Court Opinion

ID: 3474041
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 20:44:55.603822+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:04:51.139824
License: Public Domain

This is a suit on a promissory note, made by the Canal Land 
Live Stock Company, Inc., through its president, W.R. O'Neal, and indorsed for accommodation by said O'Neal and by J.W. Honeycutt. The note is for $3,000, with 8 per cent. per annum interest from April 10, 1924, the date of its maturity, and contains a stipulation for 10 per cent. attorneys' fees. It is secured by a mortgage note and certain shares of stock. The suit is against the maker and the indorsers in solido, for the amount of the note, including interest and attorneys' fees.
The maker of the note seems to have made no appearance in the trial court, and it does not appear that judgment, as to the maker, was rendered in the case. O'Neal made no appearance, and judgment was rendered by default against him. Honeycutt appeared and filed two exceptions, which he has since abandoned. He then appeared and filed an answer setting up certain defenses, upon which, apparently, he no longer relies. He then filed an amended answer, in which he sets forth substantially that he was willing, and offered, to pay the note sued on on plaintiff's surrendering to him the collateral attached to it, and that, by reason of plaintiff's refusal to surrender the collateral, he is discharged from all liability.
The trial court, after hearing the case, rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff against Honeycutt for the full amount prayed for, with recognition of the right of Honeycutt to *Page 255 
be subrogated, under the law, to all of the rights of the pledgee, acquired at the time of the pledge, to the stock given in pledge to secure the note upon Honeycutt's paying the judgment rendered.
After judgment had been rendered against him, Honeycutt filed a motion for a new trial, in which he avers that, since the rendition of judgment against him, plaintiff received an offer to purchase the collateral pledged to secure the note, the offer being for $7,500, which amount, it is averred, is more than sufficient to pay the note, and in which he sets forth that he is informed and believes, and therefore alleges, that plaintiff has sold said collateral for the price offered, and, in the event plaintiff has not sold it, then it is because of the fact that plaintiff refused to accept the offer, in either of which events, it is averred, a new trial should be granted and the demands of plaintiff rejected. Attached to this motion is a letter from plaintiff's attorneys to Honeycutt's attorneys requesting them to advise Honeycutt that plaintiff had received an offer of $7,500 for the stock, attached to the note sued on, and that if Honeycutt felt unable to make a better offer, plaintiff would proceed to sell the stock as authorized by the pledge. The trial court overruled the motion for a new trial, and Honeycutt reserved a bill to the ruling. Honeycutt alone has appealed from the judgments rendered.
In support of their contention that plaintiff cannot demand payment of the note of Honeycutt, and at the same time retain the securities, counsel for Honeycutt call the court's attention to the following authorities, to wit: Succession of Pratt, 16 La. Ann. 357; McGuire v. Wooldridge, 6 Rob. 47; and New England Life Insurance Co. v. Randall, 7 So. 679, 42 La. Ann. 260, and other authorities. The authorities cited, however, do not support the position taken by counsel. They relate to the duty of the pledgee to keep the *Page 256 
property pledged unimpaired, and to do no act that would affect the surety's or the indorser's right to subrogation, without the latter's consent. Counsel's position, in our opinion, is not tenable. An indorser or a surety on a note is not entitled to the possession of the collateral attached to it until he has paid the note, for until payment is made subrogation does not take place, and until then the holder of the note has a clear right, if it is not also his duty, to hold the collateral under the pledge given him. Civil Code, art. 2159. Hence it follows that the holder of the note may demand its payment of the indorser by suit or otherwise, and at the same time retain the securities pledged. And, since an offer to pay is not equivalent to payment, it cannot be said, because such an offer is made and the holder of the note refuses to surrender the collateral attached to it, upon the making of the offer, that the indorser is, by such refusal, discharged.
