Calhoun v. Levy

33 La. Ann. 1296
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8161
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 La. Ann. 1296 (Calhoun v. Levy) 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
Calhoun v. Levy, 33 La. Ann. 1296 (La. 1881).

Opinions

[1298]*1298The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Levy, J.

On the 24th of November, 1868, Lionel L. Levy obtained judgment inithe District Court of the parish of Rapides against Meredith and William S. Calhoun for the sum of $5250, with eight per cent per annum interest thereon from 1st of February, 1867. On the 7th of June, 1878, at the suit of said Levy, this judgment was revived by judgment of the District Court of the parish of Rapides and the original judgment was reinscribed and that of revival inscribed in June and September 1868. On the 7th of May, 1873, an act was passed before Andrew Hero, notary public, in which it was declared that William S. Calhoun sold to his sister, plaintiff herein, for the consideration of thirty-five thousand dollars, his entire interest in the succession of his mother. Levy, treating this sale as a simulation, had execution issued on his judgment, directed to the sheriff of Grant parish, and seized thereunder certain property embraced in the sale of W. S. Calhoun to his sister, as the property of said W. S. Calhoun, and the same was advertised for sale. The plaintiff, M. M. Ada Calhoun, and her husband, G. W. Lane, sued out a writ of injunction restraining the sheriff from making the advertised sale, alleging her ownership of the property seized and averring that Levy’s judgment was improperly revived in the parish of Rapides, and that it is prescribed, and also that the “judgment has never been recorded and reinscribed and no longer bears upon the property.” Defendant, in his answer to plaintiff’s petition, made a general denial, and specially averred the facts of the rendition, recordation, revival and reinscription of his judgment, and the regularity and legality of all those proceedings. He specifically charged that the conveyance from the brother to the sister was “ unreal, fraudulent and simulated, and intended to cover up the property; that W. 8. Calhoun at the time was largely in debt and the parties had signed a counter-letter showing the said sale to be unreal and simulated,” prayed for twenty per cent general and $550 special damages, that said sale be decreed to be fraudu - lent and simulated, and for dissolution of the injunction, etc.

On the same day upon which this answer was filed, plaintiff filed a petition, affidavit and bond for the removal of the cause to the United State's Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana, on the ground that her husband, G. W. Lane, was a citizen of Dutchess County, State of New York, and that the controversy in this suit was and is wholly between herself and husband, citizens of New York, and L. L. Levy, a citizen of this State. To this,petition for removal defendant answered, denying the citizenship of either plaintiff to be in New York, and averring that they are both citizens of Louisiana; he alleged that they have by their injunction suit sought the jurisdiction of the State court, and cannot now decline it, and that they cannot remove an injunction suit — a [1299]*1299mere auxiliary proceeding, and that W. S. Oalhoun, under the allegations of defendant’s answer, is a necessary party to the controversy, and that he is a resident of Grant parish, where the suit is now pending. At the September term of court there was a continuance granted, and at the next, December term, defendant filed a peremptory exception, alleging that the petition disclosed no cause for removal, this being an injunction suit, which could not originally have been brought in the United States Circuit Court, and could not be removed to that court from the State court. This exception was sustained by the District Judge, and the application for removal denied.

We will first consider the correctness of the ruling of the court a qua, denying the application for removal.

The question involved is settled in the case of Watson vs. Bondurant, 30 An. 1, where it is held that a mere auxiliary proceeding, by which a third person comes in by way of injunction, to protect his property from being seized and sold under a judgment to which he was not a party, is not removable, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1875, from the State to the Federal court; and in commenting on the case of Bank vs. Turnbull, 16 Wallace, 190, this Court said : “If, therefore, the proceeding on the part of Turnbull & Co., by whatever name it may be called, was not removable under the act of 1867, as the court expressly decided it was not, it is because a suit means an original suit, not an auxiliary, dependent, supplementary proceeding, by which a third person interferes to prevent the sale of his property, seized under execution, in satisfaction of a judgment in the original suit, to which he was a stranger. If such a proceeding was not a suit, within the meaning of'the act of 1867, and, therefore, was not removable, there is no logic by which it can be shown that the proceeding on the part of Watson in this case is any suit of a civil nature, at law or in equity, within the terms of the act of 1875, and that is, therefore, removable under that act.” Goodrich vs. Hunton, 29 An. 372; 4 Cranch, 169; 1st Otto, 254. The application for removal was, in our opinion, properly refused.

There remains to be considered whether the judgment, under which the execution was issued and the seizure made, was legally obtained in a court having jurisdiction, and whether the original judgment has been prescribed for want of proper revival.

It is contended by defendant that the court which rendered the judgment, sought to be revived, is that which has jurisdiction of the suit to revive; that the jurisdiction is unchanged by the change of residence of the debtor to another parish, or by the creation, subsequent .to the rendition of a judgment, of a new parish carved out of the territorial jurisdiction of the original court, in which new parish the debtor resides; and that the expressions contained in the Acts of 1869, No. 82, [1300]*1300creating the parish of Grant, and the amendatory Act of 1870, No. 26, do not vest the District Court of the parish of Grant with the jurisdiction to revive a judgment rendered by the District Court of the parish of Rapides, out of which the parish of Grant was created.

It is true that, under the Act of 1853, No. 274, the citation to a judgment debtor, in an action of revival, is required to be issued from the court which rendered the judgment; but this right or authority may be vested by, statutory enactment in courts other than those which rendered the judgment, and within whose territorial jurisdiction the judgment debtor may reside, as was distinctly held in the case of Hammett vs. Sprowl, 31 An. 325. Let us see if this right and jurisdiction have in the present case been conferred upon the District Court of the parish of Grant, of which the judgment debtor is a resident, and within whose territorial limits he resided when the original judgment was rendered. Section 8 of Act No. 82, of session of 1869, (under which act the parish of Grant was created) provides: “ That it shall be the duty of the clerks of the parishes of Winn and Rapides, immediately after the passage of this act, to transmit to the clerk of the District .Court for the parish of Grant, all petitions, answers, documents and papers appertaining to suits wherein the defendant or defendants reside within the parish of Grant.”

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Bluebook (online)
33 La. Ann. 1296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-v-levy-la-1881.