United Credit Plan of Gretna v. Pullen
This text of 448 So. 2d 95 (United Credit Plan of Gretna v. Pullen) 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.
Opinion
UNITED CREDIT PLAN OF GRETNA
v.
Richard PULLEN and Bobalin Pullen.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*96 Irl R. Silverstein, Gretna, for applicant.
John F. Rowley, Dist. Atty., Marcel J. Gueniot, Asst. Dist. Atty., William H. Egan, Chalmette, Richard K. Dimitry, New Orleans, for respondents.
CALOGERO, Justice.
This case involves a contest over the proceeds of a foreclosure sale, between a conventional mortgagee (relative to a wife's separate property), and a judgment creditor with an earlier inscribed judicial mortgage (against the husband).
On August 11, 1978, a judicial mortgage bearing against Richard Pullen took effect upon recordation in St. Bernard Parish of a $1445.00 judgment in favor of Southern Baptist Hospital. The judgment came out of a lawsuit to recover on a medical bill incurred when Richard Pullen's wife, Bobalin Pullen, gave birth to a child at Southern Baptist Hospital in New Orleans.
*97 On April 6, 1979, United Credit Plan of Gretna loaned Bobalin Pullen and Richard Pullen $31,900.00. The loan was secured by a conventional mortgage on property located at 2204 Farmsite Road, Violet, Louisiana in St. Bernard Parish. That was the separate property of Bobalin Pullen which she had acquired by judgment of possession in the succession of one Barbara Duhe. Following default in the payments due under the mortgage, United Credit foreclosed on December 17, 1979. On March 5, 1980, United Credit bought the property in at the sheriff's sale for $28,334.00, the amount due on its mortgage.
Southern Baptist Hospital intervened to have the sheriff's sale set aside because the sale did not bring sufficient monies to pay off the outstanding mortgages,[1] or alternatively, to be paid by United Credit the $1,445.00 owed on the hospital's judgment against Richard Pullen. The district court refused to set aside the sale of the property, but did order United Credit to pay Southern Baptist Hospital the amount outstanding on their judgment. United Credit appealed.
The Court of Appeal found that the property in question was the separate property of Bobalin Pullen, which at the time the mortgage was confected (April 16, 1979) was not available to community creditors to satisfy a community obligation incurred by the wife. However, the Court of Appeal went on to find that, at the time of the judicial sale (March 5, 1980), the law regarding the availability of a wife's separate property to satisfy a community debt incurred by her, had changed. Under the law as it existed in March of 1980, and today, creditors are allowed to satisfy a community obligation not only from community property but also from the separate property of the spouse, including a wife, who has incurred the debt. Because "the obligation to pay the hospital clearly arose after Bobalin Pullen was admitted to Baptist for the delivery of the couple's child and received medical services there" [435 So.2d 1055 at 1057, n. 3 (La.App.1983)], the appellate court concluded "that Southern Baptist Hospital had a judicial mortgage against the Pullens[2] which on March 3, 1980, was superior to the mortgage of the seizing [conventional mortgage] creditor", [435 So.2d at 1057], a creditor who held a mortgage made by the wife on her separate property. (emphasis provided.)
According to United Credit the Court of Appeal was apparently applying in some sort of retrospective manner a 1980 change in the law which freed a wife's separate property for the involuntary satisfaction of community debts incurred by her. United Credit sought writs contending that the Court of Appeal erred in "giving retroactive application to La.C.C. art. 2345." This question of the retroactivity of La.C.C. art. 2345 may yet have to be resolved, and we might conjure up hypothetical cases in which retroactive application, or not, would be dispositive in a given case. However, that is not the case here. Rather, this case can be resolved simply on the matter of ranking of mortgages, and by affording appropriate respect to the public records doctrine.
By virtue of its outset inscription of the judgment against Richard Pullen, does Southern Baptist have a ranking lien in competition with United Credit's recorded conventional mortgage against the wife and her separate property? The answer is no.
A judicial mortgage is "that resulting from [a] judgment ..., in favor of the person obtaining [it]." La.C.C. art. 3321. La.C.C. art. 3328 provides that "(t)he judicial mortgage may be enforced against all the immovables which the debtor actually *98 owns and may subsequently acquire." (emphasis provided.) The only property affected by the judicial mortgage resulting from Southern Baptist's $1,445.00 judgment against Richard Pullen was property owned or to be acquired by that named judgment debtor, Richard Pullen.
A conventional mortgage is "a contract, by which a person binds the whole of his property, or a portion of it only, in favor of another, to secure the execution of some engagement, but without divesting himself of the possession." La.C.C. art. 3290. "Conventional mortgages can only be agreed to by those who have the power of alienating the property which they subject to them." La.C.C. art. 3300. In this case Bobalin Pullen and she alone was the party who mortgaged her separate property.[3]
Applying the foregoing legal principles, the 1978 judgment against the husband (and its recordation) resulted in a lien on what he owned and on what he might later own, but the creditor got no lien against property belonging to anyone other than that debtor. La.C.C. art. 3328. The judicial mortgage against the property of Richard Pullen did not attach to the separate property of his wife. Furthermore, before 1980 Mrs. Pullen's separate property was not exposed to the satisfaction of her husband's judgment debt, even if a community obligation and incurred by her, absent a community property partition and express acceptance of community debts. La.C.C. art. 2403 and 2410 (1870).[4]
Effective January 1, 1980, however the immediately preceding statement is no longer so. La.C.C. arts. 2403 and 2410 were repealed and La.C.C. art. 2345 was enacted, which provides that "[a] separate or community obligation may be satisfied during the community property regime from community property and from the separate property of the spouse who incurred the obligation." So, after 1980 Bobalin Pullen's separate property is exposed to the satisfaction of a community debt incurred by her.
With the change in the law, Southern Baptist Hospital may have secured a right which did not formerly exist: that is, to satisfy a community debt incurred by the wife from the wife's separate property. Had the judicial mortgage been recorded in both names, Richard and Bobalin Pullen, on August 11, 1978, and the change in the law were simply to have made formerly unavailable property of the judgment debtor available to creditors, Southern Baptist's claim to a portion of the proceeds of the sale might have more merit. However, in this case, Southern Baptist Hospital's recorded judgment was only against Richard Pullen. Bobalin Pullen's obligation on this community debt has not produced a judgment against her. Consequently no lien against her separate property has arisen out of it. At best we can speculate about her separate responsibility, since the unpaid bill to Southern Baptist was one for medical treatment she and her newborn daughter received.
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448 So. 2d 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-credit-plan-of-gretna-v-pullen-la-1984.