WHITNEY NATIONAL BANK OF NEW ORLEANS v. DERBES
WHITNEY NATIONAL BANK OF NEW ORLEANS v. DERBES
Opinion of the Court
This is a consolidated case which began when an in commendam partnership, Elk Place Medical Plaza, borrowed money to finance construction of a building budgeted at $6,011,064. Coldwell Mortgage Trust provided $5,000,000 interim financing and Whitney National Bank of New Orleans loaned the balance represented by a promissory note for $1,011,064, dated July 12,1973, payable on demand, with 8½% interest per annum and signed by the managing partner, Dr. George Farber. Farber, another general partner, Mrs. Alma Burks, and three limited partners, Drs. Derbes, Brown and Christianson indorsed the note as sureties. In 1975 Dr. Hegre and Lloyd D. O’Quinn purchased a limited partnership equity and also indorsed the note. In December, 1977, Mutual of New York provided $6,500,000 permanent funding which retired the $5,000,000 Coldwell loan and the $1,500,-000 balance was applied to various other partnership obligations owed to Whitney. None of the MONY funds were applied to the subject note.
The partnership paid the interest on the note through January 31, 1979, and four months later went bankrupt. Whitney filed separate lawsuits against Dr. Farber and Mrs. Burks, and then filed suit (said suit hereinafter referred to as Whitney) against the other five limited partners as indorsers of the note. Numerous motions and exceptions were filed and the five defendants pleaded a variety of defenses, including material alteration of the note, impairment of subrogation rights due to release of securities, failure of consideration, failure of cause, error, fraud and misrepresentation. The matter was heard before a commissioner who made a report and recommendation to the district judge on July 31, 1980. Following a hearing on exceptions to the commissioner’s report, on November 10, 1980, the trial judge rendered judgment in favor of Whitney for $1,011,-064, the amount of the note, plus interest at 8½% and attorney fees. All reconventional demands were dismissed as of nonsuit. The five defendants devolutively appealed raising numerous issues and urging defenses. Whitney answered the appeal seeking additional interest.
Subsequently, Whitney obtained a writ of fieri facias against defendant O’Quinn. O’Quinn in turn sued Whitney (said suit hereinafter referred to as O’Quinn) for an accounting of funds the bank received after trial and was granted a temporary restraining order halting Whitney’s collection efforts. The restraining order was vacated by this court; however, we denied Whitney’s motion to stay O’Quinn’s suit noting that a debtor has the right to seek injunc-tive relief “... if the judgment has been extinguished by payment made subsequent to the judgment.”
Initially, we shall treat the significant issues arising out of the Whitney suit. Whitney was specifically concerned with the validity of the note and the question of liability, if any, of the several indorsers thereon. In this regard, the indorsers had argued that the bank’s actions, i.e., failure to inform the parties of the interest rate changes, misrepresentation regarding the amount of collateral available, material alteration, improper imputation of payment, equitable estoppel, renewal, novation, etc. relieved the parties of any liability on the subject note. The facts were heard before a commissioner and a report and recommended judgment were prepared in accordance with LSA-R.S. 13:1171. Following a hearing on exceptions to the findings of the report of the commissioner, the district court judge concluded that there was no merit to the many objections to the commissioner’s report except for those concerning the portion of the judgment granting contribution. Accordingly, the district court judge entered his final judgment holding each of the several indorsers liable in solido for the face value of the note at the stated rate of 8½% interest.
The major issues to be decided by this court based upon the Whitney record are: (1) are indorsers who signed at a later date to be considered as accommodation indors-ers and thus not primarily liable on the note; (2) did a material alteration take place when the bank made marginal notations of interest rate changes; (3) did Whitney make misrepresentations which would support a plea of contractual error, fraud, or equitable estoppel; and (4) is R.S. 13:1171 which allows for referral of certain cases to a commissioner constitutional.
STATUS OF THE PARTIES
The defendants who signed the note at a later date contend that they are only secondarily liable as indorsers pursuant to R.S. 7:63.
The record reflects that Dr. Hegre and O’Quinn signed the subject note in the latter part of 1975, and that Drs. Christianson, Brown and Derbes signed either on or shortly after the making of the note. The principal argument of those who signed at a later date is that there was no consideration received for their signatures since the subject funds had been transferred at an earlier date. Specific reference is made to the language on the back of the note which states:
“In consideration of the making at the request of the undersigned of the loan evidenced by the within note, the undersigned has taken notice of the conditions and promises on the reverse hereof, and binds himself in solido by each and all of them, as there stated.”
