Alfano v. Franek

105 So. 598, 159 La. 498, 1925 La. LEXIS 2268
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 13, 1925
DocketNo. 27039.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 105 So. 598 (Alfano v. Franek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfano v. Franek, 105 So. 598, 159 La. 498, 1925 La. LEXIS 2268 (La. 1925).

Opinions

THOMPSON, J.

The facts in this case are undisputed, and are established by documentary evidence.

At a judicial sale under executory process in foreclosure of a ranking conventional mortgage, the Interstate Trust & Banking-Company became the purchaser of a certain lot and improvements located at and forming the corner of Bourbon and St. Ann streets in this city. The adjudication was made on September 6, 1917, but the sheriff’s deed was not executed until February 4, 1919.

The mortgage foreclosed was executed by Joseph Franek on April 9, 1919, and was given to- secure a note for $3-,513, payable to the maker’s order, and indorsed by him in blank.

The maker of the note having- died, the seizure and sale proceedings were had against -his widow, who was appointed administratrix.

On June 26, 1919, the Interstate Trust & Banking Company sold the property to Edward P. Bernet.

On April 28, 1913, Gerlando Alfano obtained a judgment via ordinaria against Joseph Franek for $3,433, with a recognition of a mortgage on the same property, but which was subordinate to the mortgage held by the bank.

This judgment was regularly revived in favor of the widow and heirs of Gérlando Alfano.on June 7, 1923.

A writ of fi. fa. was issued on the judgment and a direct seizure was made of the mortgaged property, notwithstanding the fact that the sale to the bank under foreclosure proceedings and the sale by the bank to Bernet were extant upon the public records, and were valid and translative of property on their face.

Thereupon Bernet sued out an injunction, restraining the seizing creditor and the sheriff from proceeding with the sale of the property under the writ of fi. fa.

In answer to the injunction of Bernet, and in justification of the seizure under the fi. fa., the plaintiffs in execution attacked the sale to the bank as being null and void, for the reason that prior to the adjudication and sale the executory process sued out by the bank had been annulled and set aside by a judgment of the district court, and that an appeal had been prosecuted to the Supreme Court from that judgment; that the *501 judgment of the Supreme Court had not been returned to the lower court and filed and recorded in that court until after the sale; that hence the district court and the sheriff were without jurisdiction and authority to proceed with the executory proceedings.

The defense was rejected on a trial in the lower court, the injunction was perpetuated, and the seizing creditors were condemned to pay the plaintiff in injunction $150 attorney fees.

It appears that, when the bank applied for the order of seizure and sale, a litigation involving the validity and the rank of the mortgages on the property was pending in another division of the civil district court, and the application of the bank was transferred to that division, and was consolidated with the suit or suits therein pending.

A rule was taken on the bank to show cause why the executory process applied for 'by the bank should not be issued. The order of seizure and sale was issued, but, on a trial of the consolidated cases, the executory process of the bank was set aside, and it was from this judgment that the bank appealed to this court.

No appeal was ever prosecuted from the order of seizure and sale issued in favor of the bank, and no injunction was applied for to prevent further proceedings under such process.

On the appeal to this court, the judgment of the district court setting aside the order of seizure and sale of the bank was reversed, and the executory proceedings were reinstated and confirmed. That judgment became final on June 5, 1917. See Franek v. Brewster, 141 La. 1031, 76 So. 187.

While’ it may be true that the setting aside of the order of seizure and sale prevented further proceeding thereunder during the pendency of the appeal despite the fact that no appeal had been taken from the order of seizure and sale and no injunction arresting the same, still, after the judgment on appeal had become final, there was no legal impediment against proceeding with the executory process and the sale of the .property on September 6, 1917, unless it be, as contended by appellants, that the filing and recordation of the judgment of the Supreme Court was a condition precedent to such further proceedings with the executory process.

The Code of Practice, art. 619, provides that the judgment rendered on appeal cannot be executed until it has been recorded in the records of the inferior court which had cognizance of the cause.

And article 620 declares:

“This recording shall be directed to be made by the party wishing to make use of the judgment, * * and the clerks of the district courts shall have the power to receive, file and record, all mandates and decrees rendered by the Supreme Court, and to issue all legal process thereon.”

We hardly think that the requirement of the cited articles can be made to apply to such a case as we have here. There was ' nothing to be done under the judgment of the Supreme Court. There was no judgment of that court to be put into execution. The, executory process had been issued by the district court but later set aside. The Supreme Court annulled the revoking order of the district court, which left the original order of seizure' and sale in full force and effect.

The only thing left to be done was for the sheriff to proceed with the writ which was in his hands. In the case of Curtis v. Curtis, 4 La. 325, the court said:

“The enregistry [of the judgment] in the inferior tribunal is only necessary to obtain execution; but the decree derives no additional force from that formality, no more than placing an execution in the hands of the sheriff would add to the effect of a judgment of the district court. The obligations of the par-ties commenced from the moment the judgment becomes final; and any act done by them inconsistent with it, is contrary to these obligations, and can confer no right on them.”

*503 And in the case of State v. Judge, 33 La. Ann. 1387, this court said:

“The articles of the Code of Practice, 617 et seq., which declare that appellate courts must send their judgments to the inferior courts to be executed, and that such judgments cannot be executed unless recorded in the court which first had cognizance of the cause, refer, vi terminis, to judgments which order something to be' done, which requires execution, for the enforcement of which writs in the name of the state have to be issued, and not to judgments which, as in the instant case, are self-operative and admit of no carrying out by process of law.”

After quoting from the Curtis Case, supra, the court further said:

“This saying is the more remarkable, and cogent, as, at the date of the decision (1832). the Code of Practice expressly required (which it does no more since 1852, Ace. No. 305), a motion in open court to render executory the judgment of an appellate court.”

Counsel for appellants cite the case of State v. Williams Cypress Co., 132 La. 950, 61 So. 988, Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 598, 159 La. 498, 1925 La. LEXIS 2268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfano-v-franek-la-1925.