Arkansas-Louisiana Pipe Line Co. v. Coverdale

158 So. 640, 181 La. 117, 1935 La. LEXIS 1467
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 33154.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 158 So. 640 (Arkansas-Louisiana Pipe Line Co. v. Coverdale) 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
Arkansas-Louisiana Pipe Line Co. v. Coverdale, 158 So. 640, 181 La. 117, 1935 La. LEXIS 1467 (La. 1935).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Act No. 6 of 1932 (section 1) requires of all persons, firms, or corporations engaged in the business of manufacturing, generating, or selling electricity for heat, light, or power in this state, and engaged in certain other businesses, to pay an excise or license tax. Section 6 of the act provides that if such tax is not paid, the supervisor of public accounts shall make and cause to be recorded in the mortgage records of the parish, where such person, firm, or corporation is engaged in such business or occupation, a *120 statement under oath showing the amount of the tax due, “which statement when filed for record shall operate as a first lien, privilege and mortgage on all of the property of the * * * tax debtors as the case may be, and said property shall be subject to seizure and sale for the payment of said excise, license or privilege tax due.”

Section 8 of the act requires the sheriff of the parish where the lien is recorded, when requested to do so by the supervisor of public accounts, to seize and to sell the property of the tax debtor, after due notice, for the payment of the excise tax.

Plaintiff is a corporation, having its place of business in the parish of Ouachita. It is engaged in manufacturing, generating, and selling electricity, and other businesses. The supervisor of public accounts made up a statement under oath, setting out that plaintiff was due the sum of $7,316 as excise or license tax for the year 1932, and caused the statement to be filed and recorded in the parish of Ouachita. Due notice thereof was given the plaintiff, but it failed to pay the tax. The supervisor then requested the sheriff of Ouachita parish to collect the tax, and, in obedience to the request, he seized all of plaintiff’s property in that parish, alleged to be worth $800,000, and advertised it for sale.

Whereupon the plaintiff brought injunction proceedings in the district court for the parish of Ouachita, against the sheriff of that parish, to prohibit the sale of its property, making the supervisor of public accounts a party. As a cause of action, plaintiff alleged, among other, things, that the tax levied against its property was illegal, null, and void for various reasons, and especially because Act No. 6 of 1932, under which it was levied, is unconstitutional. It prayed that the said excise or license tax be decreed illegal; that the inscription of the lien be erased from the records; and that the sheriff be permanently enjoined from proceeding further with the sale proceedings.

Both the sheriff and the supervisor of public accounts excepted to the jurisdiction of the court, ratione person®, on the ground that under the law the supervisor of public accounts is required to and does maintain her office at the state Capitol in the parish of East Baton Rouge, where her official acts are performed, and that suit for the cancellation of the tax should be brought in that parish and not in the parish of Ouachita, the contention being that the supervisor is the real defendant, the sheriff being only a nominal party having no real interest in the suit

The exception to the jurisdiction was finally overruled, and the supervisor applied to this court for a writ of prohibition. The writ was granted with a stay order and the judges of the Fourth judicial district court for the parish of Ouachita were ordered to send up the record in order that the validity of the proceeding might be inquired into, and to show cause why they should not be prohibited from proceeding further with the case.

The only question before us at present is whether the Fourth judicial district court for the parish of Ouachita has jurisdiction ratione person® in the premises.

The ruling of that court in maintaining its jurisdiction is sanctioned by reason and *122 supported by precedent. Plaintiff is engaged in business in the parish of Ouachita and its property is there. The lien is recorded there and there it has effect against the property of the alleged debtor, and it is there that an attempt is being made to enforce it. The method set up by the act to enforce payment of the tax is the seizure and sale of the property of the tax debtor, and, if a sale is made, it must be made where the property is situated. In sum, the enforcement or execution of the lien which came into existence by virtue of the recorded sworn statement made by the supervisor of public accounts must take place in the parish of Ouachita, where the property is situated.

It is alleged, and not denied, that if the sheriff of Ouachita parish is not restrained by the court, he will sell plaintiff’s property, and it is alleged that a sale of plaintiff’s property under this process will result in irreparable injury to it. It is manifest that plaintiff’s only remedy was to enjoin the executing officer, the sheriff, from making the sale. The real object of the suit therefore was to obtain the injunction and the issue as to the validity of tax was raised by the injunction.

Section 6, Act No. 6 of 1932, says that a statement made under oath by the supervisor setting forth the amount of tax claimed, when filed for record, operates as a first lien or mortgage on the property of the tax debtor, and that said property shall be subject to “seizure and sale for the payment of said excise, license or privilege tax.” The method for the collection of this tax partakes of the nature of a judicial seizure and sale .and it is well settled that sales under any kind of judicial process may be enjoined in the parish where the seizure is made and the sale is about to take place, even though the sale was ordered or the writ issued by a court of another jurisdiction. In Copley v. Edwards, 5 La. Ann. 647, it was held that where a writ has been issued in one parish, directed to the sheriff of another parish for execution, the execution may be enjoined in the courts of the latter parish, and in the case of Condran v. Nelson Co-Op. Ass’n, Inc., 152 La. 609, 93 So. 918, the court said:

“It is well settled that a district court is competent to issue an injunction against a seizure made by the sheriff under a fieri facias or order of sale issued from another parish of the state and to try the issues raised by the injunction.” Citing Arenstein v. Weber, 21 La. Ann. 199; Jack v. Harrison & Co., 34 La. Ann. 736; Coleman v. Brown, 16 La. Ann. 110 ; and Copley v. Edwards, supra.

In Donnell v. Parrott, 13 La. Ann. 251, Chief Justice Merrick said in his concurring opinion:

“The cases in which this court has sanctioned injunctions issuing in other parishes than those where the judgments were rendered, were those in which manifest injury would have been done had they not been allowed. In the language of the court, they were allowed ex necessitate rei.” Citing Lawes v. Chinn, 4 Mart. (N. S.) 388, 390; Oger v. Daunoy, 7 Mart. (N. S.) 656, 659; Hobgood v. Brown, 3 La. Ann. 323; Police Jury of West Baton Rouge v. Michel, 4 La. Ann. 84.

The rule announced in the above-cited cases and the reason for it are applicable *124 to mases like the one presently under consideration.

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Related

Smith v. Baton Rouge Bank & Trust Company
286 So. 2d 394 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Toms v. Nugent
12 So. 2d 713 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)
Arkansas-Louisiana Pipe Line Co. v. Coverdale
17 F. Supp. 34 (W.D. Louisiana, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 640, 181 La. 117, 1935 La. LEXIS 1467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-louisiana-pipe-line-co-v-coverdale-la-1935.