Officer v. Combre

194 So. 441, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 284
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1940
DocketNo. 2095.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 194 So. 441 (Officer v. Combre) 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
Officer v. Combre, 194 So. 441, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 284 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

Plaintiff, the holder and owner of a series of notes made and subscribed by defendant, secured by act of mortgage under the pact “de non alienando” and importing a confession of judgment, and bearing on a certain lot and building in Lake Charles, brought executory proceedings to pay and satisfy the sum of $2,319.45 with 8% interest thereon from May 10, 1935, until paid, and 10% on both principal and interest unpaid as attorney’s fees, and seeking *442 to be paid out of the proceeds thereof the said amount of his claim in preference and priority over all other persons or creditors of defendant. The sale of the lot and building- was held pursuant to the writ of seizure and sale issued, resulting in the sum of $1,750. Subsequent to the sale of the property by the sheriff, but prior to the distribution of the proceeds thereof, there were filed petitions of intervention and third opposition by (1) Mrs. Mary S. Hol-lier, (2) Robert R. Stone, and (3) The Louisiana Western Lumber Company, each claiming a lien and privilege on the proceeds in priority to the seizing creditor.

On trial of the oppositions, the lower court found that the mortgage creditor was entitled to be paid in preference and priority and granted judgment accordingly. All opponents have appealed.

The basis of the respective claims of the parties, on the proceeds of the sale, will appear from the following facts and pleadings as reflected by the record:

• In the early part of 1931, Dr. Combre, defendant and owner of the house and lot sold, entered into a contract with Aurelia S. Hart, whereby Hart was to remodel and repair the house, furnishing all materials and labor therefor, for a stipulated amount. In other words, Hart was the general contractor for the entire job. This contract was not reduced to writing and consequently was not recorded in the mortgage records, nor did Hart furnish a bond, all as required by Act No. 298 of 1926. Hart, in conformity with her contract, obtained a permit from the City of Lake Charles, and immediately started to fulfill her contract.

In June, 1931, during the course of the work on the house, but prior to its completion, Dr. Combre applied for a loan from plaintiff. Plaintiff, having first obtained a certificate of mortgage from the Clerk of Court showing that the property was free of incumbrances, loaned to Dr. Combre the sum of $4,000, secured by mortgage on the property, which mortgage was immediately recorded. The proceeds of this loan were used to pay the contractor, the labor and materials on the contract.

In July, 1931, one month after the recording of the mortgage, Hart caused to be filed in the mortgage records of the Clerk of Court’s office an affidavit setting out the cost of material, labor, etc., furnished and used pursuant to her contract, with the view of preserving a lien and privilege on the property.

In April, 1933, Hart obtained a judgment against Dr. Combre for the sum of $1,138.12, with interest and costs, with recognition of a builder’s and material-man’s lien and privilege on the house and lot, ordering the same enforced with Hart’s right to be paid by preference and priority over all other creditors. Since plaintiff, the mortgagee, was not made a party to this proceeding, this judgment did not affect his rights of preference, if any, under the mortgage.

In May, 1932, being prior to the time that Hart secured the above described judgment, the Louisiana Western Lumber Company obtained a judgment against Hart for a sum in excess of $2,000. A few days after the rendition of the judgment in favor of Hart and against Dr. Combre, the lumber company obtained a writ of fieri facias, coupled with a writ of garnishment upon Dr. Combre, on its judgment, and the Hart judgment was seized. Dr. Combre made answer to the garnishment proceedings, admitting his indebtedness to Hart in the amount of the judgment rendered against him in favor of Hart. Hart intervened in the garnishment proceedings, and, upon trial thereof, there was judgment in favor of the Louisiana Western Lumber Company, dismissing the intervention of Hart, and sustaining and maintaining the seizure and garnishment against Dr. Combre for the full amount of the Hart judgment' and ordering Dr. Combre to pay the same unto the said lumber company. Alias writs were subsequently obtained by the lumber company in its endeavor to enforce collection of the I-Iart judgment by the seizure of Dr. Combre’s property, but to no avail, the seizures being released and the writs being returned unsatisfied on the request of the attorney for the seizing creditor.

After the Hart judgment against Combre had been seized and the garnishment process had been obtained, but before judgment sustaining and maintaining the seizure and garnishment had been rendered and signed, Hart assigned a half interest in the said judgment to Mrs. Hollier, one of the opponents herein; and at the- same time, Stone, another opponent, filed, in the mortgage records, an affidavit claiming a privilege on the other half interest in the said judgment, as a fee as attorney for procuring the said judgment.

This is the situation which existed at the time the house and lot were sold by the sheriff under the foreclosure proceedings, supra.

*443 It is the contention of Dr. Officer that his mortgage primes the Hart judgment against Combre, in that Hart did not have a lien and privilege on the property under Act No. 298 of 1926 for the reason that she had failed to have the said contract reduced to writing and recorded as provided by Section 1 and 2 of the said Act, she being a general contractor.

It is the contention of the three opponents that Hart, under the provisions of Section 12 of the said Act, had a lien and privilege on the lot. and building which primed the mortgage of Dr. Officer in that the mortgage was recorded after the work was begun on the building. All three opponents depend upon the effect of the Hart judgment.

It is conceded that if Hart, as a general contractor, had a lien and privilege for the balance due her under her contract, under Act No. 298 of 1926, by the filing and rec-ordation of the affidavit, after the recordation of the mortgage, but before the work was completed, then that such lien and privilege would prime the mortgage.

Act No. 298 of 1926 clearly contemplates that work on buildings shall be performed either by a general contractor who shall undertake to do or have done all the work and furnish all the labor and materials necessary, for a fixed price, or by the owner himself. In the event the work is done by a general contractor, the contractor becomes the debtor of all the laborers and furnishers of material, and the ■owner becomes the debtor of the contractor for the whole contract price.

It- is clearly the purpose of Section 1 of the Act under discussion to. give to the contractor, and anyone else who performs any work or furnishes materials in building a house, a lien and privilege upon the land and improvements for the amount due him, where there is a contract duly recorded as provided for in Section 2.

Section 2 clearly refers to those cases where a contractor contracts to do all the work and to furnish all the materials, and further provides that such contract shall be evidenced in writing and be recorded and that such recordation shall preserve

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Bluebook (online)
194 So. 441, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/officer-v-combre-lactapp-1940.