Unity Industrial Life Ins. Co. v. Dejoie

11 So. 2d 546, 202 La. 249, 1942 La. LEXIS 1347
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 30, 1942
DocketNo. 36656.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 546 (Unity Industrial Life Ins. Co. v. Dejoie) 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
Unity Industrial Life Ins. Co. v. Dejoie, 11 So. 2d 546, 202 La. 249, 1942 La. LEXIS 1347 (La. 1942).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

On December 30, 1937, Paul H. V. Dejoie and Prudhomme J. E. Dejoie executed a promissory note for $7,000 in favor of the Unity Industrial Life Insurance Company. The makers of the note bound themselves in solido to pay it. To secure the payment of the note, they, on the same day, executed a mortgage on certain property which they owned in the City of New Orleans, the mortgage itself being in favor of the insurance company. The act of mortgage recites that the makers are indebted unto the mortgagee “in the full sum of Seven Thousand and no/100 ($7,-000.00) Dollars which the said mortgagee has loaned and advanced unto the said mortgagor [s] in lawful money, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged”.

On September 28, 1939, the Unity Industrial Life Insurance Company filed a petition, alleging that it was the holder and owner, for a valuable consideration, of the note, that the note was overdue, and that nothing had been paid thereon, and it prayed that an order of executory process issue and that the mortgaged property be *254 sold to satisfy the debt. An order of ex-ecutory process was signed by the judge, and a writ of seizure and sale was issued and placed in the hands of the civil sheriff for execution. The mortgaged property was seized and advertised for sale.

Thereupon, the defendants, mortgagors, brought suit to enjoin the sale, alleging (Paragraph 2 of their petition) that: “Petitioners aver that said Seven Thousand ($7,000.00) Dollar note was drawn by themselves and made payable to the order of the Unity Industrial Life Insurance Company, a Louisiana Corporation, and was given by them ‘For Convenience Only’, and that no money' consideration or other valuable consideration was given therefor.”

In the third paragraph of their petition for injunction, the mortgagors alleged that in the year 1929 Paul H. V. Dejoie borr rowed $700 from the plaintiff insurance company and that Prudhomme J. E. Dejoie borrowed $1,400 from that company, and that as collateral they pledged “certificates of stock from the Louisiana Weekly, a Negro Newspaper, and certificates of stock from the Unity Agency and Loan Company, of which they were stockholders, and of which they were the owners of the stock given as collateral as mentioned hereinabove”. This paragraph of their petition further recites that they “acknowledge that they are indebted unto the Unity Industrial Life Insurance Company in the sums mentioned herein and have made tender of the amounts due by them respectively which was never accepted by said company”.

The fourth and fifth paragraphs of their petition for injunction are lengthy recitals of their reasons for executing the $7,000 mortgage sought to be foreclosed, and why, as they allege, the said note was given by them “For Convenience Only”. They reiterate that no money consideration or other valuable consideration was given therefor. They allege, in sum, that in the year 1934 the Louisiana Insurance Commission examined the books of the Unity Industrial Life Insurance Company and found that its books showed that the collateral of said company in effect at the time of the examination was insufficient to take care of certain loans which had been made by the insurance company to some of the stockholders. Among these loans petitioners mention one made to Constant C. Dejoie for $16,000, one made to Prudhomme J. E. Dejoie (one of the petitioners) for $1,400, and one to Paul H. V. Dejoie (one of petitioners) for $700. (The loans of $1,400 and $700 are those mentioned by the petitioners in the third paragraph of their petition, which loans they admit they owe.)

They allege in the fourth paragraph of their petition that the insurance commissioner required the life insurance company to furnish additional security to make up the deficit of $18,100 “caused by the above loans, or, that the Eighteen Thousand, One Hundred ($18,100.00) Dollar deficit wóuld be charged up against the assets of said Unity Industrial Life Insurance- Company”.

In the fifth paragraph of their petition, they allege that Constant C. Dejoie re *256 quested that the other directors of the life insurance company make loans in . favor of the company for the amount of $18,100, stating that to charge the assets of the company with the amount mentioned “in paragraph four (4) hereof, would reduce the reserve and impair the Capital of said Unity Industrial Life Insurance Company”.

In the sixth paragraph of their petition, the plaintiffs in the injunction suit allege that Constant C. Dejoie, president and one of the directors of the insurance company, with the consent of the other directors, agreed to take care of each individual loan or mortgage in favor of the company “when said reserve fund was replenished from time to time, with funds therein equaling the principal reserve fund of Eighteen Thousand, One Hundred ($18,-100.00) Dollars, or any one of the mortgages executed in accordance with the above agreement and for the above purpose; that as the mortgage or mortgages, or note or notes secured thereby equalled the amount on deposit in said funds to be used for the ultimate set-off of same, that the said mortgage or mortgage note or notes would be cancelled and erased”.

As we interpret the petitioners’ allegations, what they mean is that the $7,000 mortgage note which they executed in favor of the insurance company was to be held by the company as collateral only, and that, if and when the company’s reserve fund equalled the amount of the collateral notes, the notes were to be surrendered by. the company and returned to the mortgagors, and the mortgages cancelled.

In the tenth paragraph of their petition, plaintiffs in the injunction suit allege that the other notes' and mortgages executed in favor of the life insurance company under the circumstances above stated were subsequently cancelled and erased, and that the note and the mortgage for $7,000 which they executed should have been cancelled along with the others, but were never can-celled.

In Paragraphs 12 and 13, the plaintiffs in the injunction suit reiterate that their understanding in regard to the mortgage which they executed was that it was for collateral only, to take care of the previously mentioned loans, “whereas, in reality, they [the petitioners] were imposed upon in the premises, and were actually obligating themselves by a conventional mortgage, in fraud of their rights, which is substantiated by the cancellation of the aforementioned mortgages, except the one signed by them from which they seek relief and cancellation”; and that, notwithstanding the fact that a sufficient surq was placed in the reserve fund of the insurance company to cancel all the mortgages, including the one which they gave, and notwithstanding the fact that the others were cancelled, yet the one they executed was not cancelled. And in Paragraph 14 they allege that their obligation “was extinguished when the reserve fund was replenished for the purpose of cancelling” the said mortgages, and that “the condition upon which the said mortgage was given was discharged”, and that the refusal of the insurance company, the holder of their note for $7,000, to cancel it and the mortgage securing it was “in violation of the *258 said agreement and in Fraud of Petitioners’ rights, which Fraud being hereby-pleaded”.

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 546, 202 La. 249, 1942 La. LEXIS 1347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unity-industrial-life-ins-co-v-dejoie-la-1942.