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Civil Law Basics

Mortgage – Securing future obligations

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Securing future obligations

Art. 3298. Mortgage may secure future obligations. A. A mortgage may secure obligations that may arise in the future.

B. As to all obligations, present and future, secured by the mortgage, notwithstanding the nature of such obligations or the date they arise, the mortgage has effect between the parties from the time the mortgage is established and as to third persons from the time the contract of mortgage is filed for registry.

C. A promissory note or other evidence of indebtedness secured by a mortgage need not be paraphed for identification with the mortgage and need not recite that it is secured by the mortgage.

D. The mortgage may be terminated by the mortgagor or his successor upon reasonable notice to the mortgagee when an obligation does not exist and neither the mortgagor nor the mortgagee is bound to the other or to a third person to permit an obligation secured by the mortgage to be incurred. Parties may contract with reference to what constitutes reasonable notice.

E. The mortgage continues until it is terminated by the mortgagor or his successor in the manner provided in Paragraph D of this Article, or until the mortgage is extinguished in some other lawful manner. The effect of recordation of the mortgage ceases in accordance with the provisions of Articles 3357 and 3358.

Revision Comments-1991. (a) As the Expose des Motifs more fully explains, this article, and certain supplemental legislation adopted with it (R.S. 9:5555-5557) is intended to provide a direct and convenient substitute for the so-called collateral mortgage, which in recent years has become widely used, and to permit a person to mortgage his property to secure a line of credit, or even to secure obligations that may not then be contemplated by him except in the broadest sense of expectation that he may some day incur an obligation to the mortgagee. The supplemental legislation also facilitates the granting of mortgages to secure obligations that are not evidenced by a note paraphed for identification with it. See R.S. 9:5555-5557 (1991).

(b) The expression in Paragraph A that “a mortgage may secure” is intended to emphasize that a mortgage securing future obligations is not a distinct and different form of mortgage. A mortgage may secure existing obligations; obligations contemporaneously incurred with the execution of the mortgage or specific identifiable or particular and limited future obligations; or general and indefinite future obligations; or any combination of them. The matter is one of contract, not law, and the provisions of this Title regulating mortgages are equally applicable in each case.

(c) Paragraph B declares that a mortgage securing future obligations has the same effect and priority it would have if the obligations were in existence when the con­tract of mortgage was entered into. Thus, it is effective between the parties from the date it is created by the contract of the parties (Art. 3287), and is established over future property when the property is acquired. (Art. 3292).

(d) The effect and rank of a mortgage securing future obligations thus essentially corresponds to the effect and rank that it would have if it secured a collateral note that was pledged to secure future obligations, with the exception that Article 3298 does not require that there initially be a debt or commitment in order to give vitality to the mortgage. Of course, the contract of mortgage must be in existence and, to affect third persons acquiring rights in and to the thing mortgaged, it must be recorded. Once recorded, however, it serves notice to the world that until released or cancelled, it encumbers the property it describes to secure the obligation it contemplates.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Securing future obligations

Mortgage – Securing another’s obligation

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Securing another’s obligation

Art. 3295. Mortgage securing another’s obligation. A person may establish a mortgage over his property to secure the obligations of another. In such a case, the mortgagor may assert against the mortgagee any defense to the obligation which the mortgage secures that the obligor could assert except lack of capacity or discharge in bankruptcy of the obligor.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Securing another's obligation

Mortgage – Securing payment of money or performance of act

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Securing payment of money or performance of act

Art. 3293. Obligations for which mortgage may be established. A conventional mortgage may be established to secure performance of any lawful obligation, even one for the performance of an act. The obligation may have a term and be subject to a condition.

Art. 3294. Mortgage securing obligation that is not for the payment of money A mortgage that secures an obligation other than one for the payment of money secures the claim of the mortgagee for the damages he may suffer from a breach of the obligation, up to the amount stated in the mortgage.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Securing payment of money or performance of act

Mortgage – Presumption of things subject to mortgage

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Presumption of things subject to mortgage

Art. 3291. Presumption that things are subject to conventional mortgage A conventional mortgage of a corporeal immovable, servitude of right of use, or lease, as the case may be, includes the things made susceptible of mortgage with them by Article 3286, unless the parties expressly agree to the contrary.

