Boudreaux v. Moon Oil Co.

158 So. 672
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1935
DocketNo. 1411.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 158 So. 672 (Boudreaux v. Moon Oil Co.) 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
Boudreaux v. Moon Oil Co., 158 So. 672 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

George Boudreaux alleges: That there is due him $498 by Cal. Oil & Gas Company, Inc., on account of labor done for said company in drilling and operating an oil well in the Port Barre oil field in the parish of St. Landry. That he is also the owner of a claim for $55 due by the Cal. Oil & Gas Company, Inc., to W. H. Ellington on account of labor performed by said Ellington on the said project. That his own claim for labor and that of said Ellington makes a total of $548 due him on said account. That said work was done on leased land described in the petition situated in the parish of St. Landry. That the drilling outfit used in said work is situated on said leased land. That said drilling outfit belongs to Moon Oil Company, Inc., a corporation domiciled in the parish of Calcasieu. That there exists a lien and privilege on said machinery in favor of himself individually and as subrogee of said Ellington, on account of their labor, superior in rank to any other existing on said property. That said privilege entitles him to be paid out of the proceeds of said property by preference over all other liens and privileges existing thereon. That a judicial mortgage, due to the registry of a judgment recovered by Marrs McLean against Moon Oil Company, Inc., exists on said property, which mortgage is subordinate and inferior in rank to the lien and privilege which exists thereon in his favor. That he believes that said lease is about to be discontinued and operations ceased and the property removed from the leased premises and from the Parish of St. Landry, to the prejudice of his rights thereon. That said McLean is attempting to obtain the ownership of the property to the prejudice of petitioner’s lien and privilege thereon. He prayed that a copy of his petition and of the writ of provisional seizure be served on Moon Oil Company, Inc., and that a writ of provisional seizure issue, and that said property be provisionally seized and held in order that his rights thereon might be determined and protected. The writ issued and the property was seized and a copy of his petition and of the writ of provisional seizure was served on Moon Oil Company, Inc., as prayed for. Judgment was obtained and confirmed by default recognizing and maintaining his seizure and recognizing the lien and privilege claimed by him on said property, as well as its superior rank over all other mortgages and liens whatsoever. The property was ordered sold and the proceeds paid over to the plaintiff; the effect of the judgment, however, was restricted to the property seized. When the property was advertised for sale by the sheriff, Marrs McLean intervened in the suit and opposed the claim of the plaintiff.

McLean alleges in his petition: That he is a creditor of the Moon Oil Company, Inc., for $3,000 evidenced by a note for that amount. That said note is secured by a chattel mortgage on the drilling outfit described in his pe *674 tition. That he obtained a Judgment against Moon Oil Company, Inc., based on said note in the amount thereof. That said judgment recognizes his chattel mortgage on said property and his right to be paid out of the proceeds of same with the rank proper to his mortgage. That being a judgment creditor he caused a writ of fieri facias to issue under which the sheriff seized said property and took same into his possession to satisfy said writ.

He alleges that the judgment obtained by the plaintiff against Moon Oil Company, Inc., is null and void because rendered without service and citation upon plaintiff’s debt- or Cal. Oil & Gas Company, Inc., and the said writ of fieri facias issued thereon improperly and improvidently, etc.

He alleges in the alternative that his chattel mortgages primes any lien or privilege on said property to which the said Boudreaux may be entitled. He prays for judgment against Boudreaux decreeing the judgment obtained by Boudreaux against Moon Oil Company, Inc., to be null and void, that his chattel mortgage be recognized as outranking the lien and privilege claimed by Bou-dreaux, and that the proceeds of the same be paid to him instead of Boudreaux.

Boudreaux filed a motion to strike article 7 out of intervene* and third opponent’s petition, and said article was stricken out as prayed for. An exception of no cause of action directed at the petition of said McLean was also filed and by the court referred to the merits. Boudreaux then answered, substantially denying all the averments contained in the petition.

Judgment was rendered on the merits of the case sustaining the judgment which said Boudreaux had obtained against Moon Oil •Company, Inc.

Marrs McLean and Moon Oil Company, Inc., both appealed; the two appeals will therefore be considered together and one opinion rendered covering the issue in both cases.

The first contention of Moon Oil Company, Inc., is, that the judgment obtained against it by said Boudreaux on April 25, 1934, in suit No. 26685 on the docket of the district court parish of St. Landry is null and void; the contention being that it was not rendered against any defendant

The suit to which reference is thus made is based primarily on the provisions of the Code Practice, art. 285, subd. 4, which provides: “When the proceedings are in rem, that is to say against the thing itself which stands pledged for the debt, when the property is abandoned, or in cases' where the owner of the thing is unknown or absent.”

Boudreaux’s suit is further based on the provisions of Act No. 161 of 1932. He alleges that Cal. Oil & Gas Co., Inc., is his debtor, but that the drilling outfit used in the work and with which he performed the alleged labor belonged to Moon Oil Company, Inc. The drilling rig is described in plaintiff’s petition as follows, to wit: “One Republic Boiler with 58 flues No. 2993. One oil well Sup. Co. Boiler 62 flues not numbered. One Well Supply Company Pump No I-B-627, Size 10-5-3/4-12. One Oil Well Supply Company Oil Bath Engine II X 11 No I-J 606. One Oil Well Supply Co 22” to 27" Imperial Rotary. One Oil Well Supply Company Swivel & Hose size 6" No 556. One 54" Three Shive Travelling Block. One Oil Well Supply Co,-2 speed Draw Works with chains, etc and automatic Cat Head.' One 250 Cat Line. One 5" Kelly Jts 35’ long. One Joint 6" with drill Collar A, P I. Two Pair Wilson Break Cut tongs. One 100 Barrel Euel Tank Parkersburg NO 4202. One Xmas Tree with one 65/8-2500 Test Valve 6-5/S)-2-4" NO 2500 Test Valves. Two 4-6 Boiler Feed Pump, One Moon Generator.” The rig in question being situated on a “certain tract of land containing 30½ acres more or less lying in Section 20 T 6 S R 5 E in the Parish of St Landry”; said land being more fully described in the petition of said Boudreaux.

The procedure instituted by Boudreaux is substantially in the form recognized in the ease Favrot v. Delle Piane, 4 La. Ann. 584, 586. In that case the court referring to the procedure said: “It acts upon the thing, not upon tlie person of its owner.” See, also, Ellison v. Iler, 22 La. Ann. 470, and State ex rel. Raymond v. Judge, 39 La. Ann. 499, 2 So. 37, 4 Am. St. Rep. 274.

Provisional seizure gives a privilege under the Code Practice, art. 725, but in the present case the privilege claimed is mainly based on Act No. 161 of 1932. The procedure is legal and cannot be set aside on the theory that there was no defendant before the court.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boudreaux-v-moon-oil-co-lactapp-1935.