Monroe Automobile & Supply Co. v. Cole

6 La. App. 337, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 447
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1927
DocketNo. 2161
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 6 La. App. 337 (Monroe Automobile & Supply Co. v. Cole) 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
Monroe Automobile & Supply Co. v. Cole, 6 La. App. 337, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 447 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff brought this suit against defendant, I. C. Cole, on promissory notes executed by him aggregating $846.33, representing the balance due on the purcháse price of two Milwaukee Gas Stations and one Steel Gasoline Tank sold to Cole to be used in the construction of a filling station and garage which Cole was building at Coushatta, Louisiana.

Under proper allegations plaintiff was granted writs of sequestration and attachment, ordering the sheriff to sequester the articles sold and to attach other property owned by Cole.

Plaintiff asked for judgment on the notes and for recognition of its vendor’s privilege on the chattels sold.

W. W. Gahagan and W. T. Wilkinson separately intervened in the suit, alleging that they were mortgage creditors of Cole to an amount far exceeding the amount of plaintiff’s claim, and opposed plaintiff’s privilege on the ground that the articles sold by plaintiff to Cole had become immovable by destination and by nature and that plaintiff’s privilege thereon had become extinguished.

Upon trial the District Court granted judgment for plaintiff against Cole in the full amount sued for, but denied its claim for recognition of its privilege on the articles sold, and recognized the intervenors’ [339]*339privilege as mortgage creditors upon said property to be superior in rank to any rights held by plaintiff. :

The court also sustained the writs of attachment and sequestration.

Plaintiff alone appealed.

STATEMENT' OP THE PACTS

• In the early part of the year 1923 the defendant, Cole, erected a brick garage and in connection therewith and as a part thereof a filling station.

The garage building proper is back some thirty or forty feet from the street, the filling station occupying the space between it and the street.

Cole purchased from plaintiff a large' gasoline tank, about twenty-eight by thirty feet long and seven or eight feet in diameter, with a capacity of ten thousand five hundred gallons, together with two gas stations, all to be used as a part of the filling station outfit.

The gasoline tank was buried underneath the ground to the depth of about two feet under the surface and, in order to hold it in place, was set in concrete. It was not surrounded by concrete along its entire length but was sq encased for some four or five feet in two places.

The tank was sunk about six feet from the footing of the wall of the garage proper and is under what is called the driveway, which consists, as we understand the testimony, of all the space between the garage building proper and the street.

This entire space called the driveway, with dimensions of thirty by forty feet, underneath which the tank is buried, is covered over with reinforced concrete seven inches thick.

The gas stations are set in concrete in the driveway and are connected by pipes with air pumps which are buried along with the gasoline tank under the concrete surface.

Over this driveway and the gas station there is a shed or covering supported by brick columns, which shed extends from' the garage building proper to the edge of the sidewalk.

The building of the garage and shed, the placing of the gas tank and gas station and the covering of the driveway with concrete was all done at one and the same time and as a part of the same enterprise.

The plaintiff did not record its contract of sale in order to preserve its vendor’s privilege, nor did it record its claim as furnisher of supplies under the building contract laws of the state.

It is • admitted that the mortgage given by I. C. Cole, the defendant, to W. T. Wilkinson, one of the intervenors, covering the lot o.f ground on which the filling station and garage are situated, together with all the improvements and appurtenances thereunto belonging, was executed, filed and recorded prior to the time that the tank and gas stations were placed on the property and put in operation; and further admitted that the vendor of the' tank and gas stations knew at the time they were sold that they were to be placed in a new building, that was covered by the mortgages of both intervenors.

[340]*340The mortgage held hy the intervenor, Gahagan, was executed and recorded subsequent to the sale by plaintiff to Cole and subsequent to the date on which the property was put into the building, but it is admitted that Gahagan acquired the note in good faith prior to the filing of the suit by plaintiff.

OPINION

The curator ad hoc appointed to represent Cole did not appeal from the judgment rendered against him. However, counsel for plaintiff concede that the court erred in granting a personal judgment against Cole. Cole was an absentee and was brought into court through attachment proceedings. The judgment against him is binding in rem only and will have to be amended in that respect.

The real contest is between the plaintiff and the intervening mortgage creditors, and involves the question whether the plaintiff, under the facts and .circumstances disclosed, has lost its privilege on the property which it sold to Cole.

Counsel for plaintiff, in brief, state:

“We dq not contend for a single moment that the gas stations and tank were not attached permanently, and did not become immovables by destination; but hardly anything is better settled than our jurisprudence that a vendor’s privilege upon movables is not lost by their becoming immovables by destination.”

And they cite a long list of authorities in support of that contention.

' 'The real question in this case, however, is not whether the movables have become immovables by destination, but whether they have become merged into the immovable and have become so far a part of it as to lose entirely the character of movables.

If so, the vendor has unqtiestionably lost its right to assert its privilege thereon as against creditors who hold claims secured by mortgage on the realty.

No principle of law is more firmly established in our jurisprudence than that movables may, under some circumstances, become part of the realty in connection with which they were used and become by such use immovable, insofar as the vendor’s right to assert a privilege thereon is concerned, even though such movables are not so broken up and are not so merged into the realty as to lose entirely their identity. •

Swoop vs. Martin (Sarpy, Intervenor, 110 La. 237, 34 South. 426.

Hibernia Bank & Trust Co. vs. C. F. Knoll Planting & Manufacturing Co. (Murphy, Intervenor), 133 La. 697 (714), 63 South. 288.

Same case, 133 La. 242, 62 South. 663.

In re: Receivership of Augusta Sugar Co., Ltd. (Payne & Joubert M. & P. Co., Intervenors), 134 La. 971, 64 South. 870.

The question, whether a movable has lost its identity as such as regards the vendor’s right to assert his privilege depends, of course, upon circumstances.

A chattel need not be so broken up or so merged into the realty that it cannot be identified, in order that it may lose its character as a movable and may become realty insofar as the vendor’s right to claim his privilege is concerned. Doors, window sash and blinds could easily be [341]

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Bluebook (online)
6 La. App. 337, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-automobile-supply-co-v-cole-lactapp-1927.