22 La. Ann. 90 | La. | 1870
Upon the relator's application to this court, praying for a writ of mandamus directed to the judge of the Fourth District Court of New Orleans, requiring him to grant the relator a suspensive appeal from a judgment rendered against him in that court in a certain suit brought against the relator and others by one Henry Bizon, and also for a writ of prohibition, a rule nisi was granted, and the thirty-first of January fixed as the day on which the judge was required to •show cause why the writs should not be made peremptory.
The respondent gave as reasons for refusing a suspensive appeal, that more than ten days had elapsed after the judgment was signed before the relator applied for a suspensive appeal, and therefore that he was not entitled by law to take a suspensive appeal; that the judgment .complained of was not rendered by default, as stated by relator, but ■after trial, and contradictorily between the parties; that Bizon, tho
The relator, in his application for process from this court, sworn to in due form, declares that the judgment on which execution issued and by virtue of which his property was seized, was rendered by default, without any legal notice of the proceedings by which the judgment was obtained, and without ever having made any appearance in answer thereto; that no notice of the rendition of this judgment was ever served upon him; that, having been informed of the alleged seizure of his property by the sheriff, he applied to the judge of the Fourth District Court for an injunction, and that an injunction was refused.
From an examination of all the papers and documents before us, we are constrained to think that the rule should not be discharged, and that the relator should be allowed the appeal prayed for.
It is therefore ordered that the rule be made absolute, and that the judge of the Fourth District Court of New Orleans grant the relator a suspensive appeal, to be made returnable to this court, according to law.