Newman v. O. K. Industrial Life Ins. Co.

142 So. 791
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1932
DocketNo. 4339.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 So. 791 (Newman v. O. K. Industrial Life Ins. Co.) 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
Newman v. O. K. Industrial Life Ins. Co., 142 So. 791 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

DREW, J.

Plaintiff, alleging that he is the owner in due course before maturity of fifteen rent notes, for $15 each, instituted this suit praying for judgment against the maker in the sum of $225, with interest at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum from judicial demand until paid, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees on both principal and interest.

He alleged the notes were made payable to J. R. Patterson; that he purchased them from J. R. Patterson before maturity; that the notes were executed in connection with a certain rent contract, containing the stipulation that failure to pay any one of the .notes when due matured all notes. He claims advantage of this acceleration clause, and alleged that the notes are past due.

Defendant denied all the material allegations of plaintiff’s petition; denied that plaintiff owned the notes; and that, if he does own them, he took them subject to all equities and defenses that defendant had against the original payee, that plaintiff is mot entitled to the advantage of the acceleration clause, and that, if he was ever entitled to this advantage, he has lost it by accepting the rent on several occasions after the due date, without objection.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff on three notes, aggregating the amount of $45, with interest thereon from December 1, 1931, until paid, together with 10 per cent, upon both principal and interest as attorney’s fees.

Plaintiff has appealed from this judgment, and defendant has answered the appeal, praying that the judgment be amended by casting plaintiff for cost of suit and relieving defendant of all attorney’s fees; and that, in all other respects, the judgment be affirmed.

The question of the ownership of the notes is no longer before us. Although attorney for defendant argues that the district court found that plaintiff was not the owner of the notes, we cannot reconcile this argument with the fact that the' district court gave plaintiff judgment on three of the notes. Defendant did not appeal, and, in answer to the appeal, prayed that the judgment for the principal of the three notes be affirmed.

The defendant, an insurance company in Shreveport, desired to open a branch office in New Orleans. Through its president, it opened negotiations with J. R. Patterson, in New Orleans, to secure a lease on a certain building owned by Patterson. An agreement was reached whereby defendant was to have a twelve-month lease on certain premises in the city of New Orleans, for a monthly rental of $15. Patterson had prepared a lease contract in duplicate and twelve rent notes, which were forwarded to defendant to be executed. While in defendant’s possession, the lease was signed and twenty-four rent notes were signed covering a period of twenty-four months. The term of the lease was changed from twelve months to twenty-four months. The original lease and copy, altered as to the term, together with the twenty-four notes, duly executed, were forwarded by defendant to Patterson, who signed the lease and returned the copy and lease to defendant.

The rent notes signed were made payable on February 1, 1931, and the first day of each-month thereafter for twenty-four consecutive months. The notes that became due prior to November 1, 1931, were paid. The notes due November 1, 1931, and monthly thereafter, have not been'paid. -Plaintiff made written demand on defendant for payment of the November rent note, which was past due, and the remaining fourteen notes, claimed to be due under the accelerating clause'in the lease, which provided that failure to pay any note on the due date would mature all the remaining notes. Prior to the filing of this suit, plaintiff came to Shreveport and made a personal demand on defendant for payment of the fifteen notes. Defendant contends that ■ plaintiff is not the owner of the notes, and, if he is, he took them with due notice of the equities and defenses of defendant and after maturity.

Plaintiff testified that he purchased the notes by settlement of an account between him and Patterson and paid Patterson the difference of $85 by a check, on February 9, 1931, which canceled check he filed in evidence. Patterson corroborates the plaintiff, thereby disclaiming'any interest in the notes. The notes are negotiable and were in plaintiff’s possession, duly indorsed by the payee, Patterson. A judgment in favor of plaintiff in this suit will forever bar Patterson from claiming the notes, -as against the defendant. The only interest, therefore, defendant could have is as to the time the notes were acquired by plaintiff, whether before maturity or after maturity, in order that it might make whatever defense against him as it could have made against Patterson. The district court allowed defendant to urge all defenses to the notes as it could have had Patterson been the plaintiff.

We might say here that it is apparent that defendant based its defense, in part, at least, upon a false foundation. It assumed that plaintiff was a lawyer and that Patterson was-his client, and that plaintiff, as a lawyer, was attempting to collect the notes for his-client. The record clearly shows that plaintiff is a- retired business man of the Caucasian race; that he is not a lawyer and has never been; that he was not the agent for Patterson; and that Patterson and the offi *793 cers of defendant company are all of the negro race.

The principal defense urged by 'defendant is that the lease contract was for only twelve months; that the lease and copy, when received by it from Patterson, read “12 months”; that there were twenty-four notes accompanying the lease contract; that, without counting the notes, the president of defendant company signed all twenty-four, thinking he was signing only twelve; that the original lease was returned to Patterson and the copy filed away; that, after the notes and lease had been signed, the president of defendant company gave them to his daughter, who was his stenographer, and that she discovered there were twenty-four notes, and the lease only called for twelve, and that she changed the lease and the copy without the knowledge or consent of her father; and that he knew nothing of the change in the lease made by his daughter, and did not know there were twenty-four notes until a few days before the filing of this suit, when informed by plaintiff.

The district court undoubtedly accepted this theory of the case in allowing judgment in favor of plaintiff on only three of the remaining notes of the first twelve. If he did, it was in error, as is clearly shown by the record. We dislike to disturb the finding of the lower court upon facts, but, when it is manifestly erroneous, as in this case, we will.

Patterson prepared the lease and duplicate in New Orleans. The lease called for a period of twelve months and described twelve rent notes. The character of type in the lease and twelve notes is the same. The daughter of the president of defendant company admits changing the lease and copy to read twenty-four months, instead of twelve. The character of type is entirely different from that used in preparing the lease and the first twelve notes, and the last twelve notes are filled out with the same character of type used by the president’s daughter in changing the term of the lease.

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Bluebook (online)
142 So. 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-o-k-industrial-life-ins-co-lactapp-1932.