Wafer v. Pratt

1 Rob. 41 | La. | 1841

Morphy, J.

Plaintiff enjoined the execution of a writ of fieri facias under which the sheriff of the parish of Claiborne had seized and was proceeding to sell a negro man named Jim, as belonging- to Joel Wafer, against whom defendant had obtained a judgment; he alleges that for several years past he has had the actual and quiet possession of the boy, and that he is the legal and equitable owner of him. The defendant moved the court that plaintiff be ruled to prove the allegations in his petition, and upon failure thereof that the injunction he dissolved with damages. The sheriff pleaded the general issue, averring that he Seized the slave as the properly of Joel Wafer, who claimed him as owner twenty years ago, and has continued to own him ever since, though he permitted the plaintiff, his brother, at whose house he frequently lived, to have the services of the boy and of other property of his, but that plaintiff never claimed to own this slave until the institution of defendant’s suit against his brother, Joel Wafer, about one year ago. The judge below made the injunction perpetual, from which decree the defendants have appealed.

It appears to us from the testimony on record that the court erred. When the sheriff is in possession of property by virtue of a seizure under execution, he must he considered as a rightful possessor holding for the benefit of the plaintiff in the writ, until it be clearly *42shown that the property seized belongs to another person than the defendant from whom it may have been taken. The right of a third party to oppose an execution is limited to cases where he owns the property or has a privilege on it. When the former ground is assumed, the person making the opposition is in the position of a plaintiff in a petitory action ; he must make out a clear title, otherwise he must fail in his attempt to arrest the sale. Code of Pr., art. 396; 6 Martin, 268; 8 Martin, N. S., 661.

On the trial the plaintiff in injunction exhibited no title whatever to the slave in question ; on the contrary, the evidence by him adduced shows that as far back as 1819 or 1820 Joel Wafer brought this slave to Arkansas as owner, before the plaintiff himself went to that State. That since then the plaintiff and his brother, Joel Wafer, have almost constantly lived together either in Arkansas or in Louisiana, and particularly during the last ten or twelve years. The long possession then which plaintiff has shown cannot avail him, because he did not possess as owner, and his possession was not exclusive. If he had acquired any title to the slave from Joel Wafer, his other brother Thomas Wafer, and his brother-in-law who testified as to his possession, could have proved it, as they lived together for a number of years ; hut as no transfer to plaintiff is shown of whatever right or title Joel Wafer originally had to this slave when he took him to Arkansas, we are bound to believe that plaintiff did not possess him as owner, and could not therefore acquire title to him by prescription. Civ. Code, arts. 3399, 3409, 3476, 3439.

We have held that when a vendor and vendee live in the same house, possession follows title. 3 Martin, N. S., 337. The testimony moreover shows that the plaintiff began to claim to he the possessor of the slave as owner only since his return from'Arkansas in 1828; from which time the prescription provided for by art. 3439 has not taken place.

It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court be reversed ; and proceeding to give such judgment as should have been rendered below, it is adjudged that the injunction be dissolved, and that the plaintiff and appellee pay costs in both courts.

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