PREMIER BANK, NAT. ASS'N v. Stout
This text of 627 So. 2d 188 (PREMIER BANK, NAT. ASS'N v. Stout) 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.
Opinion
PREMIER BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION and First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Lake Charles, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Roy Lee STOUT & Ruth Delaine Cryer Stout individually and in their capacity as Trustees, Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
Robert Joseph Tete, Lake Charles, for Premier Bank, et al.
Helton Gayle Marshall, Lake Charles, for Roy Lee Stout, et ux.
Before DOMENGEAUX, C.J., and LABORDE and COOKS, JJ.
*189 COOKS, Judge.
In this revocatory action, First Federal Savings & Loan Association and Premier Bank, National Association appeal a trial court's judgment sustaining exceptions of prescription filed by Roy Lee Stout and Ruth Delaine Cryer Stout individually and in their capacity as Trustees of the Stout Family Trust resulting in dismissal of the suit.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Stouts established the Stout Family Trust by notarial act duly recorded on September 7, 1988. They transferred $1,500.00 to the Trust. In the Trust instrument, the Stouts were named as income beneficiaries and other family members were named as principal beneficiaries. The terms of the Trust further provided:
"Additional property may from time to time be transferred by the Grantor or by any other person to the Trustee(s) with their consent and such property shall thereupon become a part of the Trust estate and shall be held, managed, invested and reinvested and disposed of on the same terms and conditions as the property originally transferred."
First Federal Savings & Loan filed suit against the Stouts to collect sums due on three promissory notes secured by mortgages. Following rendition of judgment against the Stouts and foreclosure sale of the properties securing the notes, the bank filed three petitions for deficiency judgments against the Stouts which were signed on July 24, 1989 and officially filed on August 1, 1989.
Premier Bank also filed suit against the Stouts seeking collection of a promissory note (secured by real estate) executed, as stated by appellees in brief, on May 4, 1989. As a result of this suit, judgment was rendered against the Stouts on November 9, 1990. The record does not disclose whether Premier Bank perfected full foreclosure on the property securing the note and thereafter obtained a deficiency judgment for any balance due against the Stouts.
However, Premier Bank and First Federal Savings filed the present revocatory action seeking to revoke the $1,500.00 transfer made by the Stouts to the Trust on September 2, 1988 which was recorded on September 7, 1988. Responding, the Stouts individually and as Trustees of the Stout Family Trust filed exceptions of prescription to the banks' claims. At the ensuing hearing, the Stouts argued the revocatory action was not filed within one year of the time the banks learned or should have learned of the transfer to the Trust as provided by LSA C.C. article 2041. They pointed out the Trust instrument was recorded on September 7, 1988 in the Public Records of Calcasieu Parish; and thus, they urged, the banks "should have learned" of the existence of the trust on this date according to the public record doctrine. The trial judge agreed and dismissed the suit. The banks have filed the present appeal noting the parties stipulated at the hearing that Premier Bank first learned of the Trust's existence on April 18, 1991 at a judgment debtor hearing while questioning the Stouts; and First Federal Savings & Loan acquired knowledge of the Trust on August 22, 1991, after reviewing the transcript of the judgment debtor examination conducted earlier by Premier Bank. All parties agreed suit was instituted within one year from the date of the judgment debtor hearing and within three years from the date the Stouts transferred $1,500 to the Trust.
LAW AND ANALYSIS
LSA-C.C. article 2041 as amended in 1984 states:
"The action of the obligee must be brought within one year from the time he learned or should have learned of the act, or the result of the failure to act, of the obligor that the obligee seeks to annul, but never after three years from the date of that act or result." (Emphasis added)
Although the article clearly expresses a revocatory action "must be brought within one year from the time [the creditor] learned or should have learned of the act," the article's revision comments suggest "the prescriptive period should be one year from the day the... [creditor] learned of the harm."
Noting this inconsistency and the article's purpose, as expressed in the revision comments, this court in First Federal Savings & *190 Loan Association of Lake Charles v. Jones, 620 So.2d 408 (La.App. 3 Cir.1993), said:
"La.C.C. art. 2041 is found in Chapter 12, Book III of the Louisiana Civil Code, entitled Revocatory Action and Oblique Action. Section 12 of that chapter deals with the revocatory action and begins with Article 2036, which states in pertinent part: `An obligee has a right to annul an act of the obligor ... that causes or increases the obligor's insolvency'. The comments to that article explain that the article `substitutes an act of the obligor that causes or increases his insolvency for the notion of an act [of] fraud' contained in the source articles. The comments also inform us that the source of the revocatory action can be traced back to the Roman Paulian action.
An in depth discussion of the Paulian or revocatory action can be found in Planiol, Traite' Elementaire De Droit Civil, Vol. 2, Part 1 at 168-185, wherein, in pertinent part, Planiol explains:
300. Formulation of the Rule
The only acts which can give rise to a revocation upon the demand of creditors, given the proper case, are those by which the debtor has impoverished himself;...
310. In What Does Damage Consist
The damage is the determining cause of the action. It consists in the fact that the act of the debtor brings about his insolvency, or augments a pre-existing insolvency. As a consequence, in order for the revocatory action to be possible it is necessary that the act be with reference to property subject to seizure by the creditors, and that it form part of their common pledge....
311. Proof of Damage
Such proof is a condition to the exercise of the revocatory action. It is easy to furnish if the creditors have already `discussed,' that is, seized and sold the property of the debtor; if the price is not sufficient to satisfy all, the damage is not only demonstrated, but has also materialized.... (footnote omitted)
While the modern Civil Code articles have deleted the word `fraud' from their texts, they still embody the principles enunciated by and rooted in the Paulian action."
Thus, tracing the Louisiana revocatory action's origin to the Roman Paulian action, the majority in Jones held "proof of damage (harm)" is essential in presenting a revocatory claim. Citing Rayne State Bank & Trust v. National Union Fire Insurance Company, 483 So.2d 987 (La.1986), the majority also noted the Supreme Court said:
"In Louisiana prescription does not begin to run until damage is sustained. The tort prescription provisions in former C.C. 3537 were reenacted without substantive change in 1984 as C.C. 3492. C.C.
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