Youree v. Limerick

101 So. 864, 157 La. 39, 37 A.L.R. 394, 1924 La. LEXIS 2167
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 3, 1924
DocketNo. 26209.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 101 So. 864 (Youree v. Limerick) 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
Youree v. Limerick, 101 So. 864, 157 La. 39, 37 A.L.R. 394, 1924 La. LEXIS 2167 (La. 1924).

Opinions

ROGERS, J.

This matter is before us for review, of the judgment of the 'Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit affirming the judgment of the First judicial district court for the parish of Caddo.

The issue involves a plea of estoppel and the question of priority between the lessor’s lien and a chattel mortgage.

The judgment of the Court of Appeal, affirming the district court, ranked the chattel mortgage above the lessor’s lien. Relators (the lessors) aver that this judgment is erroneous, and that it is in conflict with the jurisprudence of the Court of Appeal for the First Circuit, as set forth in the case of Walton A. Lyons v. Clark Warehouse & Improvement Company, decided December 22, 1922.

In the case at bar, the substantial facts are as follows:

*41 Plaintiffs are the owners of the premises No. 310 Texas street, in the city of Shreveport, which they have been leasing for some years to parties operating a café therein. Their original tenant was one Vaky, and the business was known as “Vaky’s Café.”' Upon the retirement of Vaky, the furniture and fixtures were purchased by Gregory Caporal, who became plaintiff’s tenant, and continued the business.

On July 11, 1921, Caporal obtained a loan of $1,500 from Tony Papas, for which he gave his note due January 30, 1922, and secured by a chattel mortgage on all the furniture and fixtures, in the leased premises. This instrument was properly recorded.

On April 15, 1922, W. L. Limerick and H. C. Leopard bought the business, including the furniture and fixtures, from Caporal, and assumed the obligations of the chattel mortgage and of the lease. Subsequently, Leopard transferred his interest to Limerick, who became plaintiffs’ sole tenant under the aforesaid lease.

Limerick having defaulted in the payment of his • rent, plaintiffs, in December, 1922, brought suit against their tenant for $1,200, with interest and attorney’s fees and for recognition of their lessors’ lien and privilege on all the furniture, fixtures, and contents of the leased premises. The property seized was sold pendente lite for $1,800.

The court below awarded plaintiffs judgment for the amount claimed, with recognition of their lessors’ lien and privilege and the enforcement thereof, but subordinated the same to the claim of Tony Papas, who, by way of intervention and third opposition, had asserted his right to the balance due, $1,500, on the note of $4,500 given him by Caporal, as secured by the aforesaid chattel mortgage on the said furniture and fixtures, claiming the said chattel mortgage primed the lessors’ lien of plaintiffs.

The said judgment, on appeal by plaintiffs, was, as heretofore set forth, affirmed by the Court, of Appeal.

The pertinent provision of the Chattel Mortgage Law (Act No. 198 of .1918) is section 4, which reads:

“ * * * That every mortgage shall be a lien on the property mortgaged from the time same is filed for recordation, which filing shall be notice to, all parties of the existence of such mortgage, and, said 'lien shall he superior in rank to any privilege or lien arising subsequently thereto.” (Winter’s italics.)

The Court of Appeal in subordinating the plaintiffs’ claim to that of the third opponent, interpreted this provision of the statute as intending to give a prior recorded chattel mortgage superiority in rank over a lessor’s lien arising subsequently thereto. Its appreciation of the law is correct, but its application thereof to the present issue is Incorrect. The statute, in express terms, provides that the chattel mortgage lien “shall be superior in rank to any privilege or lien arising subsequently thereto.” No qualification nor exception is admitted. Clearly, then, the words “any privilege or lien” include the lessor’s lien and privilege.

In the case of Lyons v. Clark Warehouse & Improvement Co., referred to, supra, the Court of Appeal for the First Circuit, in construing the quoted provision of the statute, held that it applied only to ordinary liens and privileges and not to the lessor’s security for his rent, which is of a higher nature than a mere privilege carrying with it the right of pledge and retention.

The answer to this argument is to be found in the recognition of the fact that the right of retention is merely an ancillary and remedial right. The law confers it upon the lessor for the purpose of adding to his security and of facilitating the enforcement of his privilege. The existence- of the auxiliary right of detainer may make the privilege more effective, but it, nevertheless, retains its character of a privilege without *43 advancing in rank. The lessor, notwithstanding his right of pledge and detainer, cannot prevent the seizure and sale of the pledged property at the instance of other creditors. Auge v. Variol, 31 La. Ann. 865; Horner v. Sheriff, 34 La. Ann. 389; Kirkpatrick & Co. v. Oldham, 38 La. Ann. 553.

This distinction was recognized and applied by the Court of Appeal for the Parish of Orleans in the case of Roses v. Siggio, No. 7904 of its docket, decided May 17, 1920. The issue involved there was whether the lien and privilege of a workman and repairman, with the right to detain the article on which he had worked, took precedence over a chattel mortgage executed prior thereto. The court held that it did not. The organ of the court was Judge St. Paul (now -one of the Associate Justices of this court). The following from the opinion is apposite to the question now before us, viz:

“Now it is clear that the right to retain a thing until a debt be paid must and does necessarily confer the highest possible privilege or lien upon the thing, but the acceptance of the right is in the security thus secured to the creditor, and not in the mere vain detention of the thing itself. Hence, our courts have not hesitated-, to compel him whose privilege was based on. a right of pledge to take the substance of his right and waive the name. Chattel mortgages duly recorded prime all liens and privileges subsequently arising, even though coupled with a right of pledge and actual possession.”

The manifest purpose of the law is to permit persons owning only personal property, to borrow money on the security of such property. In many cases, the sole recourse of the mortgaged creditor is against the mortgaged chattels, hence the necessity of ranking the chattel mortgage lien above any privilege arising subsequently thereto. If this were not so, and the statute should be so construed as to rank the privilege created by the chattel mortgage law below those privileges which are accompanied by the additional right of retention and pledge, the object of the law would, in a great measure, be destroyed. We cannot accede to any such construction, but must interpret the law so as to make it as effective as the Legislature intended it to be when they enacted it.

Wé are therefore of the opinion that the privilege resulting from the execution and recordation of a chattel mortgage takes precedence over and primes a lessor’s lien arising subsequently thereto. And, of course, the converse is also true, that a prior lessor’s lien is superior to a subsequent chattel mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
101 So. 864, 157 La. 39, 37 A.L.R. 394, 1924 La. LEXIS 2167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/youree-v-limerick-la-1924.