In this regard, it is clear that the absence of consideration received by either an accommodation indorser, guarantor, or surety has no bearing on the underlying obligations of these parties. See Guaranty Bank & Trust Company v. Carter, 394 So.2d
MATERIAL ALTERATION
The indorsers allege that the markings placed in the margins amount to material alterations under Negotiable Instruments Law, LSA-R.S. 7:125 and 7:124, and should relieve them of any liability.
Whitney counters that the cases of Deposit Guaranty National Bank v. Shipp, 205 So.2d 101 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1967), aff’d 252 La. 745, 214 So.2d 129 (La. 1968) and Malinda v. St. Philip, 138 So.2d 671 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1962) stand for the proposition that where an interest rate is changed in the body of the note, the holder may collect the full amount of the note plus interest.
In Malinda, the change of interest rate was made with the consent of the maker. In Shipp, the Supreme Court noted that the defendant’s failure to plead material alteration as an affirmative defense made any ruling on the issue unnecessary under LSA-C.C.P. Art. 1005. Thus, neither Shipp nor Malinda have specifically ruled upon the question of what liability an indorser on such an altered note should bear.
However, Malinda does provide the general principle that where a negotiable instrument is materially altered without the assent of all parties liable thereon, it is avoided as to all parties except any party who himself made, authorized or assented to the alteration and subsequent indorsers. Indeed, this principle has been upheld under the negotiable Instruments Law even though the alterations in question had been made good in good faith. Simmons v. Green, 18 La.App. 492, 138 So. 679 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1932).
Therefore, the question to be decided is whether or not these interest rate notations
LSA-R.S. 7:124 and 7:125 are identical with the provisions of Section 124 of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act. A study of the decisions of other jurisdictions which have adopted the act reveals that an alteration of an interest rate in a note is a material alteration warranting discharge of all parties not consenting thereto.
The witnesses for the bank had testified that the changes in the interest rates on demand loans were made according to the prevailing market conditions and that a notice of rate change was sent to Elks Place about seven days prior to the effective date of such a change. The bank suggests that this system of rate change binds the indors-ers since Farber acted as their agent in his capacity as managing partner of the Elks Place Partnership. The indorsers argue that Farber lacked the agency authority to bind them in their individual capacities.
We find that although Farber had authority to bind the Elks Place Partnership, as far as the individual indorsers are concerned, the noted changes of interest rate are only marginal notations which do not change the legal effect*of the note since they merely represent a separate agreement of the maker (Elks Place) to pay a higher rate of interest in exchange for the bank’s not calling the note due.
FRAUD, ERROR, EQUITABLE ESTOPPEL
The alleged fraud in the Whitney suit arises out of the defendant’s pleadings which contend that an officer of the Whitney Bank made misrepresentations that the note would be paid off out of funds obtained from permanent financing. The commissioner’s report which was adopted by the trial judge stated that the testimony revealed that although the expectation of all parties was that this note was to be discharged when the project was completed and permanent financing obtained, such was never made part of the agreement between the parties. In this regard, the commissioner suggested that the ultimate financial demise of the partnership was a risk which should be borne by the parties who had signed the note since they were all well educated and well advised of the consequences of their actions. Upon review of the record, we find no manifest error in regard to the findings of the trial court pertaining to the pleas of fraud, error and equitable estoppel. Canter v. Koehring Co., 283 So.2d 716 (La. 1973) and Arceneaux v. Domingue, 365 So.2d 1330 (La. 1978).
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE COMMISSIONER’S SYSTEM
The indorsers further argue that the referral of the subject case to a commissioner pursuant to R.S. 13:1171 violated their constitutional right to be heard by an elected judge as provided for by Art. 5 of the Constitution of 1974.
In Bordelon v. Louisiana Department of Corrections, 398 So.2d 1103 (La. 1981) the
R.S. 13:1171 succinctly sets forth the procedure to be followed when a case is referred to a commissioner, and that procedure has been discussed by this court on prior occasions.
Additionally, it should be noted that R.S. 13:1171 provides a procedure whereby exceptions can be filed to the commission- . er’s report and recommendation. The statute requires that the trial judge set the exceptions for hearing, hear argument, and decide the exceptions on the record as made up before the commissioner. A review of the record presently before this court, reveals that following the filing of the commissioner’s report and the hearing of the exceptions thereto, the trial judge reviewed the record, read all the pleadings and mem-oranda of counsel, heard the objections to the commissioner’s report and recommendations, and rendered his judgment on the subject case. Upon these facts, we find no merit to the appellants’ contention that their constitutional rights had been violated.
