Succession of Caine v. Tanho Land & Cattle Co.

198 So. 2d 439, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5447
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 1967
DocketNo. 2616
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 So. 2d 439 (Succession of Caine v. Tanho Land & Cattle Co.) 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
Succession of Caine v. Tanho Land & Cattle Co., 198 So. 2d 439, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5447 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

McBRIDE, Judge.

This appeal presents a unique and unusual financial transaction between Dr. Ansel M. Caine, now deceased, and the defendants. The transaction was initiated in the latter part of 1959 and early 1960. On November 27, 1959, Dr. Caine advanced $6751.50 to Northern Homes, Inc., and on January 25, 1960, made another advance to said concern in the amount of $23,248.50 or a total of $30,000. Said advances were actually made for the account of defendant Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., to whom Northern Homes, Inc., turned over the money. Tan-ho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., was to utilize the funds for acquiring real estate in St. Tammany Parish which it intended to subdivide. Dr. Caine’s “investment” was made with the expectation he would receive “two for one” for his money in the form of “mortgage notes” in the aggregate sum of $60,000. In short, he was purchasing mortgage notes from Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., in the amount of $60,000 at a 50% discount. What notes or whose notes he was purchasing is not shown, but we suppose he was to take notes Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., received from its vendees in connection with credit sales of lots in the subdivision. The record shows that Dr. Caine never did receive any mortgage notes from Tanho Land and Cattle Co. Some time in 1960, after the above mentioned advances were made, Dr. Caine received from Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., its two unsecured “notes” each for $30,000, not [441]*441payable in money, but “payable in first mortgage notes". The record is silent as to any other details of the said two notes, such as the dates thereof, the maturities, rate of interest thereon, etc. William T. Campbell, with whom Dr. Caine negotiated as the representative of Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., did not endorse the notes personally, but he nevertheless “guaranteed” them and agreed to be individually bound thereon along with Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc. There is no evidence regarding the details of Campbell’s guarantee, such as whether it was in writing, its date, etc., but are certain the guarantee existed. Plaintiff’s exhibit No. 30 is a two-page statement in the hand writing of defendant Campbell, captioned:

“Succession of Dr. A. M. Caine
“Investments made for Dr. A. M. Caine by W. T. Campbell (all secured by W. T. Campbell personally as stated in further detail below)” (Italics ours.)

Campbell then listed the instant transactions.

Some time in the early part of 1961, Dr. Caine and Campbell, the latter representing Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., entered into a novation contract (R.C.C. art. 2185) under which Dr. Caine was to receive from Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., in place of one of the $30,000 notes above mentioned a new unsecured “note” for $30,-000 “payable in mortgage notes” and in place of the other $30,000 note hereinbefore mentioned the agreement was that Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., would pay Dr. Caine in cash over a period of time the sum of $30,000. Plaintiff contends that Dr. Caine was to be paid $500 per month for five years. The defendants’ contention is that the other $30,000 was to be paid at the rate of $3000 annually, said payments being intended as a bonus for the use of the $30,-000 advanced by Dr. Caine, which would have the net result of returning to Dr. Caine in cash, over the 10-year period, his $30,000, which would still leave him retaining the $30,000 new note.

We hold that the agreement for the deferred cash payments was as contended by the defendants for Campbell’s uncontradict-ed testimony runs thus:

“A. The modified agreement, as I understand it, was that Dr. Caine was to relinquish the two notes, each in the amount of thirty thousand dollars, each payable in mortgage notes, and receive in place of that from Tanho, a thirty thousand dollar note due in one year, on which — during that year he would get a ten percent interest payment and each year he would renew the note, upon getting a new note for thirty thousand dollars, and a payment of three thousand dollars of interest.
jfc % ‡ ‡ ‡
“A. There is only one agreement that I can recall which we operated on in 1961, which was that he was to get the thirty thousand dollar note and the agreement to get three thousand dollars a year on each anniversary date of the note for ten years, which would pay him the sixty thousand dollars.
“Q. Over the ten year period ?
“A. Yes, sir.
* :{c * * * *
“Q. Do you know why he explained [exchanged] the — two promissory notes for thirty thousand dollars, each for one promissory note, for thirty thousand dollars?
“A. I have stated my understanding was that Dr. Caine would exchange the two notes for one thirty-thousand dollar note, and an agreement to get the thirty thousand dollars over a period of ten years.
“Q. Was there any writing evidencing the agreement to pay that you gave to Dr. Caine?
“A. I don’t recall.
[442]*442“Q. Are you denying that you had agreed to pay a bonus of five hundred dollars a month for the other thirty thousand?
“A. It is my recollection we would pay three thousand dollars a year for ten years.”

We are also satisfied that Campbell, as in the first instance, “guaranteed” the indebtedness of Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., under the changed circumstances brought about by the novation.

The new note contemplated by the parties was not executed and delivered to Dr. Caine until July 15, 1961, some months after the novation had been confected. This note, bearing said date, is for $30,000, payable one year after date to the order of Dr. Ansel M. Caine at the National Bank of Commerce in New Orleans, with interest after July 15, 1962, at the rate of 6% per annum, and i£ * * * if not paid at maturity and collected by an attorney or by legal proceedings, an additional sum of ten per cent, on the amount of this note as attorney’s fees”. At the foot of the note appears these words: “Payment to be made in mortgage notes”.

Campbell paid Dr. Caine $1000 in each of the months March, April and May, 1961, and his testimony is to the effect that the $3000 so paid was in satisfaction of the first yearly installment due under the arrangement for the deferred cash payments over the 10-year period.

About January 2, 1963, Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., sent its check for $3000 to Dr. Caine’s executor who refused to accept it.

Dr. Caine died September 26, 1961. The instant suit was filed April 8, 1964, Ansel M. Caine, Jr., the testamentary executor, of the Succession of Dr. Ansel M. Caine, No. 394-493 of the docket of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, seeking to recover from Tanho Land and Cattle Co., Inc., and William T. Campbell, jointly and in solido, the sum of $57,000 plus interest and 10% attorney’s fees. It is alleged that $30,-000, plus interest and attorney’s fees is due on the note of July 15, 1961, and that there is $27,000 due on the agreement for the deferred cash payments.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 2d 439, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-caine-v-tanho-land-cattle-co-lactapp-1967.