American National Bank v. Childs

22 So. 384, 49 La. Ann. 1359, 1897 La. LEXIS 453
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 31, 1897
DocketNo. 12,470
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 So. 384 (American National Bank v. Childs) 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
American National Bank v. Childs, 22 So. 384, 49 La. Ann. 1359, 1897 La. LEXIS 453 (La. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

This case is before us on appeal from a judgment making absolute a rule by a sheriff to tax as oosts the sum of twelve thousand one hundred and twenty three dollars and eighteen cents, alleged to be the balance due him on account of his administration and cultivation of a sugar plantation in the year 1894.

The facts are these:

On February 8, 1894, the American National Bank instituted suit against Henry A. Ohilds for the sum of five thousand dollars, and, invoking the conservatory writ of attachment, caused the sheriff of St. Mary parish to seize thereunder the Susie ” plantation, belonging to defendant. When the seizure took place, operations for the planting and cultivation of the crop of 1894 had already begun. [1360]*1360Some of the cane had been planted and the ground was prepared for the remainder. Several other attachment suits by other creditors of Childs quickly followed, under all of which the property was levied on.

The defendant failed to exercise the privilege of having the property attached released on bond, or was unable to do so.

The sheriff, deeming himself under obligation to continue the cultivation of the plantation, appears to have applied to the first attaching creditor, the American National Bank, for funds and advances to do so. The bank declined to make the advances and also refused to authorize the sheriff to cultivate the place for its account or at its expense.

Whereupon the sheriff applied to the court and obtained an ex parte order authorizing him to secure the necessary advances to cultivate the place, not exceeding one thousand dollars per month.

Two months later, finding that the one thousand dollars per month authorization was not sufficient, the sheriff applied to' the court for an increase of the same, and obtained a second ex parte order, authorizing him to secure advances not exceeding fifteen hundred dollars per month. He obtained these advances from a mercantile firm in New Orleans, and went ahead with the planting operations, retaining the services of the overseer employed by defendant at the time of the seizure.

In July following, the defendant, Childs, appeared in the case and ruled the attaching creditors to show cause why the sheriff should not be authorized to purchase a lot of new machinery alleged to be necessary to the plantation and to the taking off of the crop, including twenty-five sugar wagons.

The rule was tried and made absolute, limiting the sheriff's expenditure for the outfit to four thousand five hundred dollars.

Counsel for the American National Bank reserved a bill of exceptions to this ruling of the judge, properly treating it as an interlocutory order. 40 An. 121, 856.

The sheriff purchased the new machinery, apparatus, etc., at a cost of four thousand four hundred and fifty-three dollars and eighty-four cents, and caused the same to be put up on the plantation, thus placing the sugar house in thorough repair.

As the grinding season approached the sheriff realized the plantation would require ten thousand barrels of coal as fuel in the taking [1361]*1361off the crop and manufacturing the cane into sugar and molasses. Accordingly, in October, he obtained another ex parte order authorizing him to purchase that quantity of coal at a cost not exceeding five thousand dollars. The coal was purchased at an expense of four thousand four hundred and seventy-seven dollars and forty cents.

The crop was taken off, prepared for market and sold, and' then the plantation account was cast up. It showed that, including advances, the purchase and repair of machinery, the purchase of coal and the sheriff’s commissions, the outlay had been thirty-one thousand three hundred and fifteen dollars and eighty-seven cents, and that the receipts, being the aggregate net amount realized from the sale of the sugar and molasses, were nineteen thousand one hundred and ninety-two dollars and sixty-nine cents, leaving a balance against the plantation of twelve thousand one hundred and twenty-three dollars and eighteen cents. In other words, the sheriff’s venture at sugar planting had resulted in a net loss of that sum. Whereupon, in July, 1895, the sheriff ruled the plaintiff and defendant to show cause why the said sum, being balance due him, should not be taxed as costs. On trial the rule, with some reductions in the account, was made absolute — the judgment of the court fixing the amount of the balance due the sheriff at ten thousand four hundred and thirty-eight, dollars and eighty-six cents, and taxing the same as costs of suit.

The defendant had not contested the claim at all. A vigorous defence was made by the plaintiff, and from the judgment rendered as aforesaid it prosecutes this appeal.

There was much delay in this litigation, and it was not until July 31, 1895, that the original suit was decided on its merits. There was judgment in favor of the bank for tlm amount of its claim and sustaining its attachment. From this judgment no appeal was taken.

It seems that about this time, or shortly after, creditors with conventional mortgages, priming the bank’s privilege as attaching creditor, brought suit, via exeeutiva, in foreclosure of their mortgages,, and under such foreclosure the plantation was sold.

It appears that neither the sheriff nor any one else required a. separate appraisement and sale of the machinery, cane, wagons, etc., purchased and put upon the place by the sheriff. All was sold under the mortgages as part of the mortgaged property.

No effort was made by the sheriff to realize his claim, or' any part. [1362]*1362thereof, for balance due him on account of his administration and cultivation of the plantation out of the proceeds of its sale under the mortgages aforesaid.

He pursues only the American National Bank, and if this judgment on the rule to tax costs is sustained, the bank is the only loser. While the judgment is against the defendant as well as the bank, its practical effect will be to mulct the bank for the unpaid expenses of the cultivation of this plantation and the taking off of the crop.

To charge the attaching creditor for the expenses of this administration and cultivation, it must be shown either (1) that such administration and cultivation was had by authority of law, or (2) by mandate of the creditor.

So far as the latter is conoerned, it may be at once dismissed from consideration. The testimony in the record negatives the idea that the sheriff cultivated the plantation by the direction or with the consent or approval of the creditor.

Thus, the question is broadly and squarely presented whether or not a sheriff, bolding a plantation under seizure by writ of attachment can without the consent of the plaintiff in attachment proceed with its cultivation at the expense and risk of plaintiff, and the planting venture proving a failure and loss ensuing, recover the amount of such loss from the plaintiff as costs of suit.

The inquiry involves a consideration of the duties and responsibilities, under the law, of a sheriff in such cases — duties and responsibilities relative to the property of which he becomes custodian by seizure under the writ. t

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 384, 49 La. Ann. 1359, 1897 La. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-national-bank-v-childs-la-1897.