Succession of Picard

115 So. 2d 817, 238 La. 455, 1959 La. LEXIS 1106
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 9, 1959
Docket43836
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 115 So. 2d 817 (Succession of Picard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Picard, 115 So. 2d 817, 238 La. 455, 1959 La. LEXIS 1106 (La. 1959).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

Canal Assets, Inc., instituted this suit naming as defendants Henry M. Picard, testamentary executor of the succession of Achille I. Picard; 1 Mrs. Beatrix Bahn, widow of Achille Picard; and Leon P. Weil and Henry M. Picard, Jr., legatees. The primary purpose of this suit is to recover judgment in the total amount of a series of notes executed by the decedent. 2

The three notes on which this suit was filed were executed by Achille I. Picard and made payable to the Canal Bank & Trust Co. One note is for the principal sum of $1,450, is dated December 30, 1929, and matured 90 days after date; another is for the principal sum of $1,800, is dated January 6, 1930, and matured 90 days after date, and the third is for the principal sum of $650, is dated February 3, 1930, and matured 30 days after date. Each of these notes is subject to certain credits representing payments made during the life of Picard, who died on July 26, 1955.

*459 Both the $1,450 note and the $1,800 note over the signature of Picard as maker contain the following provision:

“This note * * * and every other debt, liability or obligation, * * * due or to become due, whether now existing or hereafter arising, by the undersigned, * * * shall be secured by the pledge of the securities or property listed and described on the reverse hereof * * *.”

On the back of the $1,450.00 note there appears :

“Secured by the following notes :—

“Note of Emyde Chauffe dated Parish of Iberville 1/11/24 — $1800.00

“Note of Blaise Lassere dated Parish of Iberville 6/10/24— 1000.00

“Note of Ahab Collins dated Parish of Iberville 9/3/25-------- 209.00”

On the back of the $1,800.00 note there appears :

“Secured by the following stocks:—

“65 shares — Picard Construction Co. Inc.

“ 5 “ —Bank of Gonzales.

“10 “ —Insurance Securities Co. Inc.”

The $650 note does not show a pledge of any specific property.

At his death Picard left a large estate, and petitioner as the holder of the notes timely filed its claim with the testamentary executor of Picard’s succession. Notwithstanding the filing of this claim and without payment thereof, defendants caused an ex parte judgment to be rendered sending the widow and the legatees into possession of the decedent’s estate.

To plaintiff’s suit defendants pleaded the prescription of five years and in the alternative that the action was barred by plaintiff’s laches. They contend also that there is no competent evidence that decedent pledged the notes of Chauffe and Lassere described on the reverse of the $1,450 note.

After trial on the merits the district court sustained defendants’ plea of laches and dismissed plaintiff’s suit. From this judgment it has appealed.

All of the notes and stocks which are described on the reverse of these notes, and which according to the face of the notes' were pledged to secure the payment of the principal obligation, are in the possession of the plaintiff with two exceptions. The Collins note had been paid and the proceeds credited to the Picard $1,450 note, and the five shares of Bank of Gonzales stock had been sold and the proceeds applied to the $1,800 note. The notes of Chauffe and Lassere pledged for the payment of the $1,450 note were secured by chattel mortgages, pledge of crops, and crop liens, and were payable to the order of their makers and by them endorsed in blank.

With reference to the $650 note dated February 3, 1930, appellees state in brief that this note had prescribed long before *461 decedent’s death, and since this note does not describe any property as being pledged for its security, there is no need of discussing it further. Appellees overlook the fact that this note was given after the $1,450 and $1,800 notes, each of which contains the provision over the deceased’s signature that “This note * * * and every other debt, liability or obligation, * * * due or to become due, whether now existing or hereafter arising, by the undersigned, * * shall be secured by the pledge of the securities or property listed and described on the reverse hereof * * *

The law of this state is clear “that prescription does not run in favor of the debtor whose debt is secured by a pledge, and that it remains interrupted, as long as the thing pledged is in the possession of the pledgee”, and that “it is not the contract or act of pledge that interrupts prescription but rather the detention by the pledgee of the thing pledged, such possession serving as a constant acknowledgment of the debt and hence a constant renunciation of prescription”. Scott v. Corkern, 231 La. 368, 91 So.2d 569, 572, and numerous authorities cited therein.

This principle of law is recognized by defendants-appellees, but it is their contention that it is without application here because all of the pledged property still in the possession of the plaintiff-appellant was without value. In this connection they allege that the pledged notes of Chauffe and Lassere show that on the date they were pledged they had prescribed on their face and therefore had no value; that the shares of stock of Insurance Securities Company, Inc., were likewise valueless at the time they were pledged as that corporation had previously gone into receivership, and that the shares of stock of the Picard Construction Company were also without value as that company went into receivership in 1937. Appellees argue that the above principle of law is applicable only where the debtor consents for the creditor to hold as a pledge something of value owned by the debtor.

The pledge is a contract by which a debtor gives something to a creditor as security for his debt. La.Civ.Code Art. 3133. In the instant case the things remaining in the hands of the pledgee were promissory notes and shares of stock in corporations. None of these things had been lost or destroyed and all were still in the possession of the creditor, whose obligation as creditor still continues to return the pledged things or to answer for loss or damage to them resulting from its fault.

As stated in Scott v. Corkern, supra, it is the detention by the pledgee of the things pledged which serves as a continuing acknowledgment of the debt and a constant renunciation of prescription. It is not the detention of a thing of value by the *463 pledgee which serves as a constant acknowledgment of the debt and hence a constant renunciation of prescription. Regardless of the value of the thing pledged, the obligation of the pledgee to return the property continues. Counsel’s argument, in effect, is that because the things pledged were without value at the time they were pledged or subsequently became valueless, the pledge was extinguished notwithstanding the fact that the pledgee still detained the things pledged. Under the well settled law the detention or possession is the factor which serves as a constant acknowledgment of the debt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 So. 2d 817, 238 La. 455, 1959 La. LEXIS 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-picard-la-1959.