Pietri v. Wells
Pietri v. Wells
Opinion of the Court
rendered the opinion and decree of the Court, as follows:
As 'between plaintiff and appellee, G. Pietri, and those parties, including Mrs. 0 ’Reilly, who, to the exclusion of said plaintiff and of one another, claim to be entitled to the benefit of the vendor’s privilege upon the fund in dispute, the judgment in plaintiff’s favor and against them on this score cannot be disturbed, since they are all co-appellees, neither they nor the said plaintiff having appealed,
The fund in question consists of the proceeds of the judicial sale of real estate sold under executory process or foreclosure to satisfy the balance due upon vendor’s lien notes executed in partial payment of the price of the property. The wife contends that the balance of the fund, after the payment of the vendor and the legal charges, should have been applied to the partial satisfaction of her legal mortgage, while the trustee of Woulfe, who was adjudged a bankrupt by the United States 'Court in bankruptcy pending the executory proceedings in the Civil ■District Court and after the latter Court had .acquired jurisdiction of the parties thereto and the actual custody of the property, maintains that the State Court properly decreed that this balance be turned over to him as trustee, for distribution under the orders and supervision of the Bankruptcy Court.
So the precise question presented is should the State Court, after satisfying the privileged creditor first in rank, pay the balance of the proceeds to the mortgage creditor next in rank, or, on the contrary, transfer this bal anee to the Bankruptcy Court ?
Pietri vs. Wells, 64 Sou. Rep., 922; 135 La., 7.
And in order that the Court under whose mandate the property is sold may fully perform its duty to the purchaser as well as to those whose rights in the property are affected by its sale, there is comprehended within its jurisdiction the express mandate to cite and class all privilege and mortgage creditors whose lien is divested by virtue of the sale, to the end that under its decree not only shall the proceeds of the sale be distributed among them according to the rank and dignity of their debts, but also that the purchaser should acquire an unencumbered title.
C. P., 126.
And the effect of this is that while the -debtor in this instance might before the sale have withdrawn his property from the custody of the Court by payment of the privilege in aid of which the process of the ’Court was invoked, yet where this is not done and the property is permitted to be sold to satisfy the privilege, the proceeds of the sale became impounded for the satisfaction as far as possible not only of the privilege which provoked the sale, but also of all other privileged and mortgage creditors whose lien upon the property is destroyed by the sale.
The adjudication in bankruptcy does not alter this situation, for a trustee is vested with no greater title or
The cases which have been cited to us as establishing a contrary doctrine, namely, the Kensella case, 117 La., 687, and the Cavaroc case, 123 La., 319, are not in point; for it must be remembered that we are not here dealing with receivership, insolvency or other proceedings of a similar character originating in a State Court within four months of the bankruptcy, nor with liens, whether arising from the State Court’s proceeds or otherwise, acquired within a like period; but on the contrary with a proceeding before a Court having possession of the property for the enforcement of privileges and mortgage arising from the nature of the debts themselves long before the date of the bankruptcy and.in no manner affected by the bankruptcy law nor by any adjudication or other proceedingthereunder — liens which should be equally recognized and enforced, whether the proceeding for that purpose be presented to the State 'Court or to the Bankruptcy Court.
Entertaining these views, it will be necessary to reverse the judgment in so far as it awards the balance of the fund to the trustee and not to the appellant, the wife of the bankrupt.
It is accordingly ordered and adjudged that paragraph numbered “Fifth” of the judgment be annulled and re
Revered in part and in part affirmed.
(137 La., ..; 69 South., p. 847.)
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.