Andrus v. Treasurer of the State

4 La. 403
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 La. 403 (Andrus v. Treasurer of the State) 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
Andrus v. Treasurer of the State, 4 La. 403 (La. 1832).

Opinion

Mathews, J.:

In this case the plaintiffs obtained an injunction to stay proceedings on an execution issued by the defendant against [407]*407them and one Haw, who acted as sheriff for the parish of St. . * Landry, and m his capacity as such, was bound to collect the taxes of the state, assessed in said parish for the year 1827; and for the faithful performance of his duties, the plaintiffs were his sureties. The injunction was dissolved by a decree of the court below, and they appealed.

The sureties acquire no lien or .mortgage on his real property in consebond! whether it be not. had ^&prívilege or mortproperty1of its cer^during'the Yeafs 18§®-7’ or from the adoption of the; Lou. Code, in 1825, until the passage of tlie act of — 1830.

[407]*407The decision of the case is now reduced to a single question, and that is, whether the appellants áre discharged from their liability to the state, in consequence of an act passed by the legislature, and approved on the fifth of December, 1828, by which the execution, issued against the sheriff and his sureties to enforce the payment of the taxes of 1827, was suspended.

It appears by the evidence of the case, that two executions were placed at the same time in the hands of the sheriff (successor in office of Haw), one for the taxes of 1826, and the other for the taxes of 1827. The state had no sureties of the sheriff to secure the payment of the- taxes for the first year; in relation to those due, the plaintiffs were in no manner interested. Finding that their property was in danger of being sold under the execution of 1827, they made an application, by. petition, to the legislature, to suspend that process. This petition is lost, and consequently it is impossible now to ascertain with precision what was prayed for.

The most important evidence adduced to establish the prayer of that instrument consists of a letter of L. Lesassiér, addressed to John Moore, then a member of the legislature, ° and the testimony of the latter. Lesassier states explicitly, in his letter, that the object of the petition was to get a year for the collection of the taxes, and obtain time for the sale of the real property and slaves belonging to the sheriff, under the supposition that the sureties of Haw had some lien or tacit mortgage on the real estate of their principal, in consequence of the bond. I am of opinion that they had no such lien, The property of the sheriff being equally liable to be seized to pay the taxes of 1826, as those of 1827; and at that time * J 7 7 idle state itself had no privilege or lien on the property of its [408]*408collecting officers. The petition of the sureties being lost, the whole requests contained in it cannot be known. It ought, however, to be presumed that they were reasonable, and such as had relation to the matters in which the petitioners were really interested. Their interest was involved in the collection of and payment of the taxes of 1827. In relation to those of 1826 they were not in any manner bound; consequently, could not justly interfere with the policy of the state, as to the means which the treasurer might be pursuing to effect the payment of the taxes of that year.

Where the state suspends its execution against its debtor, and gives further time to collect and pay over the taxes for which the debtor is a defaulter, at the instance of the sureties, they cannot claim to be exonerated on the ground of prolongation of time to the principal debt- or.

Moore, in his testimony, states, that the first and fourth sections of the act of the legislature conform to the request of the petitioners.

The law contains only four sections, and the two intermediate ones appear to me to relate to a subject in which the plaintiffs were very remotely, if at all interested. But these sections seem to conform to the views of the appellants, if we ascertain them from Lesassier’s letter, which, in the absence of the petition, is certainly testimony in this regard not to be relied on. They wished Haw’s real estate and slaves to be sold on a credit of one and two years, and these terms are granted by the act. The sales to be made under the execution for the taxes of 1826, and to be made by the sheriff.

It seems to me that it would have been very unreasonable in the plaintiffs to have asked the state to give up to them, as sureties for the taxes of 1827 (and for them alone), the property of the sheriff, seized to pay the taxes of the preceding year, for which the government had no security; and being unreasonable, I presume it was not requested.

I conclude, from the facts of the case, as they appear to me, that the execution against Haw, the sheriff, was suspended at the instance of the appellants, and consequently, they have no right to invoke in their favor, the benefit accorded by law to’ sureties, when a creditor extends the time of payment to the principal debtor.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the judgement of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.

[409]*409, _ Martin, J.:

This cause was argued at the last term, while indisposition prevented my attendance. There was a division of opinion betweenthe two judges who attended, on one question only, i. e. whether the sureties were discharged by the state ordering the suspension of the execution which the treasurer had issued against the principal debtor? And this is the only question on which the case turns.

I have read the opinion which the senior judge is about to deliver, and concur with him in every part of it.

I deem it, however, proper to add that in my opinion the act of the general assembly suspending the sale of the original debtor’s property, was not an extension of the time of pay. ment. It was only a forbearance to enforce payment by legal means, without any agreement on the part of the state, to use all these means, during any particular period.

The general assembly might have on the following day ordered, or the very day of the passage of the act, have repealed it, and the sureties by payment into the treasury could at any time have acquired the right of directing the execution to be proceeded on.

The suspension was during the pleasure of the state, and the sureties, by payment to the treasurer, could have at any time of right ipso facto been subrogated to all the rights of the state as to the means of enforcing payment. The suspension was during the pleasure of the creditor, i. e. the creditor for the time being. Payment would have made the sureties creditors for the time being, and they might, therefore, have put an end immediately to the suspension.

This suspension did not impair the rights to the subrogation of which payment would have entitled them. It did not place them in a worse situation or inflict an injury on them, and, therefore, did not discharge them.

I think the injunction ought to be dissolved.

[410]*410Portee, J.:

The plaintiffs were sureties of one Haw, who was sheriff of the parish of St. Landry, and they have enjoined an execution which the defendant issued against them as such, for the balance due by the principal to the state, in his official capacity.

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Related

State ex. rel. Mouton v. Guilbeau
37 La. Ann. 718 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
4 La. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrus-v-treasurer-of-the-state-la-1832.