White System of Lafayette v. Fisher

16 So. 2d 89
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 1943
DocketNo. 2596.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 So. 2d 89 (White System of Lafayette v. Fisher) 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
White System of Lafayette v. Fisher, 16 So. 2d 89 (La. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Plaintiff is the holder of an installment note for the sum of $486 signed by Hugh Fisher, Ed. Fisher and Katherine Fisher. The note is dated January 9, 1942, and is made payable in eighteen installments of the sum of $26 each, payable on the 9th day of each and every month following the date of its execution. It bears interest "after maturity at highest rate in Louisiana", and contains a clause accelerating the maturity of the full amount upon failure to pay any installment as the same becomes due each month. It also provides for an additional 20 per cent. as attorneys' fees in the event it is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, if not paid at maturity.

In its petition plaintiff avers that the defendants have failed to pay the installments which matured October 9th and November 9th, 1942, and therefore the note is due in its entirety in the principal sum of $304, which is the balance remaining unpaid, with 8% interest and 20 per cent. additional as attorneys' fees. It prays for judgment against all three signers, jointly and in solido, for the full amount stated.

The defendant Hugh Fisher entered the military service of the United States after he had signed the note and had made payments thereon, and he purposely was not cited. As far as he is concerned, therefore, there is nothing pending before the court.

Ed. Fisher and Katherine Fisher filed a joint answer in which, after stating that Hugh Fisher is now in the military service of the United States and that the obligation sued on had been incurred prior to his entry, they admit that they subscribed the said note with him, but in the capacity of accommodation makers only, as he was the principal maker. They then aver that because of his said service, his ability to meet and perform the obligation incurred by him has been affected and if they should be compelled to carry out his obligation by reason of a judgment being rendered against him, they will probably suffer damages. They further represent that as accommodation makers they are entitled to a stay or postponement of proceedings in the suit all as is provided for in the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940, as amended in 1942, 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix, § 501 et seq. Finally they aver that by authority of Section 206 of the said Act, they are entitled to have the interest on the above-mentioned obligation reduced from 8 per cent., as claimed, to 6 per cent. per annum. The prayer of their answer is therefore that this cause be stayed and postponed under said law for such a period of time as the extension or stay shall be granted to the defendant Hugh Fisher, and further that there be judgment reducing the rate of interest from 8 to 6 per cent.

Testimony was taken at the trial of the case to show, first, in what capacity the defendants did sign the note sued on, that is whether as co-makers or as accommodation makers or endorsers, and second, to show the manner in which they may suffer damage by reason of having a judgment rendered against them at this time. After considering the evidence, the trial judge rendered judgment in favor of these defendants ordering all proceedings herein to be stayed and postponed or suspended, for and during the period of the present military service of Hugh Fisher and for the period of three months from and after the date of expiration of said period of service, except upon leave of court granted upon application and hearing. The judgment makes no reference to the demand for the reduction in the rate of interest. The plaintiff took an appeal from the judgment granting the stay and the defendants have appealed from it because it failed to grant the reduction in interest as prayed for by them.

The vital issue that is presented is the right of these defendants to a stay of proceedings under the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act referred to. In that act as it was originally passed in 1940, the power of the court to stay any action or proceeding seems to have been restricted to cases where the application for such an order was made by the person in the military service himself, or some person on his behalf. That is indicated by Sec. 203 which makes its provisions apply only to such persons and also by Sec. 204 the last clause of which provides that: "Where the person in military service is a codefendant with others the plaintiff may nevertheless by leave of court proceed against the others." In 1942, however, the act was amended, and Sec. 103 (1) reads as follows: "Whenever pursuant to any of the provisions of this Act the enforcement of ny obligation or liability, the prosecution *Page 91 of any suit or proceedings, the entry or enforcement of any order, writ, judgment, or decree, or the performance of any other act, may be stayed, postponed, or suspended, such stay, postponement, or suspension may, in the discretion of the court, likewise be granted to sureties, guarantors, endorsers, accommodation makers, and others, either primarily or secondarily subject to the obligation or liability, the performance or enforcement of which is stayed, postponed, or suspended." This provision clearly gives the court the power, after using its discretion, to grant the same order in favor of sureties, guarantors, endorsers, accommodation makers, and other persons either primarily or secondarily liable on the obligation sued on, that it can grant to the person who is in the military service himself. We must therefore conclude that the matter is one which rests solely within the sound discretion of the court, and, that being so, on this appeal we are concerned only with the question of the proper exercise of such discretion on the part of the judge of the court a qua.

It is pertinent to observe, in our opinion, that in Sec. 203 it is provided that the court may in its discretion, or on its own motion, or on application to it by the person in the military service or someone on his behalf, first, stay the execution of any judgment or order entered against such person, and second, vacate or stay any attachment or garnishment of property, moneyor debts in the hands of others either before or after judgmentas provided in this act, "unless in the opinion of the court the ability of the defendant to comply with the judgment or order entered or sought is not materially affected by reason of his military service." (Italics ours.) Hence, it appears that the court is limited in the use of its discretion to those cases in which a judgment or an order has already been entered against the person engaged in the military service or to cases in which attachment or garnishment may issue. On the other hand the amending Sec. 103 (1) which extends the power of the court and the use of its discretion to sureties, guarantors, etc., is much broader, and applies to "the enforcement of any obligation or liability, the prosecution of any suit or proceeding, the entry or enforcement of any order, writ, judgment, or decree, or theperformance of any other act." (Italics ours.) This amendment, coming two years after the original enactment of the law, manifests, in our opinion, the intention of Congress to not only liberalize its provisions in respect to the person in the military service himself but to extend that same liberality to those who had engaged themselves in his behalf as surety, guarantor, endorser or some other capacity on any obligation he may have undertaken prior to his entry.

Counsel for the plaintiff relies on two cases decided by the Supreme Court of this State, neither of which, in our opinion, has any particular bearing on the case before us. The first is that of Laperouse v. Eagle Indemnity Co. and Wilson Landry,202 La. 686, 12 So.2d 680, 682.

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Bluebook (online)
16 So. 2d 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-system-of-lafayette-v-fisher-lactapp-1943.