Parlor City Lumber Co. v. Sandel

173 So. 737, 186 La. 982, 1937 La. LEXIS 1133
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 1, 1937
DocketNo. 34090.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 173 So. 737 (Parlor City Lumber Co. v. Sandel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parlor City Lumber Co. v. Sandel, 173 So. 737, 186 La. 982, 1937 La. LEXIS 1133 (La. 1937).

Opinions

LAND, Justice.

On April 4, 1931, Percy Sandel executed a note for $5,897.26, payable 90 days after date to the order of plaintiff, Parlor City Lumber Company, Inc., with 8 per cent, per annum interest from date, and stipulating 10 per cent, upon the amount of principal and interest as attorney’s fees if the note is not paid at maturity and is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection.

As collateral security for the payment of this note, defendant, Mrs. Anna S. Sandel, on April 4, 1931, executed a note for *985 $6,000 payable to the order of herself and by her indorsed. This note is payable six months after date, with interest at 8 per cent, per annum from date until paid, with the usual stipulation as to attorney’s fees, and is secured by a second special mortgage on a lot and improvements in the city of Monroe, La., owned by defendant.

At the time of the execution of this collateral special mortgage note for $6,000 by defendant, the property was encumbered by a first special mortgage, of date August 14, 1924, in the original sum of $10,000, held by the Life Insurance Company of Virginia, but upon which there was a balance due, at the time, of only $4,000 in principal, so that there was sufficient equity in the property to serve as ample security for the $6,000 second special mortgage note then executed and delivered to plaintiff by defendant.

Defendant having become delinquent in the payment of the balance due the Life Insurance Company, that company on November 2, 1932, instituted foreclosure proceedings, and, thereafter, on January. 18, 1933, caused execution to issue. The property was duly advertised, and, on February 25, 1933, was sold and bid in by plaintiff, Parlor City Lumber Company, Inc., for the sum of $5,588.43, .or only 39 cents more than the amount required to pay the amount of the first special mortgage of the Life Insurance Company of Virginia.

(1) Defendant’s defense to this suit is that she has been released from any personal obligation on her second special mortgage note for $6,000, herein sued upon, and is entitled to cancellation of same in full.

This defense is predicated upon an alleged oral agreement between plaintiff and defendant.

On the trial of the case defendant offered to prove that, while the foreclosure proceedings were being carried on by the Life Insurance Company of Virginia, it was agreed between plaintiff and herself that, in consideration of defendant’s permitting the property to be sold, and not seeking to protect her equity in the property, and permitting plaintiff to bid in the property, plaintiff agreed that it would release defendant from any personal liability on the note sued upon. And, in addition, if plaintiff were thereafter able to dispose of the property at a price more than sufficient to cover the amount of the first mortgage and' its own second mortgage, plaintiff agreed that such surplus, if any, should be turned over and delivered to the defendant.

This testimony was objected to by counsel for plaintiff on two grounds:

First. That the note sued on was a written instrument, and parol evidence is not admissible to vary, modify, or change its terms by proof of a subsequent or a contemporaneous agreement.

Second. That since defendant has admitted to the court that remission or release was made verbally, and since defendant has not alleged delivery, and plaintiff has not delivered to the defendant the note sued on, oral evidence is not permitted to prove release or remission of the note. Tr., p. 35.

These objections were sustained by the trial judge; the parol evidence tendered by *987 defendant was excluded; and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff as prayed for on the note sued upon. From this judgment defendant has appealed.

The parol evidence rule in this state is embodied in article 2276 of the Revised Civil Code in the following language: “Neither shall parol evidence be admitted against or beyond what is contained in the acts, nor on what may have been said before, or at the time of making them, or since.”

This article simply means that when parties to a contract have committed their negotiations to writing, they are conclusively persumed to make their contract as written, and the power to show otherwise by parol evidence is denied.

Defendant is not attempting by parol to vary, modify, or change the terms of the note, the original written contract, but is attempting to prove a subsequent, new, and independent agreement, intended to modify the original.

That defendant may do so is well established by the jurisprudence of this court.

In the case of Cain v. Pullen, 34 La.Ann. 511, this court recognized that a lease, although in writing, could be modified by subsequent oral agreement.

In that case the court said at page 517: “Here we would note that the testimony to establish this last agreement was objected to, on the ground that it contradicts the written contract of lease. It is shown, as stated, that this agreement was made subsequently to the execution of the written one. It constituted a new and independent contract, intended to modify the original, and to this new contract there was another party, the firm of H. & C. Newman, intervenors.

“It is competent to establish by parol, a subsequent change or modification of a written contract. Greenleaf, Ev. -; (Commandeur v. Russell) 5 Mart. (N.S.) [456] 459; (Bouligny v. Urquhart) 4 La. [29] 30; (Ross v. O’Nail) 1 Rob. 358; (Summers v. United States Ins., Annuity & Trust Co.) 13 La.Ann. 504; (Gardiner v. Bataille) 5 La.Ann. 597; (Cole v. Smith) 29 La.Ann. 551 (29 Am.Rep. 343).”

In Chesapeake & Ohio R. Company v. Ray, 101 U.S. 522, 25 L.Ed. 792, the Supreme Court of the United States said: “Notwithstanding what was said in some of the old cases, it is now recognized doctrine that the terms of a contract under seal may be varied by a subsequent parol agreement.”

In the recent case of Salley v. Louviere, 183 La. 92, at pages 98 and 99, 162 So. 811, 813, it is said by the Supreme Court of this State: “It is well settled that this article [2276] of the Civil Code does not forbid the proving by parol evidence of a subsequent agreement to modify or to revoke a written agreement.” (Italics ours.)

(2) It is contended by plaintiff that the discharge of a negotiable instrument must be in writing unless the instrument is delivered up to the person primarily liable thereon.

Plaintiff relies on section 122 of Act No. 64 of 1904, the Negotiable Instruments Law of this state, which provides that: “The *989 holder may expressly renounce his rights against any party to the instrument, before, at or after its maturity. An absolute and unconditional renunciation of his rights against the principal debtor made at or after the maturity of the instrument discharges the instrument. But a renunciation does not affect the rights of a holder in due course without notice. A renunciation must be in writing, unless the instrument is delivered up to the person primarily liable thereon.”

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Bluebook (online)
173 So. 737, 186 La. 982, 1937 La. LEXIS 1133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parlor-city-lumber-co-v-sandel-la-1937.