23 La. Ann. 489 | La. | 1871
The defendants are sued for $2000 as damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiffs from the illegal seizure and sale under execution by defendants of the property of the" plaintiffs. The answer is a general denial. Plaintiffs had judgment for $1000, and defendants have appealed.
It is in proof that after the seizure was made the sheriff was distinctly informed by Benner, one of the plaintiffs, that the property seized did not belong to Hughes, but to himself and Ranlett.
The defendants show that the contents of the drug store were under the control of Hughes, who held himself out to the world as the owner; that he kept the establishment, made sale of the drugs, and was considered the owner. They contend that the plaintiffs’ claim as owners is simulated, and set up to screen the property of Hughes from the pursuit of his creditors.
It appears from the evidence that in the latter part of the year 1805, and in the early part of I860 this apothecary establishment belonged to a Dr. Hynes, who, during the time lie kept it, had Hughes employed as a clerk; that Hynes sold the establishment to Ranlett, at the price of $1700, the estimated value of the entire stock, as appears by the receipt of I-Iynes, dated seventeenth March, 1866. An instrument is in evidence dated eleventh of March, J866, and signed by Ranlett and Hughes, the purport of which is that they were to carry on the drug and apothecary business in the city of Jefferson; that the business was to he carried on in the name of B. F. Hughes, who was to keep the accounts and render a full statement of affairs at the end of each month and pay over to Ranlett such sum of money as might be on hand after deducting the expenses of carrying on the business. Ranlott was to buy the stock in trade of Hynes, the profits and losses to he equally divided.
The seizure was made on the ninth of August, 1867. On the nineteenth of June previous an estimative inventory of the stock of drugs on hand was made and, as stated, the value of the drugs was set down according to wholesale prices, the aggregate amount being $1103. Hughes testifies that between the time of making the inventory and tlie seizure there was sold an amount between fifty and one hundred dollars. The sheriff’s inventory and estimate seem to have been made carelessly, and the drugs set down at about what the appraisers judged they would he likely to bring at an auction sale.
The fact that the plaintiffs permitted Hughes to bold himself out to the world as the owner of the establishment would, according to well established principles, involve a responsibility to persons giving Mm credit on the faith of the pretended ownership. Still, under the facts shown in this case, we think no liability results against them. The
The evidence, we think, sufficiently shows that the plaintiffs were the owners of the property sold. Hughes was destitute of means. That Ranlett paid the whole price of the stock purchased from Dr. Hynes, there can be no doubt. The statements of Ranlett and Hughes, in connection with the receipt of Hynes, make this clear, and the tenor of ■ the contract between Ranlett and Hughes corroborates their statements under cath as to the ownership of the stock in trade. If Hughes were to participate in tlio profits, it does not follow that there was a community of interest in the property itself. The contrary, wo think, is established.
In estimating the value of the plaintiffs’ property sold, we are inclined to adopt tlio opinion of the judge a quo, who assumed the valuation made shortly before the seizure as more reliable than the evidently vague appraisement made at the time of the sale. Deducting one hundred dollars, the amount sold after the first appraisement or valuation, irorn §1100, ho gave judgment for $1000, and we think correctly.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs
Rehearing- refused.