139 So. 762 | La. | 1932
Plaintiff foreclosed on a mortgage note signed by one Bauman, owner of certain real estate in the city of Shreveport. Bauman had contracted with one White to build upon said property. Plaintiff advanced the money to the builder, and held the note as security for his advancements. The property was afterwards transferred to the Washburn Land Company. The contractor defaulted in the *73 building, leaving numerous unpaid liens upon it. Washburn Land Company attempted to bring concursus proceedings. Plaintiff was not satisfied to await the outcome of those proceedings, and proceeded to do that which he had a right to do, to wit, to foreclose on his mortgage.
The mortgage was executed and recorded before the building was started, and therefore primes all claims upon said building, except claims for labor done. Act 298 of 1926, § 12.
This being a foreclosure proceeding with opposition to the distribution of the proceeds of the property sold, and not a concursus proceeding, the Washburn Land Company which attempted to bring concursus proceedings, but which did not succeed on account of the filing of this suit, is not entitled to attorney's fees.
The fact that plaintiff, who was advancing money to the builder, and might have advanced it all at once (Cf. Hortman-Salmen Co. v. White,
He inadvertently allowed the Shreveport Tile Company the sum of $52, for their claim was for "labor and material," without separation of items. So it was impossible to distinguish between its claim for labor which primes plaintiff's mortgage, and its claim for materials which does not. This claim should have been rejected, and the judgment of the lower court will be amended accordingly.
The trial judge allowed the claim of L.E. McNatt, who had the subcontract for plastering the building, which claim amounted to $834.95. The evidence shows that McNatt did with his own hands $442 worth of labor on the building. The other $392.95 represents the labor done by his workmen, whom he paid.
We think he is. Under the statute, the building (and therefore, in effect the owner of the building) is liable for the workmen's wages, because they have a lien on it; the subcontractor is of course liable for these *75 wages, because he employed the men. Again, since the laborer's lien primes the mortgage and the subcontractor's does not, the laborer's lien is necessarily preferable to that of the subcontractor.
We have therefore before us both cases provided for by the Civil Code, art. 2161, R.C.C. which provides as follows:
"Subrogation takes place of right:
"1. For the benefit of him who, being himself a creditor, pays another creditor, whose claim is preferable to his by reason of his privileges or mortgages. * * *
"3. For the benefit of him who, being bound with others, or for others, for the payment of the debt, had an interest in discharging it."