Castagnos Cane Loader Co. v. David

69 So. 843, 137 La. 1074, 1915 La. LEXIS 1795
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 18, 1915
DocketNo. 20067
StatusPublished

This text of 69 So. 843 (Castagnos Cane Loader Co. v. David) 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
Castagnos Cane Loader Co. v. David, 69 So. 843, 137 La. 1074, 1915 La. LEXIS 1795 (La. 1915).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, C. J.

The titular plaintiff herein, as also Jos. T. Cañero, J. Pollock & Co., and W. D. Haas prosecute this appeal from a judgment dismissing a rule taken by them, requiring the sheriff and the J. B. Levert Company, Limited, to show cause why a certain sum of $10,000, alleged to be in the hands of the sheriff, should not be distributed as in concurso.

The circumstances leading to the judgment appealed from are as follows:

On February 1, 1912, W. D. Haas sued the-[1075]*1075'C. P. Knoll Planting & Manufacturing Company for a balance alleged, to be due for sugar cane, and, asserting a privilege on third sugars, caused them to be sequestered. J. B. Levