Cash v. Durand

VanDalsen,

on an application for a re-hearing:

The counsel for plaintiff and appellant respectfully submits the following as reasons why the Hon. Court should grant a re-hearing in these premises.

The Hon. Court sustains the counsel in his declarations that the “ Doten" notes given to plaintiff were worthless and wholly non-effective, and that the two sales, the first from defendant to Smith, and the second from Smith to defendant’s younger bother, were fraudulent; and also that plaintiff fully established her title to the original mortgage notes, at least as pledgee from John M. Durand, who was her original debtor, and the payee and endorser of those notes so pledged.

From this point, the interest of the plaintiff was overcome by the following (in effect) reasoning of the Hon. Court: Say the Hon. Court, “ John M. Durand was her debtor, not the defendant, who owed her nothing. She also received the joint notes of defendant and John M. Durand as additional security.” And lastly, “The plaintiff was only the pledgee of the original notes.” And then, as judgment against plaintiff immediately follows, counsel is compelled to the only conclusion deduciable from the argument of the Court, to wit: That because the plaintiff was only the pledgee of the notes, the defendant was not guilty of fraud in obtaining possession of them by the base trickery and dissimulation he so successfully practiced upon the plaintiff. With profound deference for the expressed opinion of the Hon. Court, counsel will proceed to consider the three branches of the above set forth reasoning, and not without the fullest confidence of being able to convince the Hon. Court that the plaintiff’s claims for a rehearing, are based upon and sustained by the clearest principles of law.

1st. “ John Jf. Durand was her debtor, not the defendant, who owed her nothing.”

C. C., -3100. “ The pledge is a eonbraet by which a debter gives something to his creditor for his debt." John M. Durand was our debtor and gave us the notes as a pledge to secure that debt.

C. C., 3103. “Every lawful obligation may be enforced by the auxiliary obligation of pledge.”

John M. Durand's obligation to plaintiff was lawful, and she had a right to enforce it by the auxiliary obligation of a pledge.

O. 0., 3109. “A debtor may give in pledge whatever belongs to him.”

John M. Durand was the original payee and endorser of those notes, had them in his possession, and pledged them to plaintiff' before their maturity, for a legal cause ; and negotiable money obligations so drawn, so endorsed, and so transferred to an unsuspecting third person, without notice of any fraud or want of consideration, carry with them every right known to the law, to enforce their payment for all the purposes and to the full extent of the transferee’s property in them. See all the jurisprudence of Louisiana on this subject, and every American and English writer on Bills and Notes. See also, C. C., 3121, 3122, 3124. See also King v. Gayoso, 8 N. S., 373.

It was not pretended that the defendant was entitled to receive notice of John M. Durand's pledge to plaintiff, of the obligations of defendant; but if it had been, or if this Hon. Court have any doubt on the point, Art. 3128, 0. C., lays the question at rest, for that Article expressly declares that such notice is un-neeessarjr. King v. Gayoso, 8 N. S., 373.

0. C., 3137. “ If the debt, which has been given in pledge becomes due before it is redeemed by the person pawning it, the creditor, (pledgee,) by virtue of *191the transfer, which has been made to him, shall he justified in receiving the amount, and in taking measures to recover it.”

It is confidently believed, that after the above authorities shall have been examined, the Hon. Court will conclude that the first considered ground as a reason for judgment, is wholly untenable.

We now consider the second branch, to wit: “ The plaintiff also received the joint notes of defendant and John M. Durand as additional security.”

As additional security for what, did she receive them ? There is not one lino in the record that shows the plaintiff to have received them in payment of the mortgage notes, nor was any such absurdity contended for by defendant’s counsel, either in the District Court or in this Hon. Court. Then for what purpose were they given ? A legal mind can only conclude (in absence of positive proof) that they were handed to plaintiff as a pledge for the fulfilment of a double obligation of her debtor, the defendant: 1st, That acknowledging himself to be the debtor of plaintiff by reason of her possession of his obligations, he intended them as a pledge that he would not wrong her; and 2d, Being well assured that the plaintiff was fully convinced she would never receive back the money she had loaned, except by means of the pledge she held legally, and on which chose pledged he (defendant) was the principal obligor; the act of executing and giving to her, new notes, made and endorsed by himself and his uncle, was a solemn pledge that he would secure to her the debt due her, for the payment of which she held his mortgage paper. This is what we charged, what the plaintiff did necessarily believe and the defendant both promised and intended the plaintiff should believe. Any other conclusion would lead into a labyrinth of false logic. The money due to plaintiff was her little all. Before her was her debtor and pledgor, beside him was the debtor of the thing pledged, on which, by the clearest and strongest provisions of our Civil Code, she had a paramount privilege to the extent of, and for the restitution of her loan. And yet the Hon. Court said the defendant was not our debtor. Not to be our debtor, defendant must have paid our debt; for he was our debtor while we remained the legal pledgee of those mortgage notes which he and his property were bound to us for.

C. 0., 3137. From the laws cited, this position is too clear to be successfully assailed, which leaves us to examine, as to one fact, to wit: Did he pay us? There can be but one answer : he did not. Nor has it been pretended, nor is it so declared in the judgment of this Hon. Court. From the beginning one of defendant’s counsel has contended that his client owed us nothing, never had owed us anything; that although we were pledgees of notes which the law says we could collect from defendant, yet, says he, my uncle John should have surrendered them to me as per document D, page 55, of the record, and as uncle John has done him wrong, by not surrendering to him according to document D, a thing the poor plaintiff knew nothing about, and is in no manner bound by, he is justified in taking from us our securities by false pretences and misrepresentations. This logic is certainly not less startling than new. To sustain such a position, the maxims, that “all’s fair in war,” “stratagem is better than force,” and “all’s well that ends well,” may be properly cited; but there is no maxim or principle of law or natural right to sustain it, notwithstanding this Hon. Court seems to have considered the argument favorably.

Another of defendant’s counsel contended at bar that it is alleged, the defendant promised to sell the property on which the notes bore mortgage, if plaintiff would let him have the notes; and that forasmuch as defendant did sell the property when he had obtained the notes, he had done all he had promised, and plaintiff had no cause to complain. Yes, he did sell the property, and as per the evidence in the record, he conveyed it into the pocket of his young brother to take it back at will. This position is certainly below legal criticism.

The third branch proposed to be considered, to wit: The plaintiff was only the pledgee of the notes, has been necessarily touched in the first part of this brief. All the laws shewing that the pledgee’s right against the debtor of the thing pledged, is pure, clear and forcible, have already been cited. Much more could be said on this point if there over had been an expressed opinion adverse to such a right in a pledgee; but as all laws and authorities are clearly in favor of the right of a pledgee, as is sought to be enjoyed by this plaintiff, counsel will close this brief, by praying that the re-hearing may be granted.