Art. 3292. Mortgage of future property permitted in certain cases. A special mortgage given over property the mortgagor does not own is established when the property is acquired by the mortgagor. A general conventional mortgage is permitted only when expressly provided by law.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Presumption of things subject to mortgage

Mortgage – Power to create conventional mortgage

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Power to create conventional mortgage

Art. 3290. Power to mortgage. A conventional mortgage may be established only by a person having the power to alienate the property mortgaged.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Power to create conventional mortgage

Mortgage – Form and content of contract of mortgage

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Form and content of contract of mortgage

Art. 3288. Requirements of contract of mortgage. A contract of mortgage must state precisely the nature and situation of each of the immovables or other property over which it is granted; state the amount of the obligation, or the maximum amount of the obligations that may be outstanding at any time and from time to time that the mortgage secures; and be signed by the mortgagor.

Art. 3289. Acceptance. A contract of mortgage need not be signed by the mortgagee, whose consent is presumed and whose acceptance may be tacit.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Form and content of contract of mortgage

Mortgage – Mortgage certificates

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Mortgage certificates

R.S. 9:2743. Certificate of encumbrances, procedure, content, liability. A. The recorder shall deliver a certificate of encumbrances to any person who requests it in writing.

B. The certificate shall list all the uncancelled mortgages and instruments evidencing privileges, in the order of their recordation, that appear in the mortgage records and that identify the persons designated in the request as the mortgagor or obligor of the debt secured by the privilege, unless the recorder is supplied with evidence satisfactory to him that such instruments are in fact not those of the person in whose name the certificate is sought.

C.(1) If no uncancelled mortgage or instrument evidencing a privilege exists, the certificate shall declare that fact.

(2) The certificate shall not list mortgages or privileges arising from the recordation of the ad valorem tax rolls nor shall it list the notices of tax sales filed pursuant to R.S. 47:2180.

D.(1) The recorder is not liable personally or in his official capacity for listing in his certificate an encumbrance in the name of a person who reasonably may be construed to be the person in whose name the certificate is sought.

(2) The recorder is liable in his official capacity for any loss caused by the failure to list a mortgage or privilege in the certificate or by listing a mortgage or privilege that has been cancelled from his records unless the error proceeds from a want of exactness in the description of the property or the name of the mortgagor or obligor of the debt secured by the privilege specifically given to the recorder in the request.

R.S. 9:5212. Prompt recordation and certificate of encumbrances. Except as provided in R.S. 35:12(D), in no case can the recorder of mortgages and the parish recorders fulfilling the same duties, refuse or delay the recording of the acts which are presented to them for that purpose, or the delivery of the certificates which are required of them, as hereafter stated.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Mortgage certificates

Mortgage – Limits on the effect of recordation

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Limits on the effect of recordation

Art. 3320. Recordation; limits of effectiveness.

A. Repealed by Acts 2005, No. 169, §8 eff. July 1, 2006.

B. Repealed by Acts 2005, No. 169, §8 eff. July 1, 2006.

C. Recordation has only the effect given it by legislation. It is not evidence of the validity of the obligation that the encumbrance secures. It does not give the creditor greater rights against third persons than he has against the person whose property is encumbered.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Limits on the effect of recordation

Mortgage – Extinction of mortgages

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Extinction of mortgages

Art. 3319. Methods of extinction. A mortgage is extinguished:

(1) By the extinction or destruction of the thing mortgaged.

(2) By confusion as a result of the obligee’s acquiring ownership of the thing mortgaged.

(3) By prescription of all the obligations that the mortgage secures.

(4) By discharge through execution or other judicial proceeding in accordance with the law.

(5) By consent of the mortgagee.

(6) By termination of the mortgage in the manner provided by Paragraph D of Article 3298.

(7) When all the obligations, present and future, for which the mortgage is established have been incurred and extinguished.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Extinction of mortgages

Mortgage – Other liabilities and rights of third possessors

August 2, 2018 By Louisiana Notary Leave a Comment

Mortgage – Other liabilities and rights of third possessors

Art. 3316. Liability of third possessor . The deteriorations, which proceed from the deed or neglect of the third possessor to the prejudice of the creditors who have a privilege or a mortgage, give rise against the former to an action of indemnification.

Art. 3318. Right of third possessor for costs of improvements. A third possessor may recover the cost of any improvements he has made to the property to the extent the improvements have enhanced the value of the property; out of the proceeds realized from enforcement of the mortgage, after the mortgagee has received the unenhanced value of the property.

Filed Under: Mortgage Tagged With: Other liabilities and rights of third possessors

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