Canal Bank v. Copeland

12 La. 34
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 La. 34 (Canal Bank v. Copeland) 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
Canal Bank v. Copeland, 12 La. 34 (La. 1838).

Opinion

Carleton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In May, 1833, the plaintiffs caused to be sold at public auction, a parcel of land, adjoining the village of Carrollton, containing seven hundred and seventy-seven acres, which were adjudicated to the defendant, the last and highest bidder, for twenty-six thousand dollars, payable in instal-ments for several successive years.

The purchaser having, failed to comply with the terms of the sale, the plaintiffs instituted suit against him in the court for the first district, which, on the 18th March, 1834, rendered in their favor the following judgment:

“ In this case, the jury having rendered a verdict for the plaintiffs without damages, and the court considering the said verdict is conformable to law, do order, adjudge and decree as follows : that Robert Copeland, the defendant, do pay the sum of two thousand six hundred and fifty dollars, with legal interest thereon, from the 17th December last, (1833) to the plaintiffs, in the proportions following, to wit; one half of said sum and interest to the New-Orleans Canal and Banking Company; the other half to the other plaintiffs in the following proportions, to wit : one moiety of said half to Samuel Kohn, one-tenth thereof to John Slidell, and four-tenths to Laurent Millaudon; and further, that said Copeland do execute his promissory note, satisfactorily endorsed, for the sum of two thousand six hundred and fifty dollars, payable on the 1st day of May, 1834, and three other promissory notes, for the sum of seven thousand and sixty-six dollars and sixty-six cents and two-thirds, each payable respectively, in two, three and four years, from the 1st May, 1833, without endorsement, but secured by special mortgage on the property sold ; and that the plaintiffs execute to him [43]*43■a bill of sale, on the defendant depositing with the notary, Felix Grima, Esq., successor of G. R. Stringer, the sum of two thousand six hundred and fifty dollars, with interest, at the rate of five per cent, from the 17th December, 1833, up to the time of such tender, and also his promissory notes in the manner aforesaid, of the property adjudicated to him and mentioned in the petition, in the form of the one filed in the suit marked A, dated June 7th, 1833, and that the defendant pay the costs of this suit.”

This judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court, in the May term of the same year, on an appeal taken by the defendant, and on the first of November following, the plaintiffs exhibited it, annexed to their petition, praying for an order of seizure and sale, to the judge of the parish and city of New-Orleans, who, therefore, granted the following order; “ Let the within described property be seized and sold according to law, at the following terms, to wit: five thousand three hundred dollars for cash, with legal interest on two thousand six hundred and fifty dollars thereof, from 17th December, 1833, and on two thousand six hundred and fifty dollars, from the first of May, 1834, the balance payable in three equal instalments on the 1st of May, of the years 1835, 1836 and 1837, respectively, without endorsements, but ■secured by special mortgage,” etc.

An ineffectual attempt having been made by the defendant, to set aside this order, on the ground that the property seized was out of the territorial limits of the parish of Orleans, he appealed, and in the June term of 1835, the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the Parish Court, and set the order aside. 6 Louisiana Reports, page 584. 8 Ibid., 577.

But as the appeal was not taken in time to stay execution, the sheriff, in the meanwhile, proceeded under the order, and sold the land at public sale on the 12th January, 1835, when it was bought by John McDonougb, as the last and highest bidder, for nineteen thousand two hundred and fifteen dollars and fifty-five cents. The purchaser, having •caused the usual monitions to issue in order to confirm his [44]*44title according to the provisions of the act of March, 1834, the defendant.-again appeared and made opposition to the homologation of the sale, which being overruled, he appealed, and thus the cause comes for the third time before this court.

Various points have been raised in argument and ably discussed by. the counsel'on both sides.

. But our attention has been mainly drawn to the first ground of opposition taken by the defendant, viz ; “ The Parish Court has no authority to grant an order of seizure and sale in this case, because the -District Court has already taken cognizance of the matter, and rendered judgment therein; because there was no act importing confession of judgment, and: because the court has no jurisdiction thereof.

The objection taken when the cause came before us on the first appeal from the. Parish Court, was to the want of territorial jurisdiction in that court, the property seized, being, as was alleged, out of the limits of the parish. Now, the validity of the order itself is contested, and we are called •upon for the first time, to look into the sources of that power under which the parish judge acted in granting it. This question lies at the bottom of the controversy, and upon its rightful solution the fate of the cause must depend.

It is contended that this power is derived from article 746 of the Code of Practice, which declares, that, “when a creditor has obtained against his debtor, a judgment, having the force of res judicata, in a tribunal different from that in which he seeks the execution, whether the judgment was rendered in this state or another state of the Union, or in a foreign country; he may, on this ground, proceed by execu-tory process, and cause to be seized and sold the property of his debtor, without previous citation, in the same manner as on privileged or mortgaged debts, contained in acts importing confession of judgment, except in the cases mentioned in the following article.”

To avoid all incongruity, and give a reasonable interpretation to this law, we are bound to infer, that, by a tribunal, different from that in which execution is sought, was intended the courts of the parishes and districts, other than that in [45]*45which the judgment was rendered; as if it were rendered by a tribunal at Ouachita, the creditor might obtain executory process from the judge of the Parish of Orleans, if the debtor’s property were within his jurisdiction, or he might-keep the record in his possession, and obtain the order in any other parish of the state wherever he might be so- fortunate as to find the debtor’s property. This mode of procedure * * - * might afford greater facilities in the collection of debts, when the situation of the debtor’s property was unknown, than the writ of fieri facias, for the obtaining of which, recourse must . .. , , ° be had, in every instance, to the tribunal that pronounced the judgment. '

the execution of mdgment ron— dered by ñ trifrom\hatw1thln yhose jurisdiction the execution of it is resort (o the S cutory'process; cannot issue within the same party mustresort on'^Vis^udgment- , So, where a judgment was court ortheyfirst judicial district, and its execution sought, by t0pj_ “iin the Parish Court of New-Orleans: Held, Court wis^vith-out power to grant the order of seizure, as u Com^prasessed Precisely . *e tion, within the same territorial limits,

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Related

Montejo v. Gordy
33 La. Ann. 1113 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
12 La. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canal-bank-v-copeland-la-1838.