T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc. v. Northern Lumber Mfg. Co.

107 So. 593, 160 La. 839, 1926 La. LEXIS 1969
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 1, 1926
DocketNo. 27683.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 107 So. 593 (T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc. v. Northern Lumber Mfg. Co.) 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
T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc. v. Northern Lumber Mfg. Co., 107 So. 593, 160 La. 839, 1926 La. LEXIS 1969 (La. 1926).

Opinion

OVERTON, .1.

T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., under a contract dated June 16, 1923, agreed to advance to the Northern Lumber-Manufacturing Company, Inc., whom we shall refer to as the relator, the funds required by it to operate its sawmill. To represent each advance made, relator executed its note, secured by chattel mortgage on a specified quantity of lumber, described in each act of mortgage. Fifty-eight advances were made from time to time, and a like number of notes and mortgages were executed. These notes and mortgages range in amount from, say, approximately, $1,200 to $7,900 each, and aggregate, say, $191,919.93, but are subject to credits, which, according to the claim of T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., leaves $48,924.03, exclusive of interest and attorneys’ fees, still due. Considerable portions of the lumber mortgaged were shipped by relator, on orders received from ,T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., to purchasers indicated in the orders, and the proceeds derived from the sales were applied by that house on its books to the credit of relator, but no credits were entered on the notes themselves. It was from these sales-, or almost entirely so, that the total indebtedness, due by relator, was reduced, leaving the balance above stated.

Relator failed to pay the balance of the indebtedness, which T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., claimed was due, and the latter caused executory process to issue on the mortgages held by it, and had the sheriff seize the lumber on relator’s yards, which it considered subject to its mortgages.

A few days after the issuance of the executory process, relator applied to the district court, in and for the parish of Pointe Coupee, for a writ of injunction to prohibit T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., and the sheriff from proceeding further under the executory process that had issued.

In its petition for a writ of injunction, relator sets forth substantially, and by reference to documents attached to the petition, the foregoing facts. Relator then alleges that the notes and mortgages executed by it, upon which executory process issued, were executed without consideration, and that it derived no benefit or advantage whatever from their execution. It then alleges, to quote from its petition, that:

“Should the court hold that there was a consideration for said notes and mortgages, which is not admitted but specially denied, then and in that event, in the alternative, and for the reasons hereinafter set forth, petitioner shows that the order for executory process in said suit was inadvertently granted by the court, and that the writ of seizure and sale which issued in pursuance of said order issued illegally and wrongfully and to the great and irreparable damage of petitioner, and that same should therefore be recalled, rescinded, annulled, and set aside, and the sheriff of the parish of Pointe Coupee ‘should be restrained and forever prohibited from further proceeding under said writ:
*843 “(a) Because on the face of the petition in said suit it clearly appears that most of the notes foreclosed upon therein have been paid from the proceeds of lumber sold by said T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., for the account of petitioner; yet said petition does not show which of said notes have- thus been paid and which of said notes, if any, are still due and unpaid.
“(b) Because, notwithstanding the fact that the payment of each of said notes was secured by a special mortgage on particular lumber specifically described in each act of mortgage and each of said notes should therefore have been credited with the proceeds of the sale of the particular lumber mortgaged to secure it, the said petition (referring to the petition for executory process), with the statement of account thereto annexed, shows that the proceeds of the sale of the lumber thus mortgaged was applied to all of said fifty-eight notes indiscriminately and without reference to the particular note to which a certain portion of said proceeds should in each case have been applied; and that said petition fails to show the amount of credit to which each or any of said notes is entitled from the proceeds of the lumber sold. ■ 0
“(c) Because, should the sheriff be permitted to sell the lumber seized in execution of said writ of seizure and sale, it would be impossible for him, under the allegations and prayer of said petition (for executory process) to properly and legally apply to each of the mortgage notes, foreclosed upon, the exact credit to which it would be entitled out of the proceeds of the sale of the lumber under seizure.
“(d) That, for the reasons hereinbefore set forth, and for other reasons, the petition for foreclosure in said suit discloses no right or cause of action for executory process.”

The trial judge granted a rule nisi, directing T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., and the sheriff to show cause why the injunction prayed for should not issue. The former appeared, in response to the rule issued by the judge, and excepted to relator’s petition, on the ground that it did not disclose a right or cause of action. , This exception was sustained by the trial judge, and the petition for injunction was accordingly dismissed. Relator then made application to this court, through its receivers, the company having been placed in the hands of receivers pending the application for injunction, for writs of certiorari, prohibition, and mandamus for the purpose of having the proceedings had reviewed, the injunction ordered to issue, and the proceedings in the meantime stayed in the lower court. This court ordered the writ of certiorari to issue, and also granted an order for a rule nisi, directing that cause be shown why the relief prayed for by relator should not be granted. The trial judge has made his return, and T. HofmanOlsen, Inc., has filed exceptions and an answer.

As we have seen, one of the grounds urged, as a reason why the injunction should issue, is that the notes and mortgages were executed without consideration, and were therefore null and void. This ground is not discussed in relator’s brief. As a matter of fact, as observed, in effect, by the trial judge, the allegations of the petition, taken as a whole, clearly show that the notes were given to represent advances in money,1' made to relator by T. Hofman-Olsen, Inc., and that the mortgages were given to secure the notes. The notes and mortgages were given to represent and secure indebtedness due, and it is immaterial whether they were given partly after the advances were made, and partly at the time they were made, or wholly after the advances were made, or whether the contract to make the advances required the* giving of the notes and mortgages or not. The notes and mortgages are not without consideration, and hence this ground for injunction possesses no merit.

Relator, as we have observed, also sets forth as a ground for injunction that, although it appears from the petition for executory process that most of said notes have been paid from the proceeds of the lumber •sold from time to time, yet the petition does not show which of said notes have been paid, and which are still due, and that the petition should so show, and should also show the *845

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 593, 160 La. 839, 1926 La. LEXIS 1969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-hofman-olsen-inc-v-northern-lumber-mfg-co-la-1926.