Spremich v. Somerfield

166 So. 630, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 115
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1936
DocketNo. 16254.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 So. 630 (Spremich v. Somerfield) 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
Spremich v. Somerfield, 166 So. 630, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 115 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On November 6, 1933, Nicholas Spremich leased to Mrs. Sadie C. Somerfield a building known as the Plaza Hotel in the city of New Orleans. The lease, though it was executed on November 6, 1933, contained a stipulation that it had gone into effect on November 1st. Under its terms Mrs. Somerfield agreed to pay monthly, in advance, $170 for each of the two remaining months of 1933, and $150 monthly, in advance, for each month of the years 1934 and 1935, and it was also stipulated that in the event of default in the payment of any note, the remaining unpaid notes should automatically become due.

Spremich, the landlord, alleging that the note for $150 due on January 1, 1934, had not been paid, and that as a result the remaining notes had matured, filed this suit against the lessee, Mrs. Somerfield, seeking judgment for the full amount, to wit, $3,-600, with interest and attorney’s fees as stipulated in the lease.

He prayed for recognition of his lessor’s lien on all of the effects of the lessor contained in the premises, and he obtained a writ of provisional seizure under which the said effects were seized.

Mrs. Somerfield filed an answer which plaintiff construed as containing admissions which entitled him to judgment, and, therefore, by rule nisi, he called upon her to show cause why judgment should not be rendered as prayed for by him. This rule was made absolute, judgment was rendered in accordance with the prayer of the petition, and defendant, Mrs. Somerfield, has not appealed.

Thereupon, Spremich, in execution of the judgment and in addition to the seizure which had resulted from the writ of provisional seizure, caused the issuance of a writ of fieri facias and under it issued garnishment process against the American Bank & Trust Company requiring that corporation to declare whether in its possession there were any funds of the said Mrs. Somerfield. ‘The said bank answered that there was on deposit with it an amount slightly in excess of $500; that Mrs. Somerfield had sent to the said bank previously a letter requesting that on January 5, 1934, it pay to Wesley D. Burdine $500 out of the said deposit; that on December 21, 1933, Mrs. Somerfield had notified the said bank that she had canceled the said authorization, and that it, the said bank, could not tell whether it should deliver the $500 to Burdine under the first said order, or to the sheriff under the writ of fieri facias, and it further stated that it would hold the said sum either “subject to an agreement between the parties, or a judicial determination of this dispute.”

At this stage of the proceeding Wesley D. Burdine intervened and claimed that he had sold to Mrs. Spremich the effects which had been contained in the premises and 'which had been seized under the writ of provisional seizure, and that he had retained a vendor’s lien and obtained a chattel mortgage to -secure the payment of the unpaid portion of the purchase price, and that, though his chattel mortgage had not been recorded in the mortgage office until after the date of the lease, nevertheless, the lien resulting from the chattel mortgage should be given priority over that of the lessor for various reasons which we shall hereafter set forth and discuss.

Burdine also claimed that Mrs. Somer-field had assigned to him, prior to its seizure at the hands of the lessor and judgment creditor, a certain $500 portion of the deposit standing in her name at the American Bank & Trust Company, and that, as a result of this alleged prior assignment, he should be placed in possession of the said sum.

In the absence of an appeal by Mrs. Som-erfield, the controversy, so far as the effects which were in the premises are concerned, resolves itself into a contest between the lessor of the building and the holder of a chattel mortgage on property found in the building and seized at the instance of the lessor, and, so far as the $500 deposit is concerned, the controversy depends upon whether the order, which Mrs. Somerfield gave to the bank to pay at a future date a certain portion of her funds to some one else, might be canceled by her prior to the date fixed for its execution.

Both of these questions were decided by the district court adversely to Burdine, and he has appealed.

We consider first whether the record authorizes us to hold that the lien resulting from the chattel mortgage held by Burdine, which mortgage was not recorded until aft *632 er the execution of the lease, should have priority over the lien of the lessor resulting from the execution of the lease.

Conceding that the lien of the lessor on articles in the leased premises ordinarily takes precedence over the lien of a chattel mortgage recorded after the execution of the lease, Burdine contends that here the actions of the lessor were such as to amount to fraud and coercion, and that, as a result of those actions, the recordation of the chattel mortgage was permitted to be delayed; that he, Burdine, was coerced into withholding the chattel mortgage from recordation until after the lease had been executed, and that, therefore, so far as Spremich and his lessor’s lien are concerned, the lien of the chattel mortgage should be considered as having attached at the time at which it would have attached had the recordation not been delayed.

We must, therefore, consider the facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of the lease and of the chattel mortgage. During the month of October, 1933, Burdine occupied the premises under a lease from Spremich, under which he was required to pay in advance a monthly rental of $170. This lease would have expired on December 31, 1933. It contained a stipulation giving Burdine the right to renew it for an additional term of from one to four years at the same rental, to wit, $170 per month payable in advance.

At that time there were located in the leased premises certain articles of furniture and hotel paraphernalia which belonged to Burdine. Concluding that he did not care to renew-the lease, he prevailed upon Mrs. Somerfield, who was interested in leasing the premises from Spremich, to purchase from him the furniture and other hotel effects to which we have referred.

He alleges that Spremich, the landlord, was aware of and verbally assented to this transaction and agreed that Mrs. Somer-field might lease the premises from January 1, 1934, for two years at $150 per month, and that the sale and chattel mortgage involving the furniture might be executed and recorded prior to the commencement of the new lease. In other words, that the lessor consented that the chattel mortgage to be executed might, by reason of prior execution and recordation have precedence over the lessor’s lien which would result from the lease which was later to be executed.

Burdine further charges that he and Mrs. Somerfield and Spremich, during the early part of November, 1933, agreed that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 630, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spremich-v-somerfield-lactapp-1936.