Having disposed of the significant issues raised by the defendants in the Whitney case, we turn to the issues involved in the O'Quinn case.
Whitney asserts under local court rules
The bank received substantial monies after the Whitney trial ended on June 19,
APPLICABILITY OF IMPUTATION CLAUSE
The note’s imputation of payments clause states:
“All parties hereto hereby authorize and empower said Bank, at any time, to appropriate and apply to the payment and extinguishment hereof and/or of any of the obligations or liabilities, direct or contingent, of any of the parties hereto, whether now existing or hereafter arising, and whether then due or not due, up to the amount of $15,000,000.00, said bank being authorized to impute the payments as it sees fit, any and all moneys, stocks, bonds, or other property of any kind whatever now or hereafter in the hands of said Bank on deposit or otherwise to the credit of or belonging to any party hereto, including any moneys or other property in transit to or from said Bank for any purpose.”
Whitney contends this language gave it authority, without limitation, to apply any payments made on behalf of the partnership or its partners to any obligation of the partnership or any of its limited partners. Though this is a standard imputation clause, its interpretation and the question here on its application is res nova.
Whitney argues in brief: “(T)he $15,000,000.00 limitation is a cap on the pledge obligation of each maker, endorser and guarantor, which many bank attorneys feel is required by the Civil Code articles on pledge.” Whitney asserts the fifteen million dollar figure is not a limit on the holder’s (bank’s) right to impute, but rather on the amount of an individual’s collateral that the bank can hold at one time. We disagree. The note states the bank is authorized to apply “... as it sees fit, any and all moneys, stocks, bonds or other property of any kind whatever ... belonging to any party hereto” “... to the payment and extinguishment ... of any of the parties hereto ... up to the amount of $15,000,-000.00” (our emphasis). Since Whitney prepared the promissory note any ambiguity must be resolved against it. We interpret the fifteen million dollar provision as establishing a limit upon Whitney’s right to impute payments at its sole discretion. Once that limit is reached Whitney’s discretionary right to impute ends.
Whitney claims O’Quinn was precluded from raising the imputation issue in the O’Quinn suit because of collateral estoppel, res judicata and lis pendens. Collateral estoppel is not susceptible of application in a civil law jurisdiction. Welch v. Crown Zellerbach Corp., 359 So.2d 154 (La. 1978). Res judicata is not applicable because a final judgment had not been rendered in the first suit. LSA C.C. Arts. 2285, 2286. However, lis pendens has already been held to be applicable to all issues previously litigated.
COMPONENTS OF THE $15,000,000.00 LIMIT
During the O’Quinn trial Mike Kingsberry, C.P.A., an expert witness for O’Quinn, determined from subpoenaed bank records that Whitney received payments totaling $19,918,693.64 on Farber-related accounts since the note was executed on July 12, 1973. Whitney complains the sources of payments included by Kingsberry were inappropriate because the records were from
IMPUTATIONS OF PAYMENTS
Once the fifteen million dollar limitation was exceeded Whitney no longer had the right to impute payments as it saw fit. Instead, imputation was thereafter controlled by the following codal articles:
“Art. 2163. DEBTOR’S RIGHT TO MAKE IMPUTATION. The debtor of several debts has a right to declare, when he makes a payment, what debt he means to discharge.”
“Art. 2165. IMPUTATION BY CREDITOR’S RECEIPT. When the debtor of several debts has accepted a receipt, by which the creditor has imputed what he has received to one of the debts specially, the debtor can no longer require the imputation to be made to a different debt, unless there have been fraud or surprise on the part of the creditor.”
“Art. 2166. LEGAL ORDERS OR IMPUTATION. When the receipt bears no imputation, the payment must be imputed to the debt, which the debtor had at the time most interest in discharging, or those that are equally due; otherwise to the debt which has fallen due, though less burdensome than those which are not yet payable.
If the debts be of a like nature, the imputation is made to the debt which has been longest due; if all things are equal, it is made proportionally.”
The pertinent amounts received after the fifteen million dollar limitation was reached are described as follows:
1. $704,386.67 — Received by Whitney on October 29, 1980 from the foreclosure sale of Elk Place Medical Plaza.
