A. F. Flournoy & Co. v. Milling

15 La. Ann. 473 | La. | 1860

Merrick, C. J.

This case is correctly stated by appellants’ counsel as follows :

“ Plaintiffs allege: that, on the 19th December, 1859, they, as commercial partners, were in the legal and rightful possession of a building called and known as a cotton shed at said town of Trenton, and on that day were in the legal and actual possession of a large quantity of cotton then in said shed; that on said 19th December, 1859, James 11. Milling, resident of your said parish and State, violently, maliciously, and against the wish and consent of petitioners, or either of them, with force and arms, broke down the door of said cotton shed, and took therefrom fifteen bales of said cotton, and carried the same away, and deprived your petitioners of the same ; by which forcible, tortious, malicious and violent acts of trespass, petitioners have been damaged in the injury to their property, and loss of property, in the sum of one thousand dollars, and in the further sum of five thousand dollars as damage for the said tortious, malicious and forcible acts of trespass, of said Milling, in injury to their feelings and the outrages of their private rights, and in their costs necessarily incurred in asserting their rights.
“ To this demand defendant filed the following exception: That plaintiffs have no cause of action against him, for the following reasons, to-wit:
“ That in the service of said writ of sequestration, he was acting as Sheriff of the parish of Ouachita, and in his said official capacity, under the orders of the Twelth District Court for said parish.
“ That previous to the service of said writ, he took from the said F. McClendon a bond of indemnity, as provided for by the statute of 18th March, 1858, which said bond was filed on the 19th December, 1859, in the records of the suit entitled F. McClendon v. C. S. Scarborough et al, No. 3049.
“ That on the 21st February, 1860, before this suit was brought, against respondent, he assigned said bond of indemnity to the plaintiffs, in the presence of witnesses, and tendered them said assignment, and that said assignment was made in accordance with said statute of 18th March, 1858.
“ This exception was sustained by the court, and the suit dismissed ; from which judgment plaintiffs bring up this appeal.”

*474The plaintiffs contend that their action is that of trespass, and that on the exception, the allegations in their petition must be taken as true.

The exception in this case, it is true, is informal in not averring that the acts complained of in plaintiffs’ petition are the same and none other than those mentioned in the exception; yet, as the testimony, on the trial of the same, was received without objection, under the well settled rules of law, effect must be given to the testimony.

The petition of intervention of the plaintiffs in the case of McClendon v. Scarborough et al., makes it sufficiently certain, that the supposed trespasses complained of by the plaintiff in his petition were the acts of the Sheriff in the execution of the writ of sequestration issued against Scarborough et al.

Plaintiffs do not pretend to be the owners of the cotton seized in their intervention, but allege that they hold it as security, and have a privilege upon the same. It is, therefore, evident, from their own showing, that they had no right to prevent the seizure of the cotton by any other party also claiming a privilege against the defendants Scarborough. Their right was limited to a judicial proceeding to make their privilege available against the cotton. The complaint is not, as appears by the intervention, that the Sheriff used unnecessary violence in seizing the cotton ; the complaint is that “ he did, by force and violence, break open petitioners’ warehouse or cotton shed, and take possession of said cotton against the consent of petitioners, and without any writ or process of any kind against petitioners.”

It is clear', that the Sheriff had the right to take the property of the defendants Scarborough under the writ issued against them ; and if the plaintiffs closed their warehouse, and refused to consent to allow the Sheriff to enter, he was justified in using so much force as necessary to make the seizure commanded by the writ.

The bond of indemnity, under the Act of 1858, covers not only the damages occasioned by the simple detention of the property, but also any other damage necessarily resulting from the act of seizure itself. Otherwise, it would not be a bond of indemnity.

The District Judge does not, therefore, appear to have erred in his conclusions upon the evidence adduced under the exceptions.

Judgment affirmed.