33 La. Ann. 973 | La. | 1881
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In execution of a judgment in favor of plaintiff, all the property belonging to the Delta Moss Company, an insolvent corporation, was sold and realized the sum of $ 1465.
Plaintiff’s claim to be paid from said proceeds the full amount of his judgment of $156 is resisted by Augustus Reichard, another judgment
A. Mereier, the owner of the land on which the defendant’s factory had been erected and on which the property seized was situated, also intervened, and set up the lessor’s privilege for an unpaid balance of rent ■of $75.
The judgment of the lower court distributed the proceeds as follows:
1st. Allowing to A. Mereier, under the lessor’s privilege, seventy-five ■dollars.
2d. Allowing to plaintiff the sum of sixty-eight dollars, realized by property seized under his writ only, and hot covered by Reichard’s ■seizure.
3d. Allowing the balance to Augustus Eeichard under his judgment -and pledge.
Plaintiff appeals and urges the reversal of the judgment on several .grounds, which we shall consider seriatim:
1st. He relies on his judgment, which recognized his privilege on the defendant’s property for the unpaid balance of his wages as clerk in the ■employ of the company, and contends that this judgment concludes all parties. The authorities which he quotes in support of this position, contain nothing more than the recognition of a familiar principle, under which such a judgment in the case of a concursus, is prima facie evidence in favor of the party holding it, and throws the burden of proof on the party contesting the validity and binding force of the judgment.
The privilege claimed by plaintiff, when tested by his own admission and by an extract from defendant’s books, cannot be recognized by us, and was properly enjoined by the District Judge.
We find from that evidence that plaintiff was employed by defendant as a salesman, or agent to solicit sales of its moss, and that his compensation was a monthly salary of fifty dollars, and a commission on all ■sales effected by him, and that he was not a clerk within the meaning of ■the law, which secures by privilege the payment of the wages of that class of employees.
It follows, therefore, that the presumption of a privilege in his favor, as clerk, flowing from his judgment, is fully met and overcome by the evidence, and that he had no privileges as such on defendant’s property.
He urges in the second place that Eeichard had no privilege under the pledge which he set up, for want of delivery to him of the things -.pledged, as required by Art. 3162 of our Code.
It further appears that subsequently, this trustee having abandoned his position, the President and Reichard, - after making a second list of the things pledged, selected another party, as the keeper or custodian of the property, and that the possession of the latter continued until the seizure of the property by the sheriff. Under the provision of Art. 3162, which allows the possession of the pledgeerto be vested in a third person, agreed upon by the parties, we find that these transactions show such a possession in the pledgee as the law requires, even under a vigorous construction of its provisions.
The objection that the two custodians of the property pledged were employees of the company, has no force, and cannot destroy the effect of the delivery made to Reichard.
By its own act the company had lost the custody and control of its property, and any attempt on its part to dispose of the property thus pledged, to the prejudice of the act of pledge, could have been successfully and legally resisted by Reichard, the pledgee. Conger, Executor, vs. City of New Orleans, 32 An. 1250.
The pledge of Reichard was, therefore, properly recognized and enforced by the lower court.
We find no error in the judgment appealed from, and itis, therefore, affirmed with costs.