2. $4,246.23 — Received by Whitney on November 10, 1980 from Harris Mortgage Corporation for application to the debt of Elk Place Medical Plaza.
3. $445,059.09 — Received by Whitney from the sale of Farber stock on February 5 and 6, 1981, applied to two loans made by Farber.
The $704,386.67 received by Whitney on October 29,1980, was the balance of the sales price received by the sheriff on the foreclosure sale of Elk Place Medical Plaza. Whitney held a second mortgage on the building, and applied the funds to those Elk Place partnership loans secured by said mortgage. Common sense dictates that O’Quinn and Hegre cannot contest this imputation. The sheriff had to deliver the funds remaining after discharge of the first mortgage to the next ranking mortgage holder. We are unaware of any legal principle which prevents that second mortgage holder from applying those proceeds to the secured debt and requires it to apply them to some other debt for the sole benefit of the other debt’s surety.
Furthermore, the law supports Whitney’s position. Since the debtor made no direction as to application of payment and hence “accepted receipt” of the payment, Whitney’s imputation was proper. C.C. Art. 2165. “When a creditor imputes the payment and informs the debtor of the imputation by a statement of account, the debtor who accepts the statement or receipt without objection or is silent is estopped from questioning the imputation.” Marks v. Deutsch Construction Co., 258 So.2d 676 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1972), 678, 679. See also,
The |445,059.09 received by Whitney on February 5 and 6, 1981 from the sale of Farber stock was applied to the credit of various personal loans of Dr. Farber. This was done by the explicit direction of Dr. Farber, and the record is devoid of any evidence that the stock was pledged to secure the note indorsed by O’Quinn. On the contrary, C.C. Art. 2163 specifically provides that a debtor of several debts has the right to declare which debt he means to discharge.
The record is not clear as to the application of the funds received from the Harris Mortgage Corporation. However, the same rules of imputation are applicable. If the debtor, Elk Place Partnership or Far-ber, directed application of the proceeds to a particular debt, Whitney was obliged to do so. If Whitney imputed by receipt, without objection from the debtor, the guarantor has no standing to object.
A third party, including an indorser, cannot force the debtor to impute his payment in a particular fashion, nor can he abrogate the creditor’s right to impute by receipt when the debtor has failed to declare. See, Imputation of Payment; A Study of Obligations, 38 Tul.L.R. 31. See also Grand Lodge, etc. v. Murphy Const. Co., 152 La. 123, 92 So. 757 (1922); Thompson & Co. v. Sporl, 160 La. 352, 107 So. 135 (1926).
We have thus concluded that defendants are not entitled to any of the credits they claim on the note sued on in the Whitney case and the trial judge in the O'Quinn case erred in his conclusion that note was satisfied and extinguished.
Finally, we turn to Whitney’s answer to the appeal in which it seeks an increase in the interest of 8V2% allowed by the trial court in Whitney.
Whitney contends that it was allowed to charge a “floating rate” of interest on the subject note. The allowed 8½% interest was the amount set out in the original note. During the life of the loan Whitney fluctuated its interest rate to as high as 11¾% on April 1,1979. “Floating” interest rates are not uncommon in financial circles. They are a very integral part of the lending industry. However, in order to bind obli-gors to such practices they must be advised of same and have consented to it. In the instant case, the note merely stated 8½% interest. No mention was made of a floating rate in the body of the note, nor was. there any other agreement indicating consent on behalf of the parties to a fluctuating rate. While Farber may have consented to changes in the interest rate there is no evidence that any of the indorsers consented or even had knowledge of the purported changes when they occurred. Whitney had no authority unilaterally to change the interest rate of its loan without the consent of the parties thereto.
Accordingly, the judgment in favor of the Whitney National Bank in Suit No. 79-8183 of the Civil District Court against Dr. Vincent J. Derbes, Dr. Gary R. Brown, Dr. Herbert B. Christianson, Dr. Andrew M. Hegre and Lloyd D. O’Quinn is affirmed.
The judgment in favor of Lloyd D. O’Quinn in suit No. 81-1399 of the Civil District Court is reversed and set aside and there is judgment in favor of Whitney National Bank of New Orleans, dismissing Lloyd O’Quinn’s suit at his cost, including the cost of the appeal.
Our Docket No. 12411 AFFIRMED.
Our Docket No. 12752 REVERSED AND RENDERED.
WARD, J., concurs.
BARRY, J., dissents.
