Polizzotto v. Hart

146 So. 151, 176 La. 564, 1933 La. LEXIS 1573
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 31520.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 So. 151 (Polizzotto v. Hart) 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
Polizzotto v. Hart, 146 So. 151, 176 La. 564, 1933 La. LEXIS 1573 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

This is a foreclosure proceeding brought by the plaintiffs against Mrs. Beulah Richards Hart, who is alleged to he an absentee, not represented in this state, for whom an attorney was appointed as provided by article 737 of the Code of Practice. Plaintiffs first sued out executory process but later converted the action into a suit via ordinaria.

The plaintiff Polizzotto alleged that he was the holder and owner of two promissory notes dated February 27, 1922, one for $2,000 and the other for $1,000, both made and signed by the said Mrs. Hart, and secured by mortgage on certain described, property in the parish of Iberville. The bank alleged that it was the owner, in pledge, of one note for $2,000 of the same series and secured hy the same mortgage. They attached to their petition the notes and a copy of the mortgage relied on. The mortgage was passed before Jules A. Carville, a notary public, and two witnesses on February 27, 1922, and recites that Mrs. Beulah Richards Hart is the wife of Lewis B. Hart, and that she is “herein represented by Mr. Lewis B. Hart, by virtue of and authority of a general power of attorney attached hereto and hereof made a part.” .It recites that said Airs. Hart, by her said agent, declared that she was indebted unto Samuel Polizzotto in the sum of $7,000, represented by four notes, three for $2,000 each and one for $1,000. To secure said notes she specially mortgaged certain real estate situated in the parish of Iberville.

Plaintiffs, in their converted action, pray for judgment in the amount of the notes, interest, and attorneys’ fees and that their mortgage be recognized and rendered executory against the property described and that the same be seized and sold to pay the debt, the judgment to operate in rem only.

This suit was filed on Alarch 18, 1927, and on April 1st following, Airs. Hart, the defendant, applied for an injunction to restrain plaintiffs from proceeding further with their suit and from selling the property. On April 27th, Mrs. Alarie Hebert Lotz, alleging that she was then the owner of the mortgaged property, having acquired the same on August 18, 1925, intervened in the foreclosure proceeding and joined Mrs. Hart, the defendant, in her opposition to the sale and her prayer for injunction. Her grounds for the injunction are identical with those set up by Airs. Hart. No further steps were taken in these suits for more than a year for reasons which need not be stated.

Mrs. Hart died on August 6, 1927, and her only child and sole heir, Mrs. Ann Richards Neely of Terrell, Tex., was by order of court substituted as party defendant in the fore *567 closure suit and as plaintiff in the injunction suit brought by Mrs. Hart.

The specific grounds on which Mrs. Hart and Mrs. Lotz sought the injunction, are, first, that Paul Polizzotto was not then and never had been the owner of the notes sued on by him, but that the same were the property of Lewis B. Hart, deceased. They refer to a suit brought by said Hart against Polizzotto in which the ownership of the notes was contested, which suit, it is alleged is still pending. It is well to state here that this point has passed out of the present case for the reason that the suit of Hart v. Polizzotto was finally decided by this court in favor of Polizzotto on March 25,1929. See Hart v. Polizzotto, 168 La. 356, 122 So. 64. .

The other ground, and this is the principal one now stressed by Mrs. Neely and Mrs. Lotz, is, quoting from the pleadings, that:

“She (Mrs. Hart, the mortgagor) never authorized the said Lewis B. Hart to execute said notes and act of mortgage, and that same are a fraud and simulation pure and simple upon your petitioner, and that said notes and mortgage were given without any consideration .whatever and without petitioner’s knowledge and consent and for the purpose of attempting to fraudulently place an incumbrance upon said real estate which belonged to petitioner and by fraudulent collusion between said Lewis B. Hart, her agent, and said Sam Polizzotto” (he being the mortgagee named in the act).

It is further alleged that the order of ex-ecutory process issued without sufficient evidence in that “there is not annexed to the act of mortgage purporting to secure said notes any power of attorney or authentic act showing the authority of said Lewis B. Hart to grant and execute said notes and mortgage for and in behalf of your petitioner, Mrs. Beulah Richards Hart, and that the Cleric of this court is without legal authority-to sign and issue the order of executory process herein.”

In a supplemental petition of intervention filed by Mrs. Lotz on October 3, 1929, she alleged that the power of attorney annexed to plaintiffs’ petition for executory process “is a pure simulation and was never signed or authorized by the said Mrs. Beulah Richards Hart in any manner whatever; and at the time of the alleged execution of the mortgage here relied upon, and at all times subsequent thereto, the said Lewis B. Hart was without any vestige of right, power or authority to represent the said Mrs. Beulah Richards Hart as her agent or otherwise in making or executing in her behalf any mortgage or mortgage notes whatever.”

She sets out that she acquired the property on which the mortgage rests on August 18, 1925, knowing at the time that said Mrs. Hart had not authorized the execution of the notes and the mortgage; that she acquired the property under a power of attorney executed by Mrs. Hart on March-, 1922.

Referring to the powfer of attorney given by Mrs. Hart to her husband Lewis B. Hart (she does not contend that there was no power of attorney), she alleges that the same was not executed by Mrs. Hart until March 27, 1922 (which was subsequent to the date of the mortgage), and that when executed, Mrs. Hart'“expressly excluded from the provisions of said power of attorney, by interlineation, any right or authority on the part *569 ■of the said Lewis B. Hart to make and execute in her behalf any mortgage upon said property or to sign in her behalf any mortgage notes.”

In the alternative, Mrs. Lotz alleges that, if it be true that Mrs. Hart did execute the power of attorney on February 23, 1922, instead of on March 27th, and even if Lewis B. Hart did make the mortgage as plaintiffs contend, the said Sam Polizzotto, the mortgagee, had actual knowledge “that said notes were being executed by the said Lewis B. Hart for his individual account and benefit, and not for the account and benefit of his alleged principal, the said Mrs. Beulah Richards Hart, or for any legal purpose within the scope of the alleged power of attorney herein relied upon.”

In answer to these injunction suits, the plaintiffs denied that the notes and mortgage were fraudulently made by Lewis B. Hart and especially set out that he was authorized by a power of attorney dated February 23, 1922,' which was attached to the mortgage. As to Mrs. Lotz’ alternative plea, plaintiffs alleged that the notes and the mortgage were made to secure a loan made for the use, benefit, and interest of Mrs., Hart and not for the benefit of her husband.

There was judgment for plaintiffs as prayed for and defendant appealed.

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Related

Lotz v. Iberville Bank & Trust Co.
146 So. 155 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 151, 176 La. 564, 1933 La. LEXIS 1573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polizzotto-v-hart-la-1933.