Wessell v. Kite

142 So. 363
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1932
DocketNo. 4219.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 So. 363 (Wessell v. Kite) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wessell v. Kite, 142 So. 363 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, J.

Plaintiff sued defendant for rent due on a lease of a building in the city of Shreveport and caused to be provisionally seized certain household effects, furniture, etc., found in the leased premises. Judgment was rendered on default for the amount sued for with recognition of the lessor’s lien on the chattels provisionally seized, and in due course execution issued on the judgment and said chattels were seized and advertised for sale. Before the day of sale, the Southern Furniture Company intervened in the case and filed third opposition, wherein it is asserted and averred that certain parcels of the seized property were sold and delivered by it to Mrs. D. L. Kite, wife of defendant, on terms of credit, and chattel mortgages taken and recorded to secure payment of the price of same before delivery to the purchaser; and that its chattel mortgage lien was superior in rank to the plaintiff’s rent claim as against this particular property. Intervener prayed for usual judgments against both plaintiff and defendant. The property involved in the intervention was separately appraised and separately sold by the sheriff, under order of court, and the proceeds held by that officer. This suit involves the right to said proceeds.

Plaintiff denies that the intervener has any mortgage or lien on the seized chattels and further avers, in effect, that, if defendant was originally indebted to intervener to the extent of $460, as alleged, and that $244.60 thereof had been paid, as admitted, by imputation of payments the chattel mortgage for $88.50, first one taken, had been extinguished, and the property described therein released from that mortgage; that by 'imputation of payments the second mortgage of $191.75 had been reduced to $39.95, as the balance of the credits ($24-1.60 less $88.-50) should be applied against that mortgage.

Plaintiff attacks the validity of the mortgages for $191.75 and $149.95, dated May 31. 1929, and October 10, 1929, respectively, and challenges their effect as concerns him, for the reason that neither was passed before a notary public and two witnesses, as required by law.

A trial of the case on these issues resulted in a judgment for intervener and against defendant for $216.10, amount sued for, and rejecting intervener’s demand as against plaintiff. A rehearing was applied for by in-tervener and granted, and on reconsideration of the case the lower court reversed its first judgment and rendered one in favor of intervener decreeing it to be entitled to the fund in controversy. In other words, in effect, held that the chattel mortgages primed the lessor’s privilege as against the property covered by said mortgages which had been seized and sold under execution. From this judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Mrs. D. L. Kite gave intervener three mortgages of different amounts, on different dates and payable in different installments. The first one was for $88.50. It was passed before a notary public and two witnesses and is admitted to be legal and valid. She had made ten payments of $7.30' each on this indebtedness before she incurred additional liability to intervener and gave the second mortgage to secure payment of same. After giving the second mortgage she made two more payments of $7.30 each and one for $3.00 which clearly should be imputed to the discharge of the first mortgage debt. These payments are sufficient to, and in our opinion did in fact, extinguish the first mortgage debt, and at date of the seizure in this case *365 the chattels included In this mortgage were free from its effects.

We think the additional payments made by Mrs. Kite to intervener should be imputed to the second mortgage debt, hut the conclusions reached by us on the other issues in the case renders it unnecessary to discuss further this mortgage indebtedness.

As alleged by plaintiff, the two last mortgages given by Mrs. Kite to intervener were signed by her in the presence of two witnesses, and proved by the affidavit of one of the witnesses before a notary public.

A more serious question is presented in the issue regarding the effect, as against plaintiff, of the two mortgages in question, not passed before a notary public, as required by section 2 of Act No. 198 of 1918. This section reads as follows; “ * * * In order to affect third persons without notice, said instrument must be passed by notarial act and the original or a certified- copy thereof shall be recorded in the office of the Recorder of Mortgages in the parish where the property shall then be situated, and also in the parish in which the mortgagor is a resident.”

In brief of counsel for intervener appears the following novel argument, viz.: “There is no law requiring a chattel mortgage to be passed before a notary public and two witnesses; but only that it shall be passed by notarial act.”

He further argues that there is a difference between a notarial act and an authentic act; that the latter is one passed before a notary public, or other officer authorized to do so, in the presence of two attesting witnesses, while the former is one executed by the party or parties thereto and thereafter acknowledged before an officer, or which has been thereafter proven by one of the attesting witnesses. This argument is not entirely sound. It is correct in so far as it refers to the authentic act. CSv. Code, art. 2234.

Article 2240 of the Civil Code is a complete answer to counsel’s argument that an act under private signature becomes a notarial act when proven by one of the attesting witnesses or acknowledged by the party or parties thereto: “All acts may be executed under private signature, except such as positive laws have ordained to be passed in presence of a notary.”

To have added the words “and two witnesses” after the word “notary” would not have made the meaning clearer. In Louisiana, so far as we can recall, every sort of act that is required by law to be - passed before a notary public requires two attesting witnesses for its completion, and when so executed it becomes authentic. We know that a donation inter vivos must be in authentic form. Article 1536 of the Civil Code requires that the act be passed before a notary public and two witnesses.

Counsel cites article 2253 in support of his argument. This article refers only to contracts affecting real estate. It plainly states that the instrument under private signature, to affect creditors and bona fide purchasers must, before being recorded, be proved or acknowledged. When this has been done, the record of the act with the proof or acknowledgment constitutes constructive notice to creditors and bona fide purchasers. Section 2 of the Chattel Mortgage Law is exactly opposite in meaning to this article as regards the effect flowing from the record of a mortgage under private signature, whether proved or acknowledged or not, so far as third persons are concerned. Third persons must have notice of the mortgagor’s rights, as defined in the act under private signature, before he is affected thereby.

The identical question we are discussing was raised in the case of Union Securities Co. v. Neal, Watts, Third Opponent, reported in 9 La. App. 494, 121 So. 316, 317. In that case the plaintiff's mortgage was acknowledged by the mortgagor before a notary public and two witnesses, whereas in the present case the -acts were proven by the affidavit of one of the attesting witnesses.

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Related

General Finance Co. of Louisiana v. Warner
169 So. 112 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
142 So. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wessell-v-kite-lactapp-1932.