. Specifically, this court’s order of March 5, 1981, was premised on C.C.P. Art. 2298(2) which entitles the judgment debtor to seek in-junctive relief if the judgment has been extinguished by payment made subsequent to the judgment. The order specifically stated:
“The intent of our order was clear. The debtor is not entitled to Art. 2298 relief by further temporary restraining orders, but his*1189 rights under Art. 2298 to seek an injunction are preserved. We repeat, however, that lis pendens (our earlier ‘res judicata’ was a misnomer) precludes relitigating the defenses litigated in the earlier suit now pending on appeal.”
. In brief and oral arguments the parties have referred to provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Law found in Title 7 of the Revised Statutes. This was repealed by Act 92 of 1974 and replaced by the Commercial Law found in Title 10. Since the new laws became effective on January 1, 1975, they were in effect when Hegre and O’Quinn became indorsers. The re-suit we reach is the same under either law, but the position of Hegre and O’Quinn is weakened considerably if the new law is applied.
R.S. 7:63 provides: Persons deemed indorsers: A person placing his signature upon an instrument otherwise than as maker, drawer, or acceptor is deemed to be an indorser, unless he clearly indicates by appropriate words his intention to be bound in some other capacity. Replacement R.S. 10:3-402 provides: Unless the instrument clearly indicates that a signature is made in some other capacity it is an indorsement.
. Such is true even if the principal maker is discharged in bankruptcy proceedings. Meadow Brook National Bank v. Massengill, et al, 427 F.2d 1055 (5th Cir. 1970).
. LSA-R.S. 7:124 reads: Alterations, effect of.
Where a negotiable instrument is materially altered without the assent of all parties liable thereon, it is avoided, except as against a party who has himself made, authorized, or assented to the alteration and subsequent indorsers. But when an instrument has been materially altered and is in the hands of a holder in due course, not a party to the alteration, he may enforce payment thereof according to its original tenor.
LSA-R.S. 7:125 reads: Materiality of alteration, any alteration which changes:
(1) The date;
(2) The sum payable, either for principal or interest;
(3) The time or place of payment;
(4) The number or the relations of the parties;
(5) The medium or currency in which payment is to be made; or which adds a place of payment where no place of payment is specified, or any other change or addition which alters the effect of the instrument in any respect, is material alteration.
However, replacement R.S. 10:3-407 provides: Alteration
(1) Any alteration of an instrument is material which changes the contract of any party thereto in any respect, including any such change in
(a) the number or relations of the parties; or
(b) an incomplete instrument, by completing it otherwise than as authorized; or
(c) the writing as signed, by adding to it or by removing any part of it.
(2) As against any person other than a subsequent holder in due course
(a) alteration by the holder which is both fraudulent and material discharges any party whose contract is thereby changed unless that party assents or is precluded from asserting the defense;
(b) no other alteration discharges any party and the instrument may be enforced according to its original tenor, or as to incomplete instruments according to the authority given.
(3) A subsequent holder in due course may in all cases enforce the instrument according to its original tenor, and when an incomplete instrument has been completed, he may enforce it as completed.
. See decisions pertaining to interpretation of 5 Uniform Laws annotated § 124 and § 125.
. See: 3A C.J.S. Alteration of Instrument § 34(b), 4 Am.Jur.2d, Alteration of Instruments § 55, and A.L. Harrington Co. v. Barron, 15 La.App. 187, 131 So. 503 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1930) for discussion of marginal memorandum or notations on notes.
.Under present R.S. 10:3-407 a change in interest is not specifically mentioned as a material alteration as was so in R.S. 7:125. Furthermore, R.S. 10:3-407(2)(a) provides that an alteration must be both fraudulent and material to discharge a party. '
. Boe v. Lake Forest, Inc., 384 So.2d 850 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1980); Franklin Printing Co., Inc. v. Collin, 376 So.2d 1323 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1979) and Lane v. Lane, 375 So.2d 660 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1978).
. Rule 8, Section 9, of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans provides:
“Suits or proceedings that are filed subsequent to suits or proceedings already filed but which grow out of those previously filed suits or proceedings shall not be docketed as separate suits but shall be treated as parts of the previously pending suits and shall follow the prior allotment or assignment to the respective divisions of the Court. However, all motions for a new trial and all actions for nullity shall be heard by the judge who signed the original judgment. Whenever, by error or by oversight, this rule shall be violated, the judge to whom the matter shall have been allotted shall have the power to order same transferred to the proper division, there to be consolidated with the previously pending suit.”
