11 La. Ann. 302 | La. | 1856
Lead Opinion
Two questions of law are presented by this record:
1st. Whether a judgment of nonsuit (the plaintiff being called and not appearing) in an injunction suit forfeits the injunction bond?
2d. Whether a party who enjoins an execution on the ground of ownership in himself of the property which has been seized, and who, pending the injunction suit, makes n notarial conveyance of the same property to a third person, can he allowed to call such third party in warranty? The first of these questions was decided in the ease of Penniman v. Richardson, 3 L. R. 103, when Judge Porter said: “The plaintiff in the suit voluntary abandoned it, and by so doing became, with his surety, responsible for all damages which the plaintiff in execution sustained,” etc.
The second question is no less clear. The warranty contended for by defendants, belongs to neither of the kinds mentioned in Article 379 of the Code of Practice. Neither does the conveyance in question contain any such stipulation of warranty. Indeed, as the Judge below remarks, it is quite a reversal of the ordinary course of things, to suppose a warranty of the vendee towards the vendor. The facts, as disclosed by the evidence, are that the defendant, Tulane, having a judgment against one Conner, seized Conner's household furniture in 1842, under a fieri facias, and hid the same off at Sheriff's sale, through a friend, whose evidence is in the record. The property was left in Conner's possession after this sale, and so remained to the year 1847, five years afterwards, when it was again seized by the present plaintiff in execution of a judgment against Conner.
Tulane, who had never exercised any ownership or control since his apparent purchase, then came forward and enjoined plaintiff’s execution, claiming the pro-property. Pending the injunction suit Tulane made a conveyance to Robert R. Barrow of his interest in the property seized, for the consideration of Barrow's
These facts make out a case against the defendants of damages to the full extent of the injunction bond signed by them. .The legal presumption arising from this continued possession in Conner is that', the purchase of Conner’s property by Tulane at Sheriff’s sale was a simulation. The anomalous sale, pending the injunction suit, to Barrow, (who is shown by the record to have claimed other property seized at the same time with this furniture, and under the same execution,) coupled with the equally anomalous call in warranty of Barrow by his vendor, are facts which corroborate this legal presumption.
Perhaps it is even unnecessary to advert to these circumstances, inasmuch as the voluntary abandonment of the injunction suit, in the language of the case cited, has fixed the responsibility of the principal and surety in the injunction bond. We allow interest from the date of the judicial demand.
It is, therefore, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court, as between plaintiff and defendants, be reversed; that plaintiff recover of Paul Tulane and C. Morel Guiramand, in solido, eight hundred dollars, with legal interest from the 16th February, 1853, until paid, and costs in both courts; and that, as between the defendants and the warrantor, Robert R. Barrow, the judgment dismissing the call in warranty be affirmed.
Rehearing
ON A REHEARING.
On an application for a rehearing the court rendered the following judgment:
The suggestion in the petition for rehearing, that the appellant’s brief was filed more than two days after the cause was fixed for trial, comes too late. Parties are bound to take notice of the fixing of causes for trial; and the appellee should have appeared in court, when the cause'was called for argument, and moved for a continuance, if he were entitled under the rule of court to do so.
Rehearing refused.