2 La. 422 | La. | 1831
delivered the opinion of the court:
This suit is brought to recover certain rights and credits which were attached by the defendant as the property of one Joshua Cox, and on which attachment a judgment was obtained, and execution subsequently issued and was levied on the attached property. The plaintiff claims these rights and credits by transfer from Banks & Kincaid, made by and with the consent of Joshua Cox, the owner. There was judgment in the District Court for the defendant, from which, the plaintiff appealed.
The material facts of the case, as gathered from the testimony and documents, are the following: In the year 1826,.
Objections are made in the present case to the regularity and legality of the proceedings in the attachment, which, if it' were by appeal, or in any other legal shape now before this court, would perhaps be entitled to great weight.
The judgment therein rendered must be considered as res judicata between the parties, and as having settled all disputes between them in relation to the property attached, however irregular the proceeding may have been. All defects in the- commencement and prosecution of that suit, must be viewed as cured by the final judgment, in relation to all parties who had no complete and vested rights in the property attached, at the time of rendering it. The only question in the present case, as it appears to us, relates to the ownership of the plaintiff in the rights and credits of Joseph Cox, at the period when they were attached by the defendant. If a property in them, full and complete according to
It has been long a settled doctrine of our jurisprudence that tradition, and not the naked consent of parties transfers the dominion of property. It is- true that, in relation to the transfer of rights and credits, which are incorpo- °. 1 real, no actual delivery can take place. But our law, as . .... . . an equivalent for real tradition, requires certain formalities to be performed, in order that the transfer may affect third persons: such as a delivery of the title or evidence of the r J debt, and giving notice to the debtor,. &c. (See La. Code, art 2612 & 2613.) In this case it does not appear that any of these formalities were fulfilled by the plaintiff until long after the judgment whs obtained by the defendant on his attachment. The former has not succeeded' to shew that he was legal proprietor of the effects attached, previous to the judgment which subjected them to the claim of the latter under his judgment obtained against Joseph Cox, the original owner. 1
A question* was raised, and slightly commented.on during the argument of this cause, as to those who should be con- ® t sidered third persons according to the articles of the Code above cited. The counsel*seemed to think that these expressions should be limited to subsequent transferees alone. It seems, however, to be in accordance with the spirit of our laws to hold the property of debtors always liable to- their creditors until a full and complete transfer and tradition of it is made to bona fide purchasers; and in conformity to this spirit, the decisions of our courts have uniformly been, whenever the truth could be discovered. On this subject we have a very strong expression in our Code; which considers the property of a debtor as- holden in pledge for his creditors.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed; that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed with costs.