200 So. 511 | La. Ct. App. | 1941
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from an order of seizure and sale issued on a mortgage note of $1,000, executed by defendants, husband and wife, payable to the order of the Farmers and Merchants Bank, and bearing the following endorsements, in blank: "Farmers and Merchants Bank, by Ivey N. Stafford, Cashier; Independence Bank and Trust Co., Ivey Hooper, Cashier, (with two witnesses); and Tangipahoa Bank Trust Company, Independence Branch, P.E. Dollunde, Manager."
The suit is brought by J.S. Brock, State Bank Commissioner and, as such, liquidator of the Tangipahoa Bank Trust Company in liquidation. The note and a certified copy of the mortgage were annexed to the petition. On the petition and these annexed documents, the order of executory process was issued. Defendants have suspensively appealed from this order.
The only issue on appeal from an order of executory process is the sufficiency of authentic evidence to justify the issuance of the writ. The complaint of the defendants is that no authentic evidence was furnished of the transfers of the note by the Farmers and Merchants Bank, the original payee or endorser, and by the subsequent payees or endorsers, and that, therefore, the order was issued without sufficient authentic evidence.
There is authentic evidence of the execution of the note and of the mortgage but none to show the transfer of the note and its accessory, the mortgage.
Unless the Negotiable Instrument Law (Act
Plaintiff contends that the adoption of the Uniform Negotiable Instrument Law (Act
Section 30 provides that a note is negotiated when it is transferred from one person *512 to another, in such a manner as to constitute the transferee the holder thereof; and if payable to order it is negotiated by the endorsement of the holder completed for delivery. Section 49 provides that if the holder of a note made payable to his order transfers it for value without endorsing it, then the transferee is vested with such rights as the transferor may have had together with the additional right to have the transferor endorse the same, but the negotiation only takes effect when the endorsement is actually made. Section 51 provides that the holder of such instrument may sue in his own name, and payment to him in due course discharges the instrument.
The provisions of Act
The case of Thompson v. Crow,
The court did hold that the plaintiffs, being the holder of the mortgage note payable to order and endorsed by the payee, had the right to sue on the note, but the court did not hold in that case that such endorsement would be sufficient evidence of the transfer of the note and mortgage so as to justify an order of seizure and sale. On the contrary, the court held that the only way that the mortgagor could take advantage of the lack of authentic evidence of the transfer was by an appeal from the order, as was done in the case at bar, the intimation being that if an appeal had been taken from the order of seizure and sale, the situation would have been different. That decision is not apposite to this case.
Our conclusion is that the order of seizure and sale issued in this case was not supported by the kind of evidence which the law requires, and therefore it is ordered that the order of seizure and sale issued in this case be annulled and set aside, and that plaintiff's suit be dismissed as in case of non-suit, at his costs in both courts.
On Application for Rehearing.
Addendum
Plaintiff in his original application for rehearing complained of our having dismissed the suit, as non-suit, contending that we should have remanded the case for further proceedings, citing the case of Cathey v. Henriques,
In a supplemental application and brief, plaintiff cites the case of Childs v. Pruitt,
*513Rehearing refused.