Alliance Trust Co. v. Paggi-Streater Co.

155 So. 413, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 783
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1934
DocketNo. 1343.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 So. 413 (Alliance Trust Co. v. Paggi-Streater Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alliance Trust Co. v. Paggi-Streater Co., 155 So. 413, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 783 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit originally against the Paggi-Streater Company, Inc., Charles Paggi, John B. Streater, and Winfield S. Streater, seeking to recover judgment against them each, in solido, in the full sum of $10,783.64. Charles Paggi and John B. Streater were not cited, however, and in the jhdgment that was subsequently rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the other two defendants, in solido, such rights as plaintiff had against the two that were not cited were, specially reserved. On appeal to the Supreme Court, this judgment was amended by reducing the amount awarded and by disallowing certain attorney’s fees that had been demanded on unmatured notes. 173 La. 356, 137 So. 60. •

The defendant, Paggi-Streater Company, Inc., owned some 900 acres of land and about 45 head of cattle which ranged on that property situated in Cameron parish.

Winfield S. Streater was the general manager of Paggi-Streater Company, Inc. Claiming that he was a creditor of the corporation for a larger amount, he took the remnant of the herd of cattle for $1,000 on account of the sum he claimed was due him, and gave the corporation credit for that amount on its books. He thereafter organized the Streater Investment Corporation and sold all of his property, including the herd of cattle, to that corporation, taking stock in payment thereof.

On April 21, 1933, plaintiff herein filed a *414 suit docketed, under No. 17118 of the district court, in wliicli one of the objects sought was to have the sale of the cattle declared fictitious and simulated, and, in the alternative, fraudulent, null, and void. Such is one of the specific demands for relief in the plaintiff's prayer, according to the certified copy of the petition, in that suit which forms part of this record. In that petition Paggi-Streater Company, Inc., Streater Investment Corporation, and Winfield S. Streater are made parties defendant, and judgment is prayed for against them.

While suit No. 17118 was pending on the docket of the district court, and before issue had been joined, plaintiff, in execution of its judgment in the present suit, had the herd of cattle seized as being the property of Paggi-Streater Company, Inc., one of its judgment debtors. The cattle in the meantime had been removed from Cameron to Jefferson Davis parish by Streater Investment Corporation, and were ranging in a pasture belonging to W. M. Buchanan, a friend of Winfield S. Streater. After the cattle had been seized, Streater Investment Corporation, acting through Win-field S. Streater, and availing itself of the provisions of Act No. 37 of 1882, made an affidavit that it was the bona fide owner of the cattle and demanded of the plaintiff the indemnity bond provided for under that statute.

On, June 14, 1033, almost two months after it had filed suit No. 17118, plaintiff filed a petition in the present suit in which it alleged that the affidavit made by Streater Investment Corporation with regard to the ownership of the cattle was untrue and false to the knowledge of Winfield S. Streater and the Streater Investment Corporation, and further alleged that they belonged to Paggi-Streater Company, Inc., its judgment debtor. Plaintiff prayed that a rule issue against both Streater Investment Corporation and Winfield S. Streater, ordering them to show cause why it should not traverse the affidavit of ownership of said cattle and the same be quashed, and that they bo enjoined and prohibited from further interfering with the execution of the judgment herein against Paggi-Streater Company, Inc. The district judge granted the prayer for the rule to show cause, and made the same returnable two days thereafter. On the return day, Streater Investment Corporation and Winfield S. Streater filed exceptions of lis pendens and of no right or cause of action to plaintiff’s petition. After hearing these exceptions, the trial judge rendered judgment overruling them both, whereupon the defendants in rule answered to the merits, and the issue of ownership of cattle was placed squarely before the court. As an alternative, they filed a plea of prescription of one year to plaintiff’s demand to set aside or have annulled and disregard the purchase of the cattle. As a result of the trial of the rule on the merits, the court at first rendered judgment in favor of the defendants recalling and dismissing plaintiff’s rule, reserving to it the right to prosecute the revocatory action then pending in suit No. 17118, but on rehearing changed its opinion and gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff revoking and setting aside the sale of the cattle as having been made in fraud of creditors. The defendants have appealed, and urge as one of the serious errors on the part of the trial judge his ruling on the exception of lis pendens.

The exception, of course, is based on article 94 of the Code of Practicó, as amended by Act No. 62 of 1918. As amended, the article mentioned now reads: “The same cause cannot be brought before the same or separate courts, though they be possessed of concurrent jurisdiction, except by discontinuing the suit first brought before the answer is filed. The judge before whom the action is first brought shall sustain his jurisdiction, and the defendant shall be entitled to have the cause dismissed in the other suit or by the other c'ourt, and to recover costs. Nevertheless, if the defendant, instead of claiming to be dismissed, should answer in the actions so brought against him, the judgment first rendered shall be valid and executory. Proceedings shall be stayed in the other suit or in the other court, as the case may be, and the plaintiff dismissed after paying the costs.”

Here, the two alleged causes of action are brought before the same court, which makes no difference as far as subjecting one of them ■to the exception of lis pendens is concerned, since the passage of Act No. 62 of 1918. Here, also, the defendants protected their rights by filing the exception in limine, and filed no answer in éither proceeding instituted against them until their exceptions had been overruled.

The learned judge a quo, in assigning reasons for overruling the exception of lis pendens, says that the parties to the two proceedings before the court were not the same, as Paggi-Streater Company, Inc., is not a party to suit No. 17118. We do not understand in what sense it is meant that that corporation is not a party in that proceeding, as it is specifically designated by name as such, citation is prayed for on it, and certain relief is prayed for as a judgment against it. True, *415 tliere is no specific allegation or demand made against that corporation with regard to the sale of the cattle involved in both proceedings, but we fall to understand what difference that can make with respect to that part of the cause of action between plaintiff and the other defendants, which is the same in both suits. It will not suffice, therefore, to dismiss the exception on the general statement that Paggi-Streater Investment Corporation is not a party in suit No. 17118, when in truth and in fact it is a defendant therein specifically named, and citation and judgment are prayed for against it.

Whilst there are several demands embodied in suit No. 17118, it is certain that one of the definite issues involved is the ownership of the cattle that were seized in this proceeding as being the property of Paggi-Streater Company, Inc., and which is the very issue raised' by the rule to show cause.

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Bluebook (online)
155 So. 413, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alliance-trust-co-v-paggi-streater-co-lactapp-1934.