We now come to the exception taken by Honeycutt to the overruling of his motion for a new trial. Whether or not plaintiff sold the collateral after the rendition of judgment, is left so uncertain by the motion, when whatever plaintiff did in that respect could have been made certain, that we think the trial judge, if for no other reason, was fully justified in overruling the motion in so far as it is based on the ground of the sale of the collateral. Moreover, the act of pledge, which is incorporated in the note indorsed by Honeycutt, authorizes plaintiff to sell the collateral at public or private sale. If plaintiff has sold it, and has not given the indebtedness for which Honeycutt bound himself proper credit, Honeycutt is not without remedy. On the other hand, if plaintiff refused to accept the offer to purchase the collateral, the refusal did not have the effect of discharging Honeycutt as indorser. Plaintiff was not called upon to accept the offer. We are not of the opinion that the trial judge *Page 257 
abused his discretion in overruling the motion.
Honeycutt complains that the trial judgé, in recognizing his right to subrogation on paying the amount of the judgment rendered, did not recognize his right to have delivered to him the securities pledged. It appears that, at the time the note sued on herein was signed and the pledge executed, the property pledged had been, and was still, held in pledge to secure another note, executed by a different maker in favor of plaintiff. W.R. O'Neal, one of the defendants herein, was the owner of the property pledged, and had pledged it to secure the payment of a note, indorsed by him, in favor of plaintiff, and made by W.R. O'Neal, Inc., a corporation which seems to have been controlled by O'Neal. The fact that the property pledged in this instance has been pledged to secure different notes has given rise to differences between plaintiff and Honeycutt. These differences arise chiefly from the fact that the pledge, as to the note sued on, contains a provision to the effect that the proceeds of the sale of the collateral, attached to it, shall be applied first, to pay the costs of sale, second, to pay the note here sued on, and third, to pay any other indebtedness due by the maker of the note to plaintiff, Honeycutt contending that this provision makes the pledge, incorporated in the note here sued on, the ranking pledge. Plaintiff contends that these differences are properly not before the court, but, if they are an issue in the case, then it contends that it is not called upon to deliver the collateral to Honeycutt, on his paying the judgment rendered, for the reason that in reality only what remained of the collateral or its proceeds after the payment of the note executed by W.R. O'Neal, Inc., was pledged to secure the note here sued on or, in other words, the pledge here under consideration is nothing but a second pledge.
After mature consideration, we have *Page 258 
concluded that we ought not to pass upon Honeycutt's right to the possession of the collateral at this time. His right to possession, if any, is dependent upon his being subrogated to the rights of plaintiff as pledgee. Subrogation, as we have said, does not take place until payment is made. It may be that Honeycutt will never pay the judgment rendered, or that it will never be satisfied out of his estate, or, if he does pay it, or it is so satisfied, that then the note of W.R. O'Neal, Inc., will have been paid, and that plaintiff then will have no desire to retain the collateral, or it may be that facts will arise before the judgment is paid by Honeycutt, or is satisfied out of his estate, should it be so paid or satisfied, as to make of the case, relative to the rights of possession, an entirely different one from the one now presented. The question as to Honeycutt's right to possession should be kept open until Honeycutt pays the judgment or it is satisfied out of his estate, so that the parties at interest may have a hearing on the facts as they exist when that event occurs, should it occur. It might have been better procedure, perhaps, had the lower court not entered a decree recognizing Honeycutt's right to subrogation on his paying the judgment rendered. The pleadings raised no such issue. However, the decree in that respect is virtually nothing more than the statement of a legal principle, and can do no harm. Plaintiff does not complain of it, and Honeycutt has not asked that it be stricken from the judgment, for the decree in that respect is not against his interest. While the pleadings do not raise the question as to Honeycutt's right to the possession of the property on his paying the judgment, yet, out of abundance of precaution, we shall amend the judgment so as to protect such rights as he may have in that respect, including such rights as he may have to demand, by virtue of subrogation, possession of the mortgage note, attached as collateral *Page 259 
to the note sued on, which note is not mentioned in the judgment.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is amended by reserving to said Honeycutt such rights as he may have to demand and obtain possession of said collateral, including such right as he may have to demand and obtain, by virtue of subrogation, possession of said mortgage note attached to the note sued on, on his paying the judgment rendered herein, or upon its being satisfied out of his estate, and in all other respects said judgment is affirmed, appellant to pay the costs.
LAND, J., dissents.