Antoine v. Hamilton

144 So. 614
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1932
DocketNo. 1055.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 144 So. 614 (Antoine v. Hamilton) 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
Antoine v. Hamilton, 144 So. 614 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

The plaintiff, Myra Dillon Antoine, alleges that on or about January 31, 1931, D. M. Hamilton forcibly and by threats and ' violence set upon and took away from James Dillon, Smith Stewart, and Willie Perkins a mule belonging to her, and unlawfully and without her consent keeps and detains the mule from her. She claims of said Hamilton the value of the mule, alleged to be worth $85, and $1,000 on account of the unlawful taking and conversion.

The defendant admits taking, but denies that plaintiff is the owner of the mule. He avers that the mule belongs to him and that he had a right to take it, and denies the violence and threats alleged to have been used.

The case was tried by a jury, and the verdict of the jury was in favor of the defendant, rejecting plaintiff’s demand. The verdict was approved by and made the judgment of the court. Plaintiff has appealed.

Defendant-appellee moves to dismiss the appeal on the ground that plaintiff-appellant has failed and neglected to file a devolu-tive appeal bond in accordance with the order for appeal granted by the court, but in lieu thereof simply filed in the court a cashier’s check for $100, the amount fixed by the court for a devolutive appeal. Appel-lee’s motion to dismiss was filed on September 23, 1932. When this court convened on October 3, 1932, appellee, “with full reservation of all rights under his motion filed an answer to the appeal praying for the affirmance of the judgment appealed from.”

Appellant does not contend that this answer has waived- appellee’s motion to dismiss. The answer was filed under “full reservation of all rights under the motion to dismiss.” The motion to dismiss has not been' waived.

The record contains a letter from Charles J. Mundy, plaintiff’s attorney, to the clerk of court of West Feliciana parish, as follows:

“New Orleans, La., Sept. 15, 1932.
“Miss Florence Golsan, Clerk of Court,
“St. Franeisville, La.
“Dear Madam:
“Inclosed please find cashier’s check No. 20425 of the Citizens Branch Office of the Canal Bank & Trust Co. of New Orleans in the sum of $100.00 in lieu of bond for devolutive appeal (this being a cash bond) in the case of Myra Dillon Antoine vs. D.M. Hamilton No. 465 on the docket of your court. Please forward the record to the Clerk of Court of Appeals at Baton Rouge, Mr. Carl Leche, as soon as possible and please also notify me the day it is sent. I believe the appeal is returnable on September 24th 1932. I presume that you filed in the record a certificate showing that the cash has been deposited in lieu of bond in this matter.
“Awaiting your early reply, I am very truly yours,
“Charles J. Mundy.”

At the bottom of the letter we find the following: “I certify that I have received check for $100.00 referred to in the above letter and have deposited same in the registry of the court in an account carried in the Bank of Commerce & Trust Co. and am holding same in lieu of a bond for a devolutive appeal in the case referred to in the above letter. This 17th day of September 1932. St. Franeisville, La. Florence F.Golsan, Clerk of 20th Judicial district court, Parish of West Feliciana, La.”

This letter and certificate is all the record contains on the subject.

*616 Appellee admits that a deposit can be made with the clerk of court in lien of a bond with security, but contends that an appellant making a deposit of the kind must first show in the lower court that he cannot give the bond provided for by the Code of Practice, arts. 574, 575, 578, 579, and that a deposit for the purpose of an appeal under the Civil Code, arts. 3065, 3140, must be authorized by the court which granted the appeal, ¿nd that as no such authority was obtained by appellant, he insists upon his motion to dismiss.

The Civil Code, art. 3065, provides as follows: “The person who can not give a surety is admitted to give a pledge or other satisfaction sufficient to secure the debt, provided that the thing given in pledge may be kept without difficulty or risk. He may also deposit in the-hands of the public officer, whose duty it is to leceive the surety, the sum for which he is required to furnish a surety.”

Article 3140 provides: “Pledge may be given not only for an obligation consisting in money, but also for one having any other object; for example, a surety. * ⅜ * ”

In Lanata v. Bayhi, 31 La. Ann. 229, cited by appellant, authority to deposit $150 in lieu of a bond was obtained from the court.

In State ex rel. Rayssiquier v. Monroe, Judge, 37 La. Ann. 113, the judge a quo authorized a deposit of cash in lieu of a bond.

In Sauer v. Union Oil Co., 43 La. Ann. 699, 9 So. 566, 567, authority from the court to give municipal bonds, in lieu of a personal security, was obtained after personal bond which had been- given turned out to be unsatisfactory. In that case a motion to dismiss was filed on the ground that ap-pellee had not been cited to answer the second order, the one permitting the deposit in lieu of a bond. The court in acting on the motion said: “It was useless for the appellant to have again moved and petitioned, on the 2d of January, 1891, for a suspen-sive appeal, and for leave to furnish the" public securities, instead of a personal obligation with a surety, as is usually done. The appeal had been previously asked and granted. The subsequent proceedings to the same effect were superabundant. They did not amend or modify the anterior ones. The appellant does not derive from the court, but from the law, the privilege of substituting valuable public bonds for an ordinary security, as is usually done.”

In Mitchell v. Murphy, 131 La. 1033, 60 So. 674, 675, a certified check was left with the clerk of court bearing on it a memorandum as follows: “This check was left with F. A. Leonard as security on attachment bond in suit - v. Murphy, Sept. 12, 1911.” The opinion shows that there were several suits filed by Mitchell against Murphy and the check was not properly identified with the suit in which it was sought to be used in lieu of an attachment bond. The opinion says: “There is nothing in the record to'identify this certified check with the record in this case.” And in another place it is said: “There was no writing whatever attending the delivery of this pledge, which could be made only by a person who was not able to give a bond and personal surety; and it had to be made in the place of a -surety, which the plaintiff could not give.” And further on: “If plaintiff had been careful to have filed some instrument as a bond with the clerk, stating that he was making a pledge.of a $6,000 check, and that the pledge was made instead of a regular surety on bond in the case where a bond was required, thus stating its nature and object, and he had delivered such instrument to the clerk of the court for filing, and the same had been filed in the cause, he would have conformed to the law.”

The letter from Mundy to the clerk was not filed, at least we see nothing on it to that effect, but it was delivered to the clerk and bears on it an official certificate showing its receipt and purpose and the motion to dismiss alleges that the check was filed, which was sufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antoine-v-hamilton-lactapp-1932.