Summers v. Clark

30 La. Ann. 436
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
DocketNo. 6815
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 30 La. Ann. 436 (Summers v. Clark) 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
Summers v. Clark, 30 La. Ann. 436 (La. 1878).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Spencer, J.

Plaintiffs having obtained judgment for large amount against Clark, seized under execution a house and lot on Canal street, belonging to their debtor. This house wa§ occupied at time of seizure by S. L. Boyd, under a lease from Clark, at $375 per quarter; for which quarterly rents Boyd had delivered to Clark his negotiable promissory notes. At the date of seizure one of those notes for quarterly rent was part due and had been paid. The plaintiffs, upon seizing the house and lot, served process of garnishment on Boyd, and propounded interroga[437]*437tories to him, touching his indebtedness for rent. Boyd answered, stating that he held the house and lot under a notarial lease from Clark, and that he had delivered to Clark for the rent, falling due quarterly, negotiable promissory notes. That if Clark held these notes he was his debtor, otherwise not. That he did not, however, know who held them. Plaintiff moved for judgment against the garnishee, as on confession. No legal principle is better settled than that an indebtedness, evidenced by negotiable promissory notes, can not be seized by garnishment of the maker. The notes themselves must be taken into actual custody by the sheriff. But there are other legal principles which may modify or vary this rule. Thus when a contract gives rise to several successive ■obligations to be performed at different times, it may happen that one or more of these obligations, at the time of performance, are due to other persons than the original contracting creditor. Contracts of lease are of this character. The rents and fruits of an immovable belong primarily to its owner; but the ownership may be transferred from one person to another pending the lease.

As rents are considered to accrue day by day, and as being due by successive obligations, it inay well happen that the rents of to-day aré due to A, and those of to-morrow to B, though the lessee hold under one and the same contract all the while. In principle, therefore, where the right to receive the rents has passed from one person to another, the tenant can not plead, against the latter’s demand for rent, payments he may have made, by anticipation, to the former.

A tenant who has given negotiable promissory notes for future rents ought to be considered in a position similar to one who has paid his rents in advance. The question, therefore, presented for our decision is, when rents to accrue in the future have been paid in advance by cash or negotiable notes, does a seizure of the leased immovable by a judgment creditor of lessor operate a seizure of rents accruing after the seizure ? ■ .

As the lease in this case was not recorded in the conveyance office, the question is not affected by the registry laws. “ All sales, contracts, ■and judgments affecting immovable property which shall not be so recorded, shall be utterly null and void, except between the parties thereto.” C. C. 2266. See also C. C. 2264, which provides: “No notarial act concerning immovable property shall have any effect against third persons,” unless recorded in the conveyance office. These are negatives pregnant with affirmatives to the effect that contracts “ affecting ” or “concerning” immovables (and therefore leases thereof), will have effect against third persons, if duly recorded; just as sales, mortgages, etc., affect them when recorded. It would seem that where a lease of real estate has been made in good faith and duly recorded, a creditor of [438]*438the lessor, seizing the property, will take it subject to the rights of lessee under the contract, unless the seizing creditor have a mortgage or privilege anterior to the registered lease. If, in such a case, the tenant have paid his rents in advance for the whole term, either in cash or in negotiable notes, the seizing creditor, having no antferipr mortgage or privilege, can not, nor can any subsequent purchaser, exact rents until the expiration of the term. But, as we have stated, the tenant Boyd holds under an unrecorded lease, and any payments of rent which he may have made by anticipation, to Clark, are without effect as against creditors or subsequent purchasers of Clark. But it is contended by the counsel of Boyd that until the seizure made by plaintiffs ultimates in a sale of the property they can not take the rents; that it is only by title of owner, and after that title is acquired, that rents can be demanded. It is true that the right to take rents must be derived from or through the owner; but it is not true that the person exercising this right of the owner must be the owner himself. His creditors may exercise that right, and may even do so in cases and under circumstances where he could not himself do so, as we shall see hereafter. The law undoubtedly gives the creditor the right to seize the debtor’s property; and article 466, C. C. declares that: “The fruits of an immovable * * produced while it is under seizure are considered as making part thereof, and inure to the benefit of the person making the seizure.” Article 656, C. P., provides: “When the sheriff seizes houses or lands, he must take at the same time all the rents, issues, and revenue which this property may yield.” How, in the face of these provisions, can it be maintained that the seizing creditor can not as such, and through the sheriff, demand and take the rents of the seized premises ? The- distinction, therefore, attempted to bo drawn between the effects of a seizure and those of an actual sale under the writ is more seeming than real. The law does not more clearly or explicitly give the right of taking the fruits to the owner, than it does to the seizing creditor of the owner. Both rights are unquestionable, for both are positively given by the law. This distinction, too, when pushed to its legitimate results leads to legal absurdity. Thus A, being a judgment creditor of B for $100, seizes an immovable producing a monthly relit of $500. The law commands the sheriff to take those rents in satisfaction of the writ, and declares that they inure to the benefit of the seizing creditor. Before a sale of the immovable can possibly be effected, the rents satisfy and therefore extinguish the writ. But it is argued that these rents can not be taken and applied to the writ until after the sale, which can not be made because there is nothing due under the writ!

But it is urged in the second- place that the seizing creditor, under garnishment process, can have no other or greater right than his debtor!

[439]*439In our opinion, under the facts of the case before us, the process of garnishment was unnecessary, and constituted simply another seizure of what was already under seizure. The rents and fruits of an immovable under seizure “are considered as making part” of the thing seized — C. C. 466 — and the sheriff is required “ to take them.” C. P. 656. But, if unnecessary, it was a convenient form for testing the tenant’s liability. The proposition that the rights of a seizing creditor, in garnishment process, are precisely measured by those of his debtor, must be taken cum grano salis, and is not absolutely true. Garnishment under a ft. fa. is simply a mode of seizing incorporeal, intangible things. There is no philosophic reason for distinguishing between the rights of a creditor seizing by garnishment intangible things, and those of a creditor seizing, by the hand of the sheriff corporeal or tangible things.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 La. Ann. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summers-v-clark-la-1878.