Walter E. Heller & Company v. Mall, Inc.

267 F. Supp. 343, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7619
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 1967
DocketCiv. A. 2950
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 267 F. Supp. 343 (Walter E. Heller & Company v. Mall, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walter E. Heller & Company v. Mall, Inc., 267 F. Supp. 343, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7619 (E.D. La. 1967).

Opinion

WEST, District Judge:

On October 14, 1960, defendant, Mall, Inc., borrowed the sum of $425,000.00 from the plaintiff, Walter E. Heller & Company. In representation of this debt, Mall executed a note, dated that day, made payable to order of Walter E. Heller & Company, in the face amount of $527,000.00. There is no dispute about the fact that this note represented $425,-000.00 actually borrowed by Mall plus a finance charge or discount of $102,000.-00. The note was endorsed by the defendants Wilson P. Abraham, Mitchell N. Ashy, and by Arvil Allen Lindley, representing the Delta Equipment & Construction Company, Inc., and was further secured by a preferred ship mortgage on the vessel known as the MALL SPUD BARGE NO. 7, and by two instruments of guaranty executed by said endorsers. According to the terms of the note, it was payable in forty-seven (47) monthly *345 installments of $10,980.00 each and one installment of $10,940.00, commencing on November 14, 1960. The note further provided for interest at the rate of eight (8%) per cent per annum after due or declared date. It further stipulated that “in the event that this note or any installment thereof, or the interest thereon, is not paid when due, and according to its tenor, and is placed in the hands of an attorney at law for collection, or is sued on, ten per cent (10%) additional on the amount of both principal and interest as attorney’s fees” would be due.

In June of 1961, the MALL SPUD BARGE NO. 7 was sold by Mall to Popich Marine Construction, Inc. who, at that time, assumed payment of the note in question. Neither Mall nor the endorsers on the note were released from liability thereon.

Between October 14, 1960, the date of execution of the note, and July 27, 1962, plaintiff had received payments on the note totalling $208,620.00.

On July 27, 1962, payments on the note being in arrears, plaintiff, by letter, invoked the acceleration clause contained •therein and demanded that the entire unpaid balance of the note, together with interest and attorney’s fees, be immediately paid. The note was not paid in full as demanded, but between July 27, 1962 and March 1, 1963, Popich made various payments on the note totaling $65,880.00. Subsequent to the date of acceleration Popich Marine Construction, Inc. went into receivership in a state •court proceeding, and thereafter was adjudicated a bankrupt by the United States District Court in New Orleans, Louisiana. On June 28, 1963 plaintiff foreclosed on its preferred ship mortgage, and the net proceeds from the sale of the ship, i. e., the sum of $254,039.19 was, by order of the Court, paid by the Trustee in Bankruptcy to plaintiff to apply on the note. On March 23, 1964, plaintiff also received $11,598.55 from the Trustee, representing funds received from operation of the barge while it was under seizure. At that time there was a dispute between the Trustee and plaintiff as to whether or not plaintiff was liable for a portion of the administration costs of the state court receivership. In view of this dispute, plaintiff either filed a stipulation or posted a bond in the amount of $38,105.43, representing fifteen (15%) per cent of the total net proceeds of the sale, in order to secure the Trustee’s claim against plaintiff for payment of a portion of the administration costs. Plaintiff still disputes the validity of this claim by the Trustee, and the matter is still pending in the foreclosure suit entitled Walter E. Heller & Company v. Mall Spud Barge No. 7, etc., et al., No. 5938 in Admiralty on the Docket of the United States District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana, New Orleans Division.

Thus, between the date of execution of the note, October 14, 1960, and the date of acceleration of the unpaid balance, July 27,1962, plaintiff had received payments on the note in the total amount of $208,620.00. Between July 27, 1962 and March 23, 1964, plaintiff received payments totaling $331,517.74, including the payments of $254,039.19 and $11,-598.55 received from the Trustee in Bankruptcy.

Plaintiff now brings this suit to recover what it alleges to be the unpaid balance on the note, together with attorney fees and late interest as provided for in the note. It is plaintiff’s contention that the principal amount of the note in question is $527,000.00, even though $102,000.00 of that amount actually represents what is commonly referred to as six (6%) per cent add-on interest for the four year term of the note. Plaintiff, for obvious reasons, prefers to call this a “finance charge” rather than interest. Plaintiff argues that the total amount of this finance charge, or discount, is due and owing regardless of whether or not the note is accelerated by the holder as was done in this case. Plaintiff figures the unpaid balance on the note by taking the face amount of the note, $527,-000.00 and subtracting payments of $208,620.00 received prior to acceleration date, leaving a balance cne as of that *346 date of $318,380.00. It then proceeds to add interest at the rate of eight (8%) per cent on the various balances for each period between payment dates subsequent to the date of acceleration, and to subtract the various payments made subsequent to the date of acceleration and ends up with an unpaid balance of $68,500.53. To this amount it adds $36,233.36 attorney’s fees and $424.22 late interest at the rate of eight (8%) per cent on late payments prior to the date of acceleration, making a total due as of date of trial, November 6,1965, of $105,158.11.

Defendants resist this claim, alleging that as of March 5, 1964, when plaintiff received the $254,039.19 payment from the Trustee in Bankruptcy, the note, including principal, interest and attorney’s fees was, in fact, overpaid. Defendants thus assert a counterclaim against plaintiff in the amount of $42,058.86, representing the amount of the alleged overpayment. This Court concludes that this note has indeed been overpaid, and that plaintiff is not entitled to any recovery from the defendants in this suit. Also, for reasons hereafter stated, the Court concludes that these defendants have no right to recover this overpayment from the plaintiff.

First of all, the plaintiff is in error when it urges that the total face amount of a discounted note is collectible even when the holder thereof accelerates payment of the entire unpaid balance of the note. This proposition was settled beyond question by the Courts of Louisiana as long ago as the year 1895. In Williams’ Heirs v. Douglass, 47 La.Ann. 1277, 17 So. 805, the Louisiana Supreme Court said:

“Our conclusion is that this reduction ought to be made, because the amount of the indebtedness of the deceased, as represented by his 10 notes, was evidently predicated upon the theory that he, as maker and borrower, should retain and use the capital during that period of time. But, having exercised the option of the covenant in the mortgage, to precipitate the maturity of all the premature installments of the debt, the mortgagee necessarily assumed the corresponding duty of remitting all the capitalized interest that was unearned at the time of the attempted exercise of that right by the seizure and sale of the mortgaged property, * *

The Williams’ Heirs decision has been consistently followed by the Courts of Louisiana. In commenting on the Williams’ Heirs case, the Louisiana Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit, in the case of Berger v. DeSalvo, 156 So.2d 323 (La.App., 4th Cir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 F. Supp. 343, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-e-heller-company-v-mall-inc-laed-1967.