. See footnote 1.
Concurring Opinion
concurring.
Although I agree with the majority’s treatment of most issues and with its conclusion, I disagree with the treatment of the issue of imputation of payments. That part of the note which purports to grant Whitney the right to impute payments is so permeated with legalese that it is ambiguous at best and non sensical at worst, and
After eliminating the legalese and after inserting the obvious, I submit the following extract is a more accurate interpretation of the right of Whitney to impute payments.
All parties ... agree that the payment hereof may be extended from time to time, one or more times, without notice
The property described on the reverse hereof, and any property that may be substituted therefor ... are hereby pledged ... to [Whitney] to secure the payment of this note, and of any note given in extension ... as well as for the payment of any other obligation ... of any of the parties hereto to [Whitney] ... up to the amount of $15,000,000.00 .... All parties ... agree that the property ... pledged may be exchanged [for other pledged property] or surrendered ... without notice to or assent from any party ... [and] ... full irrevocable power and authority are hereby granted and given to [Whitney] ... upon this note not being paid at maturity, to sell, ... the whole of the property of every kind pledged .... [and Whitney] may apply the residue of the proceeds of sale or sales, pro tanto, to the payment of any or all of the obligations or liabilities of the parties hereto or [to] any of them, whether then-due or not due, up to the amount of $15,000,000.00 ...
[Additionally] All parties ... authorize ... [Whitney] to appropriate [any of the property described below] and [to] apply to the payment ... [of this note] or of any of the obligations ... of any of the parties hereto, ... [the proceeds from the sale of that property] up to the amount of $15,000,000.00, [and Whitney is] authorized to impute the payments as it sees fit, [of] any and all moneys, stocks, bonds, or other property of any kind whatever now or hereafter in the hands of said Bank on deposit or otherwise to the credit of or belonging to any party hereto .... All parties ... authorize [Whitney] ... to collect, ... and apply to the payment and extinguishment [of the note] the interest, dividends, or other income accruing and payable on any of the property pledged to secure the payment hereof ....
The note speaks of property, not payments on the note or payments on other indebtedness of the parties, and it should not be interpreted to include payments. The note as I interpret it does not give Whitney the unfettered right to impute payments as it sees fit except from proceeds of the sales of property pledged to secure the note or from money, stocks, and bonds belonging to the parties and then in the hands of Whitney. Hence, imputation of all payments now in dispute should follow the provision of Articles 2163, 2165, and 2166 of the Civil Code.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The note plainly states the bank is authorized to apply “... as it sees fit, any and all moneys, stocks, bonds or other property of any kind whatever .... belonging to any party hereto” ... “to the payment and extinguishment ... of any of the obligations or liabilities, direct or contingent, of any of the parties hereto ... up to the amount of $15,000,000.00” (my emphasis). The majority correctly interprets this as clearly establishing a $15 million limit upon Whitney’s right to impute, but falls into error when applying the provision to several payments the bank received following the Whitney trial.
COMPONENTS OF THE $15,000,000 (see appendix)
Whitney’s records (produced under subpoena) show the bank received payments totalling $19,918,693.64 on Farber-related accounts since the note was executed on July 12, 1973.
IMPUTATION OF PAYMENTS (see appendix)
After the $15 million limit was reached, codal articles on imputation of payments (LSA-C.C. Arts. 2168 et seq.) are applicable to funds attributable to the partnership note. Under these provisions payments go to the debt “... which the debtor had at the time the most interest in discharging, of those that are equally due .... If the debts be of a like nature, the imputation is made to the debt which has been longest due ...” LSA-C.C. Art. 2166. Any interest due must be paid either first or concurrently with principal. LSA-C.C. Art. 2164. Certainly the debtor (Farber) had “the most interest in discharging” this debt (secured by a surety)
The bank argues this issue was litigated in Whitney and was precluded by an order from this Court. The $15 million cap was not raised in Whitney.
Whitney also complains that the rules of imputation can be evoked only by the “debtor of several debts”
After the Whitney trial, the note was placed in a separate account by the bank.
