White Co. v. Hammond Stage Lines

158 So. 353, 180 La. 962, 1934 La. LEXIS 1594
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 26, 1934
DocketNo. 32584.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 158 So. 353 (White Co. v. Hammond Stage Lines) 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
White Co. v. Hammond Stage Lines, 158 So. 353, 180 La. 962, 1934 La. LEXIS 1594 (La. 1934).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This appeal, presents a conflict of liens .on four automobile busses and a Cadillac sedan, which were seized by the sheriff in a foreclosure proceeding brought by the White Company against the Hammond Stage Lineé, on a chattel mortgage.

The four busses are identified by their serial numbers, 138491, 139601, 165212 and 166764. The record does not show how or when the Hammond Stage Lines first acquired title to the busses numbered 138491 and 139601; but it appears that they were owned by the stage lines and were not incumbered by a chattel mortgage or vendor’s lien at the time when the White Company obtained the chattel morgage and lien on which this foreclosure proceeding is founded. The bus numbered 165212 was sold by the White Company to the stage lines on the 30th of July, 1929, by a notarial deed in which the White Company reserved the vendor’s lien and a chattel mortgage to secure the payment of $5,688, being the unpaid part of the price, represented by a promissory note, payable in eighteen monthly installments. The Cadillac sedan was sold by the White Company to the stage lines on the 20th of February, 1930, by a notarial deed in which the White Compa *966 ny reserved the vendor’s lien and a chattel mortgage to secure the payment of $1,010.13, being the unpaid part of the price, represented by a promissory note, payable . in eleven monthly installments. The bus numbered 166764 was sold by the White Company to the stage lines on the 17th of March, 1930, by a notarial deed.in which the White Company reserved the vendor’s lien and a chattel mortgage to secure the payment of $7,172, being the unpaid part of the price, represented by a promissory note, payable in twenty-six monthly installments.

On the 29th of October, 1931, the Hammond Stage Lines, being in arrears on their payments, entered into an agreement with the White Company to “consolidate,” as the witnesses say, the debts represented by the three-notes into one debt, to be represented by one note, payable in monthly installments of $207 each. The monthly payments that were stipulated in the three original notes amounted to $670, which was more than the stage lines could pay every month. In consideration for the refinancing of the debts, and 'thereby reducing, the amount of the monthly payments, the stage lines agreed to give a new chattel mortgage on the three vehicles which were already mortgaged separately, and to include in the mortgage the two vehicles, numbered 138491 and 139601, which were not then incumbered by.a chattel mortgage. It appears that the unpaid balance on the three notes which were in arrears was then $3,442.23, to which the White Company added a so-called carrying charge of $2S6.77, making the amount of the new note $3,729, which was made payable in eighteen monthly installments, seventeen for $207 each, and the last one for $210. The new chattel mortgage was made in the form; of a notarial act of sale of the five vehicles, by the White Company to the Hammond Stage Lines, for $3,729, for which the stage lines gave its promissory note, payable in eighteen monthly payments, secured by the vendor’s lien and a chattel mortgage on the five vehicles.

On the 31st of May, 1933, the White Company brought this foreclosure proceeding, on the note for $3,72.9, the monthly payments being then in arrears; and the sheriff seized the five vehicles: and advertised them for sale under the new • chattel mortgage and vendor’s lien affecting all of the vehicles.

Charles 6. Baltzell, claiming a landlord’s lien on the five vehicles, - to secure the payment of a rent note for $1,100, with interest and attorney’s fees, for rent of the premises in which the vehicles were kept by the stage’ lines, brought suit against the stage lines and! obtained a writ of provisional seizure, under which the five vehicles' were seized, constructively, by the sheriff. Baltzell obtained a judgment against the stage lines for the amount of his claim, with recognition of the lessor’s lien. About "the same time, Baltzell filed a' petition of intervention or third opposition in this executory proceeding that was brought by the White Company against the stage lines, and prayed to be paid the amount of his claim out of the proceeds ■ of' the sale of the five vehicles, in preference to 'all other creditors of the stage lines.

The city of Hammond, claiming $196.43 for ad valorem taxes on the five vehicles, and having a judgment for $150 for past-due license taxes against the stage lines, filed a petition of intervention or third opposition,. *968 praying for recognition of a lien on the five vehicles, and for payment of the city’s claim in preference to all other creditors of the stage lines.

E. B. Penton, claiming $237.50 as salary for clerical work and $174.98 as assignee of claimants of wages for mechanical work on the five vehicles and for clerical work, filed a petition of intervention or third opposition, praying for recognition of a lien on the vehicles and for payment of his claim out of the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale in preference to the other creditors of the stage lines.

Felix Tilley, claiming $211.15 as salary for services rendered as a clerk for the stage lines, filed a petition of intervention or third opposition, praying for recognition of a lien on the five vehicles and for payment of his claim out of the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale in preference to the other creditors of the stage lines.

Charles G. Baltzell’s rent claim was founded upon a contract of lease entered into between him and the Hammond Stage Lines after the chattel mortgages dated, respectively, the 30th of July, 1929, the 20th of February, 1930, and the 17th of March, 1930, were recorded, but before the chattel mortgage dated the 29th of October, 193Í, was recorded. In other words, the landlord’s lien claimed by Baltzell was inferior in rank to the original chattel mortgages of the White Company, affecting, respectively, the bus numbered 165212, the Cadillac sedan and the bus numbered 166764, but was superior in rank to the chattel mortgage securing the payment of the note for $3,729, dated the 29th of October, 1931, and affecting all of the five vehicles. Therefore the White Company filed a supplemental petition, averring that the three original debts, represented by the three notes first obtained from the stage lines, were, not extinguished or novated by the taking of a new note for the total amount of the three debts, on the 29th of October, 1931, and that the chattel mortgages dated, respectively, the 30th of July, 1929, and the 20th of February, 1930, and the 17th of March, 1930, and affecting, respectively, the bus numbered 165212 and the Cadillac sedan and the bus numbered 166764, were not canceled from the mortgage records, and were therefore yet in full force and effect. It was alleged in the supplemental petition that, at the time of the so-called consolidation of the three debts into one debt, the balance due on the bus numbered 165212 was $1,646.71, the. balance due on the Cadillac sedan was $332.74, and the balance due on the bus numbered 166764 was $1,862.78. These figures amount to $3,842.23, which is more than the amount of the new note. No explanation of the discrepancy has been made or attempted ; but that is perhaps not important now.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 353, 180 La. 962, 1934 La. LEXIS 1594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-co-v-hammond-stage-lines-la-1934.