Hooper v. Union Bank
Hooper v. Union Bank
Opinion of the Court
On the 3d of June, 1835, Sarah Rhodes, for herself and as tutrix of her children, mortgaged to the Union Bank certain slaves for $2000, which mortgage was duly recorded in the parish of East Feliciana, where she then resided and had her domicil. In 1839, Sarah Rhodes removed with the slaves mortgaged into the parish of East Baton Rouge, where she resided from March, 1839, to January, 1840, when she moved into the parish of Livingston, resided there about one year, and then returned, with her slaves, to the parish of East Baton Rouge, where she has had her domicil ever since. In April, 1840, Sarah Rhodes sold to her son Theodore B. Rhodes, her undivided half of the slaves mortgaged, and of other slaves which she held in common with her children. T. B. Rhodes, in March, 1840, mortgaged the slaves to the plaintiff, Elihu Hooper, to save him harmless, and secure him from loss on account of his having endorsed three notes of his, for $1286 66§ each, payable to the order of Sarah Rhodes, at one, two, and three years from the 10th of the same month. This mortgage was recorded in the parish of East Baton Rouge, on the 23d of July, 1844. The Union Bank, under a judgment obtained upon their mortgage in East Feliciana, issued an execution directed to the sheriff of East Baton Rouge, who levied upon the slaves mortgaged to that institution. The plaintiff then brought the present suit, alleging that his mortgage on the slaves seized, though posterior in date to that of the Bank, should have precedence over it, as the mortgage of the Bank had never been recorded in the parish of East Baton Rouge, where the owner of the slaves resided, and where his own mortgage was recorded prior to the seizure of the property. He prays that the sheriff be directed, out of the proceeds of the sale of these slaves, to retain the sum of $3859 98 ; and that such sum, or whatever sum, if less, the slaves may bring, be held subject to his mortgage thereon, by
It is urged that the bank, by their failure to record their mortgage in East Baton Rouge, have lost their rights under it as regards the plaintiff, a subsequent mortgagee. Were it absolutely necessary to decide this case on the ground assumed, we would hesitate long ere we would declare that a creditor, whose mortgage on slaves has been Once legally recorded at the time of its execution in the parish where the owner of the slaves resided, is bound to follow the mortgagor into évery other parish where he may afterwards think proper to reside, and have his mortgage recorded in each parish in order to protect himself against subsequent mortgages. It seems that a mortgage when lawfully acquired becomes a vested right, which cannot be destroyed by any act of the mortgagor, or Of third persons. But, be this as it may, the plaintiff has not shown himself entitled to any portion of the proceeds of the sale. His interest in the property was only a contingent one. He has not alleged, nor proved that he has paid, or become liable to pay any of the notes he endorsed; nor does it even appear that the notes which were all past due at the time of the trial below, were protested for want of payment by the maker. The plaintiff’s demand was then properly rejected below.
Judgmenl affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Elihu Hooper v. The Union Bank of Louisiana and another
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published