American National Bank v. Owens

8 La. App. 578, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 188
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1928
DocketNo. 3052
StatusPublished

This text of 8 La. App. 578 (American National Bank v. Owens) 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
American National Bank v. Owens, 8 La. App. 578, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 188 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

The plaintiff bank brought suit against S. H. Owens to recover certain amounts alleged to be due on promissory notes.

Alleging that the defendant, Owens, was then a non-resident of the state and that Pegues & Pegues, attorneys, domiciled in DeSoto parish, we.re indebted unto the defendant or had money in their possession belonging to him, plaintiff procured the issuance of -a writ of attachment and had seized in the hands of said Pegues & Pegues whatever property or funds they had in their hands or under their control belonging to the defendant.

In answer to interrogatories propounded to them as garnishees Pegues & Pegues answered that at the time the service of the interrogatories was made on them they had $200.00

“* * * which we originally collected for the defendant in this suit (evidently referring to another suit) but prior to the time that we collected this money, the defendant instructed us to pay the amount that we collected out of the claim that we had for him against the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, over to the Alexandria Construction Company of Alexandria, La., as we understood that they had a chattel mortgage on the mules that the claim grew out of. About the time that we collected this money as aforesaid, the defendant instructed us to hold same until the Alexandria Construction Company convinced us that he was indebted unto them to the extent of $200.00. We have been waiting for the Alexandria Construction Company and the defendant to adjust their differences before paying the money over to the Alexandria Construction Company.”

These answers were filed by the gar'nishees on February 14, 1927.

On April 13, 1927, the Alexandria Construction Company intervened in said suit by way of third opponent, alleging that said sum of money now in the hands of the garnishees

“* * * was received by the said Pegues & Pegues from the Texas & Pacific Railway Company as payment and settlement by said Railway Company of its liability to S. H. Owens growing out of the death of certain livestock owned by said S. H. Owens in an accident on the right of way of said railroad in the parish of Red River, Louisiana.
“That at the time of the killing of said livestock the said S. H. Owens was in■debted unto your appearer, and as security therefor your appearer held a chattel mortgage against said livestock in the sum of one thousand ($1000.00) dollars.”

It is further alleged that said Owens employed the law firm of Pegues & Pegues to represent him in the collection of said claim against said Railway Company for killing said livestock

“* * * and that during the pendency of said claim, and prior to the service of the writ of garnishment herein, a verbal contract was entered into between the said S. H. Owens and your appearer, represented by C. E. Ransbqttom, its president, by the terms of which the said Owens assigned and set over unto your petitioner as part payment of, and to be credited on the amount due by the said Owens to your petitioner, all of the sums of money that might be collected by the said Pegues & Pegues from the said Texas & Pacific Railway Company; and that at said time notice of the assignment and transfer of said sums was given to and accepted by said Pegues & Pegues, and said Pegues & Pegues then and there consented to be bound by said contract.
“Your petitioner shows that subsequent to the time of said transfer your petitioner requested the said Pegues & Pegues to pay over to it the proceeds held by said firm of the claim collected by it from the Texas & Pacific Railway Company Under the claim above referred to, but that the said Pegues & Pegues refused to do so, for the reason that the said S. H. Ownes had previously notified the said firm to withhold [580]*580payment of the same to your appearer, as set up in the answers to the interrogatories by said Pegues & Pegues.”

Intervenor prays for judgment against the defendant Owens

“* * * that under and by virtue of the transfer and assignment to your appearer, as above set forth, your appearer is entitled to be paid the amount in the hands of said Pegues & Pegues in preference to the plaintiff herein.”

The plaintiff filed an exception of no cause of action to intervenor’s petition, which was sustained, and intervenor prosecutes this appeal.

OPINION

This case comes up on the pleadings alone, and the only question presented is this:

Do the allegations of intervenor’s petiiton show that it had clear title to the money seized in the hands of Pegues & Pegues, attorneys?

If the money in the hands of the attorneys was the property of Owens, it was subject to attachment by his creditors.

The plaintiff bank attached it as his property. Its attachment conferred upon it a privilege on the property and its claim must prevail, unless intervenor can show that the money, when attached, belonged to it and not to Owens, the defendant.

It therefore follows that unless the allegations of intervenor’s petition, which are taken for true, show that said money belonged to it, and not to Owens, no cause of action is shown.

Intervenolr’s petition shows that its debtor, Owens, had a claim against the Texas & Pacific Railway Company for stock killed and that he placed this claim in the hands of Pegues & Pegues, attorneys, for collection. Intervenor does not allege that the claim was transferred or assigned to it but, on the contrary, alleges that during the “pendency of the claim,” that is, while it was in the hands of the attorneys for collectoin, a verbal contract was entered into between it and said Owens

“* * * by the terms of which said Owens assigned and set over to your petitioner as part payment of, and to be credited on the amount due by the said Owens to your petitioner, all of the sum$ of money that might he collected hy said Pegues & Pegues from the said Texas <6 Pacific Railway Company.” (Italics, ours.)

It is clear from intervenor’s allegations that what Owens owned at the time of the alleged transfer, was the claim against the Railway Company. That was property which could have been validly transferred by Owens to intervenor and its title thereto would have been complete if and when due notice of the transfer was given to the Railway Company.

If the claim itself had been transferred to intervenor, it would have owned the proceeds when collected. Not having acquired title to the claim against the Railway Company, intervenor acquired no title to the proceeds.

When Owens placed the claim in the hands of Pegues & Pegues, attorneys, for collection, they became the agents of Owens for the collection thereof, and the acts of the attorneys were the acts of Owens. The attorneys were never the agents of intervenor, but acted all through for Owens. When they collected the claim, they collected for Owens, and the proceeds went into their hands as the property of Owens.

Now, the question is,, did the agreement between Owens and the intervenor to the effect that the attorneys should pay to intervenor

[581]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilson & Co. v. Lizardi
15 La. 255 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1840)
Branch Bank of Alabama v. Kraft
18 La. 565 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1841)
Livaudais v. Livaudais
3 La. Ann. 454 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1848)
Robertson v. Scales
15 La. Ann. 545 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1860)
Hickman v. Thompson
26 La. Ann. 260 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1874)
Boubede v. Aymes
29 La. Ann. 274 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 578, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-national-bank-v-owens-lactapp-1928.