Muse v. Hill

42 So. 2d 919, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 661
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 25, 1949
DocketNo. 3165.
StatusPublished

This text of 42 So. 2d 919 (Muse v. Hill) 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
Muse v. Hill, 42 So. 2d 919, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 661 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Plaintiff alleges that on the 17th day of January, 1949, he sold a 1947 Chevrolet convertible automobile to the defendant Hill, and for the purchase price, received a check from Hill in the amount of $1500. It appears that this check was not good and was given merely as evidence of indebtedness for the purchase price. It is also shown by the evidence that at the time, Muse was indebted unto Hill, a secondhand car dealer, as the result of a prior transaction, and that the car was sold to Hill in order to enable him to sell it or to borrow money under a chattel mortgage, so that Hill could take out the money owed him by plaintiff Muse and turn the excess over to Muse on the purchase price. A bill of sale was executed by Muse to Hill under date of January 13, 1949 (the date on which the sale was apparently made — the check being executed some four days later). On this bill of sale, which evidenced a cash sale for $1400, Hill borrowed $1260 from E. J. Gonzales Finance Company and executed a chattel mortgage on the Chevrolet automobile as security for the loan. It appears that later on Muse finished paying in full his prior debt to Hill and he then instituted suit against Hill for $1500 for the purchase price of the Chevrolet automobile and prayed that he have judgment against Hill in that sum with recognition of his vendor's lien and privilege on the automobile. In connection with his suit, he had the car sequestered, and thereafter, the Gulf States Finance Corporation, doing business as the E. J. Gonzales Finance Company, filed a petition of intervention, setting forth the chattel mortgage given it by Hill for the loan of $1260, and alleging further that on February 11, 1949, the defendant was indebted unto it on ten other promissory notes secured by chattel mortgages on ten other vehicles, and that a dation en paiement was executed by the defendant Hill to the intervenor of eleven automobiles, including the Chevrolet convertible coupe in question, and that pursuant thereto, all of the vehicles were delivered and accepted by it, and thus, it became the owner of all these vehicles; and that, therefore, the vendor's lien in favor of plaintiff, if it ever existed, was extinguished by the transfer of the title of the movable property unto it. It may be noted that plaintiff Muse never filed any answer or pleading to the petition of intervention.

The defendant filed an answer to plaintiff's petition, alleging that the consideration for the sale of the Chevrolet to him was the sum of $875 owed by plaintiff to him, plus the authority for him to sell the car for the best price obtainable and to deduct the $875 and commission and to thereupon turn the balance over to plaintiff; that in the deal, the defendant was further authorized to "floor-plan" the car if he so desired; that the act of sale was executed for the sum of $1400 on January 13, 1949, and that he gave a check to the plaintiff for the sum of $1500 on January 17, 1949, but that both he and plaintiff knew it was not good and was merely given as security. On the trial of the case, it was stipulated that defendant's answer to intervenor's demand was a general denial.

The trial of the case resulted in a contest between the intervenor and the plaintiff, the intervenor contending that the act of agreement between it and Miles E. Hill, of February 11, 1949, constituted a dation en paiement, or in the alternative, a pledge, for the sum of $8200 owed to it by Hill, as shown by eleven notes secured by chattel mortgage, including the note of $1260 and chattel mortgage on the Chevrolet automobile in question; that this dation en paiement, *Page 921 or pledge, had fully extinguished the vendor's lien and privilege of the plaintiff. Plaintiff contended that the agreement did not constitute either a dation en paiement or a pledge, and that consequently, his vendor's lien and privilege was in full force and effect.

The trial court, giving a lengthy written opinion therefor, came to the conclusion that the agreement did not constitute either a dation en paiement or a pledge, and accordingly, dismissed the intervenor's petition of intervention at its cost and rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant for $1500 with legal interest from judicial demand until paid and recognizing plaintiff's lien and privilege on the Chevrolet convertible coupe. The intervenor has appealed.

Defendant Hill also appealed but has abandoned his appeal, and therefore, defendant Hill is an appellee, not an appellant, in this appeal, and the question for this court to decide is mainly between the intervenor and the plaintiff. The crux of that decision depends entirely on the interpretation to be given to the agreement between Miles E. Hill and Gulf States Finance Corporation, doing business as E. J. Gonzales Finance Company, said agreement being dated February 11, 1949, and being summarized as follows:

It is set forth that Miles E. Hill is indebted unto the Finance Company in the full sum of $8200 represented by demand notes secured by chattel mortgages, which are listed in detail in the agreement.

It is further set forth that said notes are past due and that payment thereof has been demanded and that to settle and compromise the matter, the parties have agreed as follows:

"First, said Miles E. Hill has and he does hereby transfer, surrender and release the aforedescribed automobiles to the said Finance Company;

"Second, for and in consideration of said transfer, release and surrender the said Finance Company has and it does hereby release said Miles E. Hill from any obligations upon the aforedescribed notes and does further agree as follows:

"(a) The said Miles E. Hill shall have sixty days from date hereof in which to redeem said automobile;

"(b) The said Hill may sell and dispose of any of said automobiles for not less than the amount of the mortgages above referred to resting thereon and the entire proceeds of such sale, regardless of whether it exceeds the amount of said mortgage, will be applied to the above referred to $8,200.00;

"(c) The said Finance Company may at any time sell any one or more of said automobiles for not less than the current N.A.D.A. retail sales value and upon such sale, the entire proceeds of sale, less the cost of sale including commission, shall be applied to aforesaid $8,200.00;

"(d) One per cent of the sale price of any automobiles sold during the existence of this agreement shall be applied to the cost of insurance thereon;

"(e) At the expiration of this agreement, or at any time during the said sixty day period, the said Miles E. Hill shall have the right to redeem said automobiles upon payment of the remainder of said $8,200.00 after deduction of the proceeds of any such sales and insurance."

With reference to whether or not the agreement constitutes a dation en paiement, the trial court considered the following provisions of the Civil Code:

"Article 2655. The giving in payment is an act by which a debtor gives a thing to the creditor, who is willing to receive it, in payment of a sum which is due."

"Article 2567. The right of redemption is an agreement or paction, by which the vendor reserves to himself the power of taking back the thing sold by returning the price paid for it."

It is to be noted that in this case there was no intention of passing the title to the creditor and that the debtor retained some control over the property, in that he had a right to sell the automobiles for the price of the chattel mortgages existing thereon. It is to be noted also that Mr. Gonzales, head of Gonzales Finance Company, admits in his testimony, that there was no intention of selling the property for the debt owed to the finance company. *Page 922

It is true that in the case of Pomez v.

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Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 919, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muse-v-hill-lactapp-1949.