55 So. 746 | La. | 1911
Several years ago the plaintiff instituted a suit against his son Ed. Adkins, in which he claimed the ownership of a sawmill plant, in possession of the said son under an alleged contract of lease. The property was seized under writs of sequestration.
Sims & Brown intervened, claiming the ownership of the plant by written transfer from Ed. Adkins, in consideration of a debt against him for money and supplies to the amount of about $3,200, and, in the alternative, prayed for judgment for said amount, with interest. Sims & Brown alleged that any transfer of said plant from the son to the father that might be set up by the plaintiff was a fraudulent simulation. On the trial of said suit there was judgment rejecting the plaintiff’s demand as in case of non-suit, and in favor of the interveners on their alternative money demand. Execution issued against Ed. Adkins on July 1, 190S, and the sheriff seized thereunder the mill plant and a lot of lumber. On July 25, 1908, the property so seized was sold at public auction, and was adjudicated to Sims & Brown
On August 29, 1909, plaintiff filed the present suit, claiming the ownership of said plant, and $800 for one year’s rent, and, in the alternative, for the sum of $2,500, the alleged value of said property, with legal interest from August 1, 1909.
Defendants after filing, certain exceptions, which were overruled, answered that the plaintiff stood by and allowed the mill plant to be sold without objection as the property of Ed. Adkins, and was therefore es-topped to claim said property, and, further, that the plaintiff’s claim of ownership was based on a fraudulent simulation entered into between the plaintiff and his son for the purpose of defrauding creditors. Defendants further averred that since their purchase they had expended some $600 in repairing and improving said mill plant.
The case resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendants rejecting the demands of the plaintiff and sustaining the plea of estoppel. Plaintiff has appealed.
The. evidence shows that, after the seizure, the plaintiff endeavored to effect a compromise with the defendants. This fact shows knowledge of the proceedings on the part of the plaintiff, and knowledge of the assertion of his claim *on the part of the defendants.
A certain witness testified that the plaintiff requested him to act as one of the appraisers of the property under seizure, and the record shows that the same witness was one of the appraisers. This evidence was not objected to by the plaintiff, but his counsel urge that such circumstance cannot avail the defendants as an estoppel, because it was not specially pleaded in the answer, which contains only a plea of estoppel by silence and inaction. [1] It is well settled that the court will not notice grounds of estoppel not specially pleaded, but based on evidence received without objection. Thomas v. Blair, 111 La. 678, 35 South. 811; Heirs of Wood v. Nicholls, 33 La. Ann. 744; Bonnecaze v. Lieux, 52 La. Ann. 285, 26 South. 832.
The answer avers that the plaintiff stood by and allowed the property to be sold as that of his son. There is no averment that the plaintiff participated in the proceedings by the appointment of one of the appraisers.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment below be reversed, and it is now ordered that defendants’ plea of estoppel be overruled, and that this cause be remanded for decision on the merits and further proceedings according to law, defendants to pay all costs incurred by the pleá and costs of appeal.