August v. Sorsby

2 McGl. 335
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1884
DocketNo. 146
StatusPublished

This text of 2 McGl. 335 (August v. Sorsby) 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
August v. Sorsby, 2 McGl. 335 (La. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

On Motion to Dismiss.

His Honor Judge Frank McGloin

delivered the opinion and decree of the court in the words and figures following, to wit;

Plaintiff sued defendant, a non resident, and issued an attachment, serving interrogatories in garnishment upon the London Liverpool and Globe Insurance Company. Judgment was duly rendered against defendant, through a curator, and from that decree there is no appeal. Garnishee to interrogatories responded, in substance, that defendant had been insured with it and had met a loss; but that the amount thereof was not yet adjusted, and that the said sum was already seized in other suits pending in the Civil District Court. Later, garnishee presented a supplemental answer, declaring that the policy in question had been assigned to a third person previous to issuance of this attachment.

Plaintiffs move to have garnishee, under its answer condemned to satisfy its judgment against defendant. On trial of this rule, there was judgment condemning the Insurance [336]*336Company to liquidate the claim due by it under the policy within 7 days and deposit the amount thus ascertained to be the loss, in the hands of the Civil Sheriff. The judgment further condemned the garnishee to satisfy the demand of plaintiff against defendant in event of its failure to deposit as demanded. From this decree the Insurance Company appealed.

Plaintiff moves to dismiss the appeal because the defendant and the curator ad hoc are not made parties, there being an order taxing the fee of the latter; because the judgment is interlocutory and not final; and because there is no assignment of errors.

I

The law does not arbitrarily require every person who is impleaded in a cause to be made parties to an appeal. The rule is that only those who have interest in maintaining undisturbed the judgment appealed from, need be impleaded before the appellate court. Elder vs. Rogers, 11 La. 606; Gordon vs. Dreux, 6 Rob. 399; Baruer vs. Gordon, 16 La. Ann. 324; Lane vs. Roselius, 22 La. Ann. 267; Cox vs. Rees, 16 La. 109; Garcial vs. Creditors, 3 Rob. 436; Dugan vs. De Lezardi, 5 Rob. 224; Oliver vs. Williams, 12 Rob. La. 180; Swearinger vs. McDaniel, 12 Rob. La. 203; Armstrong vs. Creditors, 8 La. Ann. 367; Joy vs. Lusk, 11 La. Ann. 186; Simmons vs. Creditors, 12 La. Ann. 755; Cummins vs. Husband, 14 La. Ann. 315; Bellevill Iron Works vs. Creditors, 16 La. Ann. 78; Succession of Penniston, 18 La. Ann. 281; Bervery vs. Bird, 21 La. Ann. 209.

We have no means of ascertaining on which side of this special controversy, the wishes, or interest of the defendant Sorsey may lie. It is reasonable to infer however that he would be opposed to having this fund, if it belongs to him, taken from his control, where if he be the owner, it is supposed to be, and placed in that of the court. In all events we think that, to entitle a party to notice of an appeal, it must be apparent that he has such an interest in the question at issue, as is by law required, in order for his being impleaded. The [337]*337plaintiff, did not consider it necessary to make defendant party to their rule against appellant. In fact, the proceedings against garnishees are in their nature and by usage different from those against the debtor. After a defendant is condemned he has no right or interest that the law recognizes in withholding his property from lawful execution; and if the garnishee disclaims holding assets belonging to him, the question, in that aspect is one between such garnishee and the seizing creditor. The issue of title, as between defendant and the garnishee, so as to result in a judgment in favor of the latter, cannot come up in such a collateral and summary manner nor is the debtor bound by the result of his creditor’s proceedings to apply the disputed property to the satisfaction of his writ.

So far as the curator ad hoc is concerned, the order taxing his fee, does not give him an interest in the controversy between the creditor and the garnishee. If, as the beneficiary of one portion of the taxed charges he is to be made party to the appeal, then sheriff, clerks of court, auditors, experts, and in some cases, perhaps unpaid witnesses would be entitled to a similar notice, if at any prior stage of the case, costs had become due to them.

We consider the judgment appealed from as final and that the garnishee may appeal. It determines the fact of the garnishees’s indebtedness to the debtor, and of its owing an adjustment within 7 days. It also condemns it to satisfy plaintiff’s claim, if it does not comply with the order to adjust and deposit. Carroll vs. Wallace, 1 McGloin 9, see also Wabash and Erie Canal vs. Beers, 1 Black 54. We are not asked to dismiss the appeal because it is taken from a confessed judgment, we have therefore no right to determine, under the issues presented, whether the Insurance Co. has confessed— This reference approves P. Rielley Deputy Clerk — or whether for other reasons it was rightfully condemned. We examined the judgment and ascertained that it is final; and if it is such the law accords the right to the party affected to have it reviewed.

[338]*338This case involved more than $500.00, and therefore comes up to the court on the facts as well as the law, the certificate is in due form, showing that all the evidence, with the two copies of the proceedings, etc., have been sent up. There is indeed no complaint that the record is not complete. In such a case, an assignment of errors is not necessary, either under the law, or under the rules of this court. State vs. Gissen, 15 La. Ann. 420; Toisier vs. Darradirre, 18 La. Ann. 261; Warfield vs. Hamlet, 28 La. Ann. 814; Azemard vs. Camps, 1 McGloin 65; Sewel vs. Jacobs, 1 McGloin 134; Becker vs. Quick, and Aherns, 1 McGloin 112. The motion to dismiss is therefore denied.

His Honor Judge Frank McGloin delivered the opinion and decree of the court in the words and figures following, to wit;

We are asked in this case to reverse our ruling upon the motion to dismiss and now dismiss the appeal herein ex officio for want of proper parties. In coming to the conclusion arrived at, upon that feature of the case, we followed the only precedent we found in the reports of this state, touching directly upon the questions involved, Elder vs. Rogers, 11 La. Ann. 606. Our attention has since been called to the opinion in Katz & Varnett vs. W. B. Sorbsey, No. 8347 of the Honorable Supreme Court of this state, lately decided. We have carefully considered the opinion last referred to; but after mature deliberation, have determined to follow Wilder vs. Rovers, as determining the practice of this court.

The case of Cossley vs. Snow, 3 La. Ann. 623, is not in our judgment a precedent for this. There, defendant appealed from a decree against the garnishee; and of course that garnishee having been a necessary party of the judgment below, was equally necessary to the proceedings whereby it was to be maintained, or disturbed, in the appellate court. The garnishee having abstained from an appeal, it was fair to presume that he was satisfied and desired the finding to remain undisturbed.

Nor do we consider Robinson vs. Miller, 14 La. Ann. 219, applicable. There is a marked distinction between the judgment against the defendant in the original proceedings, or suit, [339]*339and that against the garnishee, see Carroll vs. Peters, 1 McGloin 9; Robinson vs.

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Bluebook (online)
2 McGl. 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/august-v-sorsby-lactapp-1884.