Robichaux and his two brothers with a balance of $3,846.66; (3) a balance of $200.00 due to Tulane Pay Plan on a note signed by Mr. Robichaux, one of his brothers and another man; (4) a balance of $836.35 due to C.H.F. Finance Company on a note also signed by Mr. Robichaux, one of his brothers and another man; (5) Zale's Jewelers, $163.81; (6) Dailey Style Shop, $93.80; (7) Robbins Company, $38.68; and (8) Krauss Company, $57.00.
Under the pertinent provisions of Section 17 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 35(a) (2), a discharge in bankruptcy does not release a bankrupt from those provable debts which are liabilities for obtaining money "* * * in reliance upon a materially false statement in writing respecting his financial condition made or published or caused to be made or published in any manner whatsoever with intent to deceive, * * *." But before those pertinent provisions of Section 17 can prevent the bankrupt from being released by the discharge in bankruptcy, it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that: (1) plaintiff advanced the loan in reliance upon a written financial statement made by the defendant; (2) the statement was materially false; and (3) the financial statement was made or caused to be made by the defendants with intent to deceive. See Cash Finance Service, Inc. v. Haisch, La.App., 173 So.2d 851; Friendly Finance Discount Corporation v. Hayden, La.App., 171 So.2d 717; Excel Finance Baronne, Inc. v. Abadie, La.App., 152 So.2d 822; Earl Staehle Finance, Inc. v. Brooks, La. App., 144 So.2d 155; DeLatour v. Lala, 15 La.App. 276, 131 So. 211.
We are satisfied that the judgment appealed from is erroneous insofar as it applies to Mrs. Robichaux. Plaintiff's manager testified the loan was made in reliance on the income of Mr. Robichaux and his ability to pay, taking into consideration his other obligations. No reliance was placed on Mrs. Robichaux's ability to pay; she had no income and no separate estate. Since there was no reliance upon Mrs. Robichaux's ability to pay the loan, it follows the plaintiff did not rely on the statement insofar as she was concerned. And the record fails to establish she knew, or should have known, that the affidavit she signed was false in any respect.
In addition, Mrs. Robichaux concealed none of her personal obligations from the plaintiff. There is no proof that she had any such obligations. As to her the written statement is not materially false; it did not fail to include any debt of hers. The eight above listed debts proved by plaintiff and relied upon by it to show that the statement was materially false were debts of Mr. Robichaux and not of Mrs. Robichaux. The first four of those as listed, due to Hibernia Homestead, Alfonse Mortgage Company, Tulane Pay Plan and C.H.F. Finance Company, are obligations due on notes. Mrs. Robichaux was not liable thereon because she had not signed any of those notes. LSA-R.S. 7:18; Personal Finance, Inc. v. Simms, La.App., 123 *97 So.2d 646.
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184 So. 2d 93, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midland-discount-company-v-robichaux-lactapp-1966.