Under these circumstances, I believe it is unconscionable to allow Whitney and Far-ber to agree to divert payments to the
MANDATORY CREDITS AFTER IMPUTATION
The following sums received by Whitney subsequent to the end of the Whitney trial on June 19,1980, should have been credited:
1. $704,386.67 — Received by Whitney on October 29, 1980 from foreclosure sale of Elk Place Medical Plaza. (Exhibit P-20)
2. $4,246.23 — Received by Whitney on November 10, 1980 from Harris Mortgage Corporation for application to the debt of Elk Place Medical Plaza. (Exhibit P-20)
3. $445,059.09 — Received by Whitney from sale of Farber stock on February 5 and 6, 1981. This amount was applied to two loans made by Farber. (Exhibit P-19)9
Farber admitted at trial that the stocks which were “sold”
Whitney also objects to the inclusion of stock proceeds to extinguish the note based upon Farber’s testimony that he and Whitney agreed this amount would apply to his personal loans (see footnote 9, supra.) As stated above, subsequent to the first trial and the $15 million limit being met, under the circumstances of this case, the debtor and creditor were not at liberty to direct payments to the prejudice of the endorsers.
The following assets, when liquidated, should also be imputed:
1. Coldwell Mortgage — 36,150 Common Shares
—3,200 Preferred Shares
Fairgrounds — 4,196 Common Shares.
Mr. Hart, Whitney’s vice president, testified these stocks were held by the bank,
2. Funds held by bankruptcy court.
Richard Leefe, attorney representing Elk Place, Harvey Oil Center, and Farber in three bankruptcy proceedings, testified that “approximately two hundred thousand dollars” was available in the Elk Place bankruptcy and Whitney was the largest unsecured creditor. If Whitney receives money from the bankruptcy court on the Elk Place account it should be imputed to the note.
3. $10,000 — Certificate of Deposit due March 26,1981.
At the time of trial (March 5, 1981) the certificate had not matured, but testimony does not confirm that the C.D. was in the name of Elk Place. Whitney’s Mr. Hart was the only person to testify regarding this item when referring to securities pledged by Farber to Whitney. Whitney’s brief states the C.D. was actually issued in the name of and pledged by Farber. O’Quinn argues it is irrelevant whether issued in Farber’s or Elk Place’s name as it was clearly available as a credit. If issued in either name, when the money was (or is) received it should be credited to this note.
ITEMS NOT SUBJECT TO IMPUTATION
The O’Quinn court erred by including the following amounts for credit to the Elk Place account:
1. $109,000.00 — Sale of West Bank Petroleum Club note purchased by Whitney at public sale.
Mr. Hart was the only person to testify regarding this transaction and stated the note was from a tenant of the Harvey Oil Center and pledged by Dr. Farber and Mr. Leefe as security to any of their obligations. This was not refuted by O’Quinn. The amount was credited by Whitney to the Harvey Oil Center account on February 4, 1981. O’Quinn argues it should be a credit because the note was part of the properties cross-collateralized on the cross-pledge of September 24, 1978. However, Mr. Leefe had no association with Elk Place and the evidence is insufficient to allow a credit.
2. $32,240.00 — Payments in excess of the note’s 8½% interest.
This issue was litigated in the Whitney suit. Elk Place, the maker, acquiesced in higher interest rates and that money cannot be recouped by the endorsers.
SUMMARY
The following amounts should be imputed for credit on the partnership note as of the specified dates:
$ 704,386.67 - as of October 28,1980
4,246.23 - as of November 10,1980
441,359.95 - as of February 5,1981
3.699.14 - as of February 6,1981
81.153.691.99
In addition, the unliquidated assets (Cold-well and Fairgrounds stock, bankruptcy funds, and C.D.) should be credited whenever received by Whitney.
The Whitney Bank, assisted by Farber, was in the driver’s seat throughout this scenario. The endorsers were at the mercy of the bank and its imputation clause (agreeably and legally) up to the bank’s self-imposed limitations in the clause. Thereafter, the very purpose of the clause came into play, namely, to protect these endorsers.
O’Quinn should be remanded to complete the accounting of funds received by Whitney in order to determine what balance, if any, is owed to Whitney Bank after considering all permissible credits.
