Whitney-Central National Bank v. Cuneo & Fidelity & Deposit Co.

7 La. App. 197, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 567
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1927
DocketNo. 9824
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 La. App. 197 (Whitney-Central National Bank v. Cuneo & Fidelity & Deposit Co.) 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
Whitney-Central National Bank v. Cuneo & Fidelity & Deposit Co., 7 La. App. 197, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 567 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

JONES, J.

Plaintiff, as the holder of certain mortgage notes, sues the surety and the notary before whom was executed a mortgage securing the payment of the notes.

The basis of liability is that the defendant in ciolation of his duty failed to cause the mortgage to be recorded until a year and a half after its execution and as a result of- his failure in this respect the mortgaged property was sold by the mortgagor to a third person and petitioner was thereby deprived of its security.

The defense is that the act of mortgage was promptly filed in the mortgage office and the notary did all that was required of him. The Recorder of Mortgages was originally called in warranty but was after-wards dismissed from the suit.

There was judgment for defendant and plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence shows that plaintiff is the holder in due course for value of five notes in the amount of fifty dollars each, executed by one Emmet O’Neill on April 27, 1922. To secure the payment of these notes O’Neill executed a chattel mortgage before the defendant, Alphonse J. Cuneo, a notary public for the Parish of Orleans.

As -additional security for the payment of the notes, one A. L. Cummings executed before the defendant on the same day, April 27, 1922, a mortgage on certain real property.

The record contains a certified copy of this mortgage, which shows that the chattel mortgage was executed on a printed form on one side of a single sheet of paper and on the reverse of this printed sheet, but as an entirely separate act, was executed the mortgage of the real estate. In other words, both acts were written on a single sheet of paper; on one side was the chattel mortgage, on the other side, the mortgage of real estate. At the bottom of the side on which appeared the chattel mortgage were written the words “READ OVER”.

[199]*199Oil May 1, 1922, this single sheet was deposited with the Recorder of Mortgages for the Parish of Orleans, and the sum of fifty cents was paid the recorder to cover the cost of recordation. The chattel mortgage was recorded on May 1, 1922, in Book 1271, at page 76, hut the mortgage of real estate was not then inscribed in the records.

On October 13, 1923, the document was again deposited and the sum of one dollar and fifty cents was paid to cover the cost of recordation. The mortgage of real estate was then duly recorded as of date October 13, 1923, in Book 1280, at page 205.

On the back of the chattel mortgage, under the real estate mortgage, are found the following endorsement on the original:

“Recorded May 1st, 1922, Mortgages 50c, A. C. W. 9:15 A. M.
“Recorded in Mortgage Office Book 1271, fo. 76, New Orleans, La., 5/1/1922'. Signed, Robt. Scott, D. R.
“Recorded, Oct. 13, 1923, Mortgages $1.50. 11:15 A. M.
“Recorded in Mortgage Office Book 1280, fo. 205, New Orleans, 10/13/1922. Signed, Robt. Scott, D. R.”

Between May 1, 1922, the date on which the chattel mortgage was recorded, and October 13, 1923, the date on which the real estate mortgage was recorded, A. L. Cummings, the mortgagor, sold the mortgaged property without declaring the existence of the unrecorded mortgage above described.

Defendant’s clerk testified that he called the attention of the cashier of the Mortgage Office to the writing on the back of the document when he carried it to the Mortgage Office on May 1, 1922, and asked him the charge and thereupon paid the amount demanded, namely fifty cents, and left it with the cashier.

The notary, who had been acting as such jn this city for seventeen years, testified that the Recorder of Mortgages had a file or box in his office for every notary in New Orleans and that it was the custom of the Recorder to place, whenever the document left for recordation contained any error, the document without recording it, in the notary’s box with a note attached calling attention to the error and asking the notary to explain; that in this case no such step had been taken and he believed the recordation O. K., until his attention was called to the error by plaintiff’s attorney on October 13, 1923, when he paid $1.50 additional and had the real estate mortgage recorded; that he had written the words “Read Over” at the bottom of the original chattel mortgage, and had told his clerk to call the attention of the cashier to these words.

On cross-examination he said that he knew the charge for filing a chattel mortgage was fifty cents and the charge for filing a real estate mortgage $1.50; that he did not recall the exact amount of money given the clerk that morning to file these two mortgages, but gave him sufficient money to pay for these and other acts and other certificates. The clerk, though he had been filing papers for the notary for ten years, said on rebuttal, that he did not know the cost of filing any document, that he always asked and paid the amount demanded.

The deputy cashier testified that he did not recollect the filing of the document.

Upon maturity of the notes plairatiff filed suit against the maker and endorsers and secured a judgment for the amount of the notes, interest and costs and twenty per cent attorney’s fees, with recognition of the real estate mortgage and the chattel mortgage. When he tried to execute this judgment plaintiff discovered that the automobile was held by a garageman in Hammond, La., as security for a storage and [200]*200¡repair' bill in excess , of tbe value of tbe .car, and that tbe real estate bad been sold ;,to 'tbe prejudice of plaintiff’s mortgage and •tbis suit was brought to recover from defendant tbe amount which- plaintiff could .have realized from tbe property bad tbe .mortgage been timely recorded.

Although Article 3370 of tbe Civil Code makes it the duty of all notaries to cause to be recorded without delay all mortgages executed by them, it is contended that a mortgage is in contemplation of law recorded when it is deposited with tbe recorder of mortgages and that defendant, therefore, complied with bis duty when be paid fifty cents and deposited tbe above-described paper with tbe Recorder of Mortgages on May 1, 1922, and that tbe mortgage of real estate was effective from that date notwithstanding tbe fact that it was ■not actually inscribed in tbe mortgage records.

Prior to 1910 a mortgage was not effective as against third persons until it bad been actually recorded; that is, copied into tbe mortgage book, but tbe argument is made that under tbe provisions of Afct 215 of 1910 a mortgage was made effective against third persons from tbe date of its deposit, even though it was never actually recorded.

Act 215 of 1910 provides:

“That all acts or instruments of writing wbicb import mortgage or privilege shall, when deposited with tbe Recorder of Mortgages for record, be immediately indorsed by him with the date, hour and minute of filing; wbicb indorsement shall be recorded with tbe registry of such instrument.
“* * * All such instruments shall be effective against all persons from tbe time of their filing.”

By Act 136 of 1880 tbe Recorder of Mortgages is required to exact a charge of one dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) for recording a mortgage of real estate, and under Act 198 of 1918 tbe fee for recording a chattel mortgage is fixed at fifty cents.

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Bluebook (online)
7 La. App. 197, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-central-national-bank-v-cuneo-fidelity-deposit-co-lactapp-1927.