Scallan v. Simmesport State Bank

129 So. 2d 49, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 2047
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1961
DocketNo. 74
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 So. 2d 49 (Scallan v. Simmesport State Bank) 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
Scallan v. Simmesport State Bank, 129 So. 2d 49, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 2047 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinions

CULPEPPER, Judge.

In this suit the plaintiffs seek to enjoin F. O. Didier, Jr., Sheriff of the Parish of Avoyelles, and the Simmesport State Bank from proceeding further with the advertisement or sale of certain realty which the defendant bank is seeking to have sold in Suit No. 20013 on the docket of the Twelfth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Avoyelles entitled "Simmesport State Bank vs. N. J. Scallan” which is a suit to foreclose on a mortgage by executory process. Plaintiffs, Eugene N. Scallan, Mrs. Alamae Scallan Roy and Max D. Scallan, allege that they are present owners of the property, having acquired the same from their mother, Mrs. Eulalie Young Scallan (also appearing as a party plaintiff) by an act of sale dated July 8, 19S8. Plaintiffs allege further that Mrs. Eulalie Young Scallan acquired the said property from Noah J. Scallan in an act of partition and settlement of community property dated and recorded on May 29, 1956 in which act of partition and settlement the said Noah J. Scallan expressly declared that the property in question was free and clear of any mortgages or encumbrances. Petitioners allege that notwithstanding said declarations in said act of partition and settlement, Noah J. Scallan, at the time of said partition, had in his possession 10 mortgage notes made by himself payable to himself and by him endorsed, each in the sum of $1,000, dated November 10, 1949, one of the said notes being payable each year beginning December 1, 1950, which notes were secured by a mortgage in favor of "any future holder or holders of the herein described notes”. The mortgage covers the property in question and was duly recorded on November 14, 1949.

Petitioners allege further that after Noah J. Scallan and Eulalie Young Scallan were judicially separated from bed and board and entered into said act of partition and settlement of the community in May of 1956, Noah J. Scallan did in August of 1956, attempt to reissue the 10 mortgage notes dated November 10, 1949, which notes he had reacquired, by pledging the said notes to the Simmesport State Bank as security for a promissory note in the sum of $5,000. Petitioners allege that the said ten mortgage notes had been extinguished by confusion when Noah J. Scallan reacquired them and consequently the mortgage was extinguished.

Petitioners allege further that Mrs. Eulalie Young Scallan did not sign the 1949 mortgage or the notes secured by same and that she is therefore not bound thereby. Petitioners further allege fraud on the part of Mr. Noah J. Scallan and the Simmesport State Bank and pray that the mortgage and the 10 notes secured thereby be declared extinguished and that the inscription of said mortgage be cancelled.

In their answer, defendants alleged that at the time the 10 mortgage notes were pledged to the Simmesport State Bank on August 7, 1956, Mr. and Mrs. Scallan had become reconciled and were living together as man and wife and that she knew that the said mortgage notes were being pledged by Mr. Scallan as security for a loan of $5,000 as is evidenced by the fact that she signed her name upon the reverse side of the said promissory note under a typed notation thereon which stated “This note secured by R/E mortgage in the amount of $10,000.00 dated November 10, 1949, payable to himself and due on demand”. Defendants allege further that no payments were made on said promissory note except interest, that the said note was payable on demand, and that when Noah J. Scallan advised the bank that he was unable to pay this indebtedness, it had no alternative but to foreclose on the mortgage notes which it held in pledge.

In the lower court a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction were [51]*51granted, but, on trial of the merits for a permanent injunction, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants denying the injunction relief sought. From this judgment plaintiffs have taken a suspensive and devolutive appeal.

The relevant facts proved during the trial are substantially as alleged with the exceptions hereinafter discussed. The first argument of plaintiffs, which we deem it appropriate to consider, is that the mortgage notes issued in 1949 were for a specific debt, and were not for future use in favor of any future holders, and consequently that the mortgage was extinguished when Mr. Noah J. Scallan reacquired the notes. This argument is without merit. An examination of the 10 mortgage notes shows that they are made payable to a nominal party, that is, they were made payable to the maker and by him endorsed. The mortgage itself shows that it is drawn in favor of “any future holder or holders of the herein described notes”. The jurisprudence is well settled that such mortgage notes drawn for future use and in favor of any future holder may be reacquired by the maker and reissued as collateral security and the mortgage will not be extinguished. In the case of Mente & Co., Inc. v. Levy, 160 La. 496, 107 So. 318, 320, the court cited many authorities and held as follows:

“The rule is well settled, at least in the jurisprudence of this state, that, when a mortgage is given for a specific debt to a particular creditor, payment of that debt extinguishes the mortgage and a reissue of the note will not revive or reinstate the mortgage.
“Indeed that is the plain provision of the Code.
“ ‘Hence it happens that in all cases where the principal debt is extinguished the mortgage disappears.’ C.C. Art. 3285.
“[3] It is otherwise when the mortgage note is not for a specific debt, but for future use and in favor of any future holder. In such a case the note may be reissued and used as collateral and the accessory right of mortgage preserved intact.”

Under the holding in the Mente & Co., Inc. case, and the authorities cited therein, it is clear that the 1949 mortgage notes were not for a specific debt, but were for future use in favor of any future holder and consequently could be reacquired by the maker and reissued as collateral security, without extinguishing the mortgage. However, plaintiffs argue that even though we conclude that it was a collateral mortgage to secure a future loan it is effective as to third parties only from the date of reis-suance of the notes and not from the date of original execution and recordation and that therefore, in the instant case, the mortgage is effective from the date of reissuance of the mortgage notes by pledging them to defendant bank which date was approximately 2 months after Mrs. Eulalie Young Scallan acquired the property in the community settlement above described. Since this litigation will be determined under these principles of law, we quote at length from the case of Hammond State Bank & Trust Company v. Broderick, 179 La. 693, 154 So. 739, 740, in which Broderick executed a $6,000 future holder mortgage on a dwelling which he owned, but did not occupy at the time. Broderick first pledged the note to a bank as collateral for a loan which he later repaid. He reacquired the note and kept it in his possession for about a year until he repledged it to the plaintiff, Hammond State Bank & Trust Company, as collateral security for a new loan. Broderick failed to pay the second loan and when the plaintiff bank sought to foreclose the facts showed that although at the time the mortgage was originally executed, Broderick and his family were not living in the dwelling, that previous to the date that he reissued the note to the Hammond State Bank & Trust Co., Broderick and his family had moved into the dwelling and they therefore asserted a homestead exemp

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Bluebook (online)
129 So. 2d 49, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 2047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scallan-v-simmesport-state-bank-lactapp-1961.