I should also point out that the majority has failed to treat O'Quinn’s argument rela
APPENDIX
WHITNEY-FARBER LOAN ACCOUNTS PAID TO WHITNEY AS PER KINGSBERRY LESS PAYMENTS RECEIVED AFTER WHITNEY TRIAL (AS PER EXHIBITS) amounts to calculate IMPUTATION
Elk Place Medical Plaza Liability Ledger Card $ 7,179,554.54 $ 60,000.00 18,406.96 $ 7,101,147.58
George A. Farber, M.D. James W. Burks, M.D. 86,500.00 -0-86,500.00
Farlee Company 4,337,337.24 442,522.33 268,098.06 12,114.67 3,614,602.18
George A. Farber, M.D. Guy L. Leefe, Jr. 3,730,813.95 109,000.00 3,621,813.95
Burks Dermatology & Allergy Clinic 120,332.30 -0-120,332.30
Mrs. Alma L. Burks George A. Farber, M.D. 107,000.00 -0-107,000.00
Elk Place Medical Plaza 977,694.64 173,848.70 390,708.79 977,694.64 173,848.70 390,708.79
Farlee Company 504,795.50 504,795.50
George A. Farber, M.D. Guy L. Leefe, Jr. 634,301.19 634,301.19
George A. Farber, M.D. 114,826.62 103,910.44 48.65 10,867.53 -0-
Elk Place Medical Plaza (Foreclosure) 630,225.94 555,541.04 3,821.60 70,438.67 424.63 -0-
George A. Farber, M.D. and Guy L. Leefe, Jr. 438,470.78 -0-438,470.78
Farlee Co. Foreclosures 492,283.45 134,291.84 208,968.52 19.324.17 8,197.09 14,921.31 42.529.17 12.527.17 17,331.52 31,935.80 2,256.86 370,781.62 121,501.83 -0-
$19,918,693.64 $2,147,478.03 $17,771,215.61
. Dr. Farber apparently had an extraordinary entree or working relationship with Whitney Bank personnel, as shown by the voluminous and inordinate loans in this record.
. O’Quinn’s expert, Mike Kingsberry, C.P.A., testified that $19,918,693.64 was received on Farber-related accounts prior to the close of the Whitney trial. I have amended this figure to exclude payments that were in fact received after June 19, 1980, the close of trial in Whitney.
. Calatex Oil & Gas Co. v. Smith, 175 La. 678, 144 So. 243 (1932). Although the parties were bound in solido on the note, the endorsers maintained their status as sureties vis á vis the maker.
. The issue was raised for the first time in the Whitney appeal.
. Case # 12367 dated March 5, 1981
. LSA-C.C. Art. 2163
. See Exhibit P-20
. See the cross-collateral pledge agreement dated September 25, 1978, Farber’s July 11, 1973 letter to Mr. Robert Treuting, vice president of Whitney, and Farber’s testimony on March 6, 1981.
. The first loan, for $428,000, was made on November 15, 1978 and due March 14, 1979. The second was a demand note, executed February 9, 1979 in the amount of $61,500. On February 5 and 6, 1981, payments in the amount of $114,826.62 toward interest and $330,232.47 toward principal were made on these two notes, leaving a balance of $159,-267.53.
. There is no identifying information in the record regarding this block of stocks. Two groups of stock were referred to in Farber’s testimony: one group of stocks that had been “sold,” and another group not yet sold consisting of Fairgrounds and Coldwell Mortgage stock.
. When questioned why he asked Whitney to use this money to pay his personal debts, he stated:
“Why not? I owed all of these debts and that’s what I originally intended it for and I would rather have my own loan paid off than pay for people that may or may not still be friendly or may or may not have some problems, too. It would be stupid for me to say: Pay off somebody else’s first.”
. Whitney again objects stating this issue was litigated in the first suit. The first suit did not determine the issue of collateral behind the note. Also, these sums were received by Whitney on February 5 and 6, 1981, long after the first trial ended.
070rehearing
ON REHEARING
In their application for rehearing the indorsers complain that we did not address their argument that they were discharged because of the Louisiana Deficiency Judgment Act, LSA C.C.P. Arts. 2771 and 2772, R.S. 13:4106, and they ask for a rehearing on this basis.
REHEARING DENIED.
070rehearing
would grant a rehearing.
I disagree with the majority’s treatment of the imputation clause for the detailed reasons in my dissent.
O’Quinn raises a number of substantial issues, some of which are treated summarily and one of which was ignored:
“I should also point out that the majority has failed to treat O’Quinn’s argument relative to the Difficiency Judgment Act. Serious questions were raised and are unanswered which could effectively alter the majority’s disposition of this obligation.” (See Dissent, pp. 1199-1200.)
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WHITNEY NATIONAL BANK OF NEW ORLEANS v. Vincent J. DERBES, Gary B. Brown, Herbert B. Christianson, Andrew M. Hegre and Lloyd D. O'Quinn Lloyd D. O'QUINN v. WHITNEY NATIONAL BANK OF NEW ORLEANS
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published