Richey v. Venture Oil & Gas Corp.

346 So. 2d 875
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 1977
Docket8511
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 346 So. 2d 875 (Richey v. Venture Oil & Gas Corp.) 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
Richey v. Venture Oil & Gas Corp., 346 So. 2d 875 (La. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

346 So.2d 875 (1977)

H. Lanier RICHEY
v.
VENTURE OIL & GAS CORPORATION (H & W Oil & Gas Company, Inc.).

No. 8511.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

May 17, 1977.

*876 Gordon, Arata, McCollam & Watters, Blake G. Arata, Andrew L. Gates, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

Monroe & Lemann, Richmond M. Eustis, New Orleans, for intervenor-appellant, H & W Oil & Gas Co., Inc.

Before SAMUEL, GULOTTA and BOUTALL, JJ.

GULOTTA, Judge.

We are confronted with a question involving ranking of privileges.

The relevant facts are as follows. Venture Oil & Gas Corporation executed a promissory note dated September 10, 1974, in the principal sum of $300,000.00 payable to The Merchants National Bank of Mobile for a loan in that sum made by the bank to Venture. The note was secured by the pledge of a $1,000,000.00 collateral mortgage note and collateral mortgage dated August 29, 1974. The property mortgaged was a State oil lease in Plaquemines Parish where oil drilling had been in operation.

On January 26, 1976, the bank transferred, sold and assigned to plaintiff the hand *877 note of September 10, 1974, secured by the August 29, 1974 collateral note and mortgage. Both notes were negotiated "without recourse" by the bank to plaintiff.

As holder and owner of the September 10 promissory note, plaintiff, after default in payment, filed this suit for sale of the mortgaged oil lease under executory process and sought payment of its claim for $290,272.90 (the outstanding balance due on the note) plus stipulated interest, attorney's fees and costs. H & W Oil & Gas Company, Inc., owner of a $125,000.00 note executed by Venture and secured by a mortgage and vendor's lien on the aforementioned oil lease, seeks through intervention in this suit to have its mortgage and vendor's lien prime plaintiff's collateral mortgage.

Intervenor's mortgage and vendor's lien were acquired in connection with a credit sale of the State lease from H & W Oil to Venture dated September 11, 1974, for the sum of $300,000.00 under terms of $175,000.00 cash and the balance secured by the vendor's lien and mortgage in the sum of $125,000.00. This act of sale contained the following subordination clause:

"Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary the mortgage and vendor's lien granted herein to vendor is subordinate and second to that certain collateral mortgage executed by Venture Oil & Gas Corporation securing a $1,000,000.00 collateral mortgage note dated August 29, 1974, which said mortgage is recorded in M.O.B. 77, Folio 856, of the records of Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. Purchaser warrants to vendor that said collateral mortgage note is pledged to The Merchants National Bank of Mobile to secure sums not exceeding $300,000.00. Purchaser warrants that it will not pledge said note to secure any additional borrowings during the existence of the mortgage granted herein."

Based on this recitation, the trial judge concluded that plaintiff's collateral mortgage is superior to intervenor's mortgage and vendor's lien. Intervenor appeals. We affirm.

We reject intervenor's contention (based on LSA-C.C. art. 3165 which sets forth in pertinent part, "The creditor cannot, in case of failure of payment, dispose of the pledge . . ..") that Venture's original creditor, Merchants Bank, had no right to transfer to plaintiff the pledged collateral mortgage note and, therefore, plaintiff is an unsecured creditor. We have no quarrel with the rule that ordinarily a pledgee cannot sell or transfer the pledged property absent an express agreement.[1] However, in the instant case, the hand note in the principal sum of $300,000.00 secured by the pledge of the collateral note and mortgage has been sold and assigned by the bank to plaintiff. We know of no authority and have been cited none which prohibits such a sale.

In Odom v. Cherokee Homes, Inc., 165 So.2d 855 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1964), writ refused, 246 La. 868, 167 So.2d 677 (1964), cited by intervenor, four collateral mortgage notes issued by Cherokee Homes, Inc. (the debtor) to Morgan (the first creditor) *878 were transferred for value to Odom (the second creditor). No assignment or transfer of Cherokee's primary indebtedness (the hand note, if one existed) was made to Odom. Following the transfer of the collateral mortgage notes, Cherokee issued a hand note to Odom secured by the collateral notes and mortgages. The court held that without the transfer by Morgan of evidence of the primary indebtedness (the hand note, if one existed), he, Morgan, had no right to transfer the pledged mortgage notes. The court stated at page 864:

"* * * Morgan did not own the collateral mortgage notes and stock, he held them in pledge as security for the corporation's indebtedness to him. * * * Obviously Morgan could not sell something he did not own. There was no transfer to Odom of the primary debt owed by the corporation to Morgan, and a sale of collateral divorced from the debt it is pledged to secure would amount to a conversion."

The court further concluded that the transaction was a payment of Cherokee's indebtedness to Morgan; and that pledge of the collateral mortgage notes in connection with the subsequent hand note given to Odom constituted a reissuance of the notes. According to the court, under the circumstances, Odom's collateral mortgage, for ranking purposes, dated from the time of reissuance and not from the time of the original pledge of the collateral notes to Morgan.

The facts in the instant case, however, are distinguishable from those in Odom. Unlike Odom, in our case the $300,000.00 hand note, secured by the collateral mortgage and note, was transferred by the original creditor to Richey, the subsequent creditor. In our case, both the hand note and collateral mortgage note were endorsed "without recourse" from Merchants Bank and assigned to plaintiff. The Odom court pointed out that no transfer of the primary debt (the hand note, if one existed) was made to the subsequent creditor. Though not stated in the Odom opinion, a reasonable inference is created (albeit dicta) that were the hand note transferred along with the collateral note and mortgage (as in our case), a different result would follow. See Nathan and Marshall, "The Collateral Mortgage", 33 La.L.R. 497, 512-513 (1973) for a discussion of the Odom case.

We might point out further that the collateral mortgage executed by Venture provides in pertinent part as follows:

"Mortgagee may transfer, negotiate, pledge or otherwise dispose of the aforesaid promissory note, and should any person pay said note and be subrogated to the rights and claims of the Mortgagee, then in either of said events, the Mortgagee shall have the right to transfer or pledge to transferee, pledgee or subrogee of said note, as the case may be, as security for the payment of said note, all the rights herein mortgaged, pledged, or assigned to the Mortgagee, but no such transfer or pledge shall have the effect of enlarging the obligations or prejudicing any of the rights of Mortgagor under this act or said note."

We interpret this provision to mean that the right is conferred upon Merchants Bank to transfer the collateral mortgage note in connection with a transfer of the hand note.

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