National Acceptance Co. of America v. Wallace

194 So. 2d 194
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 1967
Docket10727
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 194 So. 2d 194 (National Acceptance Co. of America v. Wallace) 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
National Acceptance Co. of America v. Wallace, 194 So. 2d 194 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

194 So.2d 194 (1967)

NATIONAL ACCEPTANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Demma S. WALLACE et al., Defendants-Appellants-Appellees.

No. 10727.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 4, 1967.
Rehearing Denied February 9, 1967.
Writ Refused March 29, 1967.

*196 Tucker, Martin, Holder, Jeter & Jackson, Shreveport, for plaintiff-appellant.

Cook, Clark, Egan, Yancey & King, Shreveport, for Thomas A. Snelling, defendant-appellant.

Peters, Ward & Johnson, Shreveport, for Erwin A. Huss, defendant-third-party plaintiff-appellant.

Samuel V. Prunty, Jr., Shreveport, curator ad hoc for Mrs. Demma S. Wallace, defendant-appellee.

Before HARDY, GLADNEY and AYRES, JJ.

AYRES, Judge.

Involved on this appeal is the right vel non of plaintiff, as pledgee of a promissory note secured by a mortgage, to the recognition and enforcement of its pledge and mortgage, despite the cancellation and erasure of the mortgage pursuant to an order of court in a proceeding by rule against the clerk of court and ex officio recorder provoked by Mrs. Demma S. Wallace, one of the mortgagors and a defendant herein, plaintiff having had no notice or knowledge of the proceedings and not having acquiesced therein or consented thereto.

A resume of the facts material to the case is deemed necessary for an appreciation of the issues as they are resolved.

The Capitol Sash & Door Company, Inc., engaged in the manufacture, and in the wholesale and retail sale, of millwork and building materials, was financed, at least partially, through loans and advances by plaintiff, National Acceptance Company of America. An agreement for such financing was executed February 26, 1962. By an instrument of the same date, Chalmers C. Wallace, an officer of the Capitol Sash & Door Company, Inc., and his wife, Demma S. Wallace, unconditionally guaranteed the payment of the obligations, as then existing or as might be thereafter incurred, by Capitol Sash & Door Company, Inc., in favor of plaintiff. To secure the performance of this guarantee, Wallace and *197 his wife pledged to plaintiff a promissory note for $25,000.00, dated February 17, 1961, and the mortgage with which it was paraphed and identified, the mortgage covering Lot 131 of the Brookwood Subdivision, Unit No. 3, Caddo Parish, Louisiana. On the basis of this guarantee, plaintiff made advances and loans to the Capitol Sash & Door Company, Inc. It appears appropriate to point out that this mortgage was, as the instrument itself recites, intended to be used as collateral security. The mortgage specifically provides that the mortgagor may issue and reissue the note from time to time without extinguishing or impairing the obligation of the note or of the mortgage.

Chalmers C. Wallace died November 25, 1962, as the result of an airplane crash. Mrs. Demma S. Wallace, as universal legatee under her husband's last will and testament, unconditionally accepted his succession and, following renunciations by next of kin, was placed in possession of his estate December 21, 1962. Thereafter, Mrs. Wallace resolved to sell the mortgaged property and engaged the services of a realtor who procured a prospective purchaser in the person of Erwin A. Huss.

Huss retained an attorney to examine title to the property. In the course of the examination, two mortgages were found encumbering the property: first, a mortgage to Pan American Life Insurance Company, and, second, the mortgage involved here. Huss intended to assume payment of the first mortgage, but required that the second be canceled. Mrs. Wallace, for that purpose, thereupon petitioned the court and prayed for a writ of mandamus directed to the clerk of court and ex officio recorder. The basis of her demand for the cancellation was the allegation in her petition, to the correctness of which she swore, that the note had been paid and satisfied in full, but was lost. Attached to the petition was an additional affidavit by Thomas A. Snelling, the nominal payee of the note, which also recited that the note had been paid and satisfied in full, but was lost. Snelling further swore that he had not sold, transferred, or otherwise delivered possession of the note to anyone. Noted, also, was Snelling's consent to the cancellation of the mortgage. On a basis of this petition and affidavit, and on the acceptance of service by the clerk of court, who consented to an immediate judgment, the court directed the cancellation of the mortgage. These proceedings were filed June 5, 1963, and were completed on that date, as was the sale from Mrs. Wallace to Huss.

Plaintiff named as defendants Mrs. Demma S. Wallace and Erwin A. Huss, seeking judgment against the former in the full sum of $53,345.43, with interest and attorneys' fees, and judgment against both recognizing its lien, privilege, and mortgage by virtue of its pledge. Also made defendants were Thomas A. Snelling and the clerk of court and ex officio recorder, as well as the latter's insurer, against whom plaintiff prayed for judgment, in the alternative, for whatever loss and damage resulted to plaintiff from the wrongful cancellation of its mortgage. However, a voluntary nonsuit was later entered as to the clerk of court and his surety.

Defendant Huss, in defending against plaintiff's demands for recognition and enforcement of its mortgage, relied primarily upon the public records evidencing the fact that the mortgage had been canceled, and, in the alternative, sought recognition of his claim by virtue of the payments made on the first-ranking mortgage, the rights to which he was allegedly subrogated. In a further alternative, defendant Huss sought judgment against Mrs. Wallace and Snelling in damages for such sums as might be assessed against him. Huss' rights against the clerk of court and his surety were reserved.

In answer to plaintiff's demands, as well as to those of Huss, Snelling alleged he never had possession of the note and urged his good faith in executing the affidavit upon which the cancellation was at least partially based. Additionally, it was contended *198 the note and mortgage were executed as a sham to protect Mrs. Wallace in her possession of her home in case anything happened to her husband.

Mrs. Wallace could not be located for service of either plaintiff's demands or those of Huss, a third-party plaintiff. She is, however, represented by a curator ad hoc appointed by the court. Evidence produced during trial disclosed that Mrs. Wallace had moved to Oklahoma. No affirmative defenses are urged on her behalf.

After trial, the court concluded that the note and mortgage were, to plaintiff's knowledge, initially executed as a sham and, for that reason, plaintiff was not a holder of the note in good faith or in due course. Plaintiff's demands for recognition and enforcement of its mortgage were accordingly rejected. Plaintiff, however, was awarded damages against Snelling in the sum of $25,000.00. From the judgment thus rendered and signed, plaintiff appealed, both suspensively and devolutively; Snelling and Huss, only devolutively.

The basis of the court's conclusion that plaintiff was not a holder of the note in good faith but acquired it with notice of an infirmity was the testimony of defendant Snelling who, at the time of the execution of the note and mortgage, was requested by Wallace, his employer, to serve as a nominal payee of the note. Snelling testified that, upon arrival at Wallace's office, Wallace stated to him that the purpose of the mortgage was to protect Mrs. Wallace in the event anything happened to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 So. 2d 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-acceptance-co-of-america-v-wallace-lactapp-1967.