Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company v. Woodcock

150 So. 2d 660
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 1963
Docket777
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 150 So. 2d 660 (Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company v. Woodcock) 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
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company v. Woodcock, 150 So. 2d 660 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

150 So.2d 660 (1963)

PITTSBURGH PLATE GLASS COMPANY, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
Edwin C. WOODCOCK, d/b/a Able Insulation Company, Defendant and Appellee,
Kenneth B. F. Streater, Jr., and Aveno J. Mello, Intervenors and Appellants.

No. 777.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 5, 1963.

*661 Charles C. Broussard, Sulphur, for intervenors-appellants.

Bass & Lawes, by Louis Cunningham, Jr., John R. Stewart, Lake Charles, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Before FRUGÉ, CULPEPPER and HOOD, JJ.

HOOD, Judge.

This action was originally instituted as a suit on an open account by Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company against Edwin C. Woodcock, a non-resident of the State of Louisiana, and as an incident to the suit plaintiff obtained a writ of attachment. Pursuant to that writ property owned by the defendant was seized, and following this attachment the appellants, Kenneth B. F. Streater, Jr., and Aveno J. Mello, intervened. Streater, alleging in his intervention that he is a creditor of Woodcock and that the debt is secured by a previously recorded mortgage affecting the seized property, contends that he is entitled to be paid by preference out of the proceeds of the sale of such property. Mello alleges that he is the owner of the attached property, having purchased it from Woodcock before the attachment was issued, and he demands that the attachment be set aside.

Plaintiff filed exceptions of no cause of action to these interventions, and it also filed a motion for a summary judgment dismissing the demands of the intervenors. In due course a hearing was held on this motion, and after such hearing a summary judgment was rendered by the trial court dismissing the interventions, with prejudice. Streater and Mello have appealed from that judgment.

This suit was instituted on August 18, 1961, and on the same date a writ of attachment *662 was authorized and was issued directing the sheriff to seize the following described property, situated in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, to-wit:

Commencing on North side of Highway #90, 450 feet West of East line of Southwest quarter of Northwest quarter (SW ¼ of NW ¼) of Section 36, Township 9 South, Range 10 West, then West 50 feet, North 172 feet, East 50 feet and South 172 feet to commencement.
Commencing on North side of Highway #90, 400 feet West of East line of Southwest quarter of Northwest quarter (SW ¼ of NW ¼) of Section 36, Township 9 South, Range 10 West, thence West 50 feet, North 172 feet, East 50 feet and South 172 feet to commencement

Pursuant to this writ the above-described property was seized by the sheriff, and a notice to the effect that such a seizure had been made and also a notice of Lis Pendens were promptly filed in the Mortgage Records of Calcasieu Parish. No issue is raised in this suit as to the regularity or legality of the procedure which was followed in obtaining and executing this writ of attachment.

The evidence further shows, however, that on March 1, 1961, which was several months before the above-mentioned writ of attachment was issued, Woodcock executed an act of mortgage in favor of appellant Streater, and that mortgage was filed for record in the Mortgage Records of Calcasieu Parish on about the same day. The mortgage purports to affect the following described property situated in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, to-wit:

Commencing at a point on the North right-of-way line of U. S. Highway #90, five hundred (500) feet West of East line of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (SW ¼ of NW¼) of Section Thirty-six (36), Township Nine (9) South, Range Ten (10) West, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, thence North one hundred seventy-two (172) feet, more or less, to the South right-of-way line of railroad; thence West along the South right-of-way line of railroad one hundred (100) feet; thence South one hundred seventy-two (172) feet, more or less, to the North right-of-way line of U. S. Highway #90; thence East one hundred (100) feet along North right-of-way line of U. S. Highway #90 to the point of commencement, together with all buildings and other improvements thereon situated.

Although the property described in this act of mortgage is located adjacent to the property which was attached in this suit, it is apparent that the mortgage clearly and accurately describes an entirely different tract of land from that which was later seized by plaintiff. Appellants have shown that actually the mortgage contained an erroneous description, and that the parties in executing it intended to describe and to encumber the same property as that which was later attached.

On April 3, 1961, which also was before the attachment was issued, defendant Woodcock executed a warranty deed purporting to convey to appellant Mello the same tract of land as that described in the mortgage. Although the record shows that the parties by that deed actually intended to convey the property which plaintiff has seized in this suit, the deed nevertheless purports to convey an entirely separate, but adjoining, tract. This warranty deed was recorded in the Conveyance Records of Calcasieu Parish in May, 1961.

After the property involved in this suit had been seized under the writ of attachment issued on August 18, 1961, appellants discovered that the descriptions contained in the mortgage and in the warranty deed were erroneous, so shortly thereafter they obtained corrective instruments showing that the parties to both of those documents had intended for them to affect the *663 land which had been attached rather than the property described in the original mortgage and deed. The corrected mortgage and the corrected warranty deed were filed for record on August 23, 1961, after the writ of attachment had been executed.

The trial judge, applying the public records doctrine as set out in McDuffie v. Walker, 125 La. 152, 51 So. 100, and Quatre Parish Co. v. Beauregard Parish School Board, 220 La. 592, 57 So.2d 197, dismissed the interventions on the ground that the descriptions contained in the previously recorded mortgage and warranty deed were not sufficient to place plaintiff on notice that those documents were intended to affect the attached property.

Appellants, however, contending that the trial judge erred, argue that plaintiff was charged with knowledge of all recorded instruments affecting the seized property, and that "in the ordinary course of examination" of the public records plaintiff should have discovered that the mortgage and deed were intended to affect the property which was attached. They point out that the mortgage contains the following provision:

"It is expressly understood and agreed between the parties hereto that the mortgage herein granted and accepted is a first mortgage on the East fifty (50) feet and a second mortgage on the West fifty (50) feet of property hereinabove described."

Also, in the warranty deed from Woodcock to Mello the following provision was inserted immediately after the description: "And to assume all indebtedness as due on property."

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 2d 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburgh-plate-glass-company-v-woodcock-lactapp-1963.