Mills' Succession v. Manasseh

147 So. 77, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1594
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1933
DocketNo. 4514.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 147 So. 77 (Mills' Succession v. Manasseh) 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
Mills' Succession v. Manasseh, 147 So. 77, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1594 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

On January 17, 1927, Oscar G. Manasseh, a defendant, executed a promissory note for $1,742.67, payable to his own order and by him indorsed, due on or before three years from da'te, with 7 per cent, per annum interest from date. There is a stipulation in the note that payments thereon shall be at the rate of $20 per month beginning one month from its date. To secure payment of this note with 10 per cent, attorney's fees, the maker, on the date of note, by authentic act, specially mortgaged and hypothecated certain real estate in the city of Shreveport. Thereafter, to wit, September 28, 1927, he sold the mortgaged property to J. S. Waldron, defendant, who, according to the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, assumed the balance due on the note. The deed from Manasseh to Waldron was not offered or filed in evidence, and we are left to some extent to conjecture as to the exact terms of the assumption referred to. In connection with the* transaction between Manasseh and Waldron, the latter did sign said mortgage note of the former on its face, under the signature of the original maker. This note, immediately after its execution by Manasseh, was acquired by Mrs. Penelope Ardis Mills. Payments thereon were regularly made to February 2, 1931, reducing the principal to $1,-242.79.

This suit was instituted by the executor of the succession of Mrs. Penelope Ardis Mills against both Manasseh and Waldron to recover judgment against them in solido for the balance due on said note with recognition of the special mortgage securing its payment. It is alleged in the petition that ’ “ * ⅜ ⅜ Oscar Manasseh sold and conveyed said property to defendant, J. S. Waldron, who expressly assumed the payment of the balance due under this mortgage, together with all other obligations thereunder, and said deed which is recorded in Book 243, page 673, is made a part hereof by reference.”

Waldron did not answer the suit, and issue was joined as to him by judgment by default. Manasseh answered. 1-Ie admits the balance due on the note to be the amount sued for and that the representative of Mrs. Mills’ succession is holder thereof. He avers that on September 28,1927, he sold said property to J. S. Waldron, who, at the request of W. W. Newcomb, duly authorized agent of the late Mrs. Mills, assumed said mortgage and signed the said note, which had originally been executed by him (said Manasseh), and thereby became the primary obligor thereon, that, after purchasing the property, .Waldron *78 made all the monthly payments on the note until it matured by its own terms; that he (Manasseh) was not notified of the nonpayment of the note at its maturity, and no demand was made on him or Waldron then to pay the note in full, but payments thereafter were accepted from Waldron; that said Wal-dron discontinued making monthly payments on the note after having been granted extensions from time to time by said Newcomb, agent of Mrs. Mills; that said agent of Mrs. Mills, holder of the note, in March, 1931, informed Waldron that he would not press collection thereof so long as he kept up the payments on a first mortgage against the property held by a building and loan association in Shreveport.

Defendant further alleges that, “ ⅜ * * after the assumption by the said 3. S. Wal-dron of the payment of said note and mortgage, that your defendant, Oscar G. Manasseh, became secondarily liable thereon and that he was entitled to demand and notice when the said note was not paid at its maturity on September 28th, 1930, and that the extensions which were granted the said J. S. Waldron, as above set forth, were granted the said J. S. Waldron without the knowledge or consent of your defendant, Oscar G. Manasseh and that he was thereby released from any obligations under the said note or mortgage.”

Defendant further avers that since the maturity of the note sued on property values in the city of Shreveport have declined materially, and that the failure of Mrs. Mills to notify him of Waldron’s default in payment of the note at maturity has prejudiced him, in that the mortgaged property has greatiy depreciated in value, and interest has accumulated; that, had he been called upon to pay the note at maturity, he could have easily done so.

The lower court rejected plaintiff’s demands against Manasseh, but gave judgment against Waldron as prayed for. Plaintiff appealed.

The gravamen of the defense is reflected from that portion of the answer quoted above. If, after Waldron purchased the property from Manasseh on September 28,1930, Manasseh’s liability to Mrs. Mills on the note was reduced to a secondary obligation, then his position that he was entitled to notice of nonpayment thereof by Waldron, and demand for payment, is well taken, for these requirements are not waived in the note or the mortgage securing its payment; and, if his liability became secondary in the manner and for the reasons by him assigned, any definite extension of time of payment of the note released him.

Manasseh does not contend that he was automatically released from liability on the note because Waldron signed it and assumed the mortgage securing its payment, nor because Mrs. Mills accepted payments thereon from Waldron after September 28, 1927, but does contend that, because of these facts, a transition resulted whereby his responsibility shifted from that of a primary obligor to that of a secondary obligor, and that this secondary liability has been destroyed because the note has been extended without his consent or sanction, and because he was not notified of Waldron’s default on the note, and no payment from him demanded, when it matured.

He relies upon the decision in Isaacs et al. v. Van Hoose, 171 La. 670, 131 So. 845, 847, as sustaining his contention of secondary responsibility after Waldron purchased the property. We do not think this case supports the contention, but, on the contrary, sustains the proposition that Waldron, when he signed Manasseh’s note and assumed the mortgage, became a primary obligor, and in solido bound with Manasseh for payment of the note. His assumption did not affect the status of Manasseh as maker. This conclusion is supported by the following excerpts from that opinion:

“It is conceded that when the Taylors assumed the payment of the mortgage debt they became primary obligors and bound themselves in solido with the maker of the notes. ⅞ * *
“The Taylors therefore were not only primary obligors in solido with Van Hoose for the payment of the debt to the holders of the notes, but they were likewise debtors of Van Hoose for the unpaid portion of the price which they agreed to pay in assuming the debt due to the plaintiffs.”

The outstanding mortgage note of Manasseh, when assumed by Waldron, became a part of the purchase price of the sale between them, and both became primarily and solidarily responsible for its payment in the hands of Mrs. Mills, and, in addition, at same time, Waldron became a debtor of Manasseh to that extent. Schiro v. Fallo, 13 La. App. 369, 127 So. 113; People’s Bank v. Shreveport I. &. B. Co., 142 La. 802, 77 So. 636; Rhys v. Moody, 163 La. 1039, 113 So. 367; Simon v. McMeel, 167 La. 243, 119 So. 35; Isaacs et al. v. Van Hoose, 171 La. 681, 131 So. 845; Civ. Code, arts. 2091, 2092.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 77, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-succession-v-manasseh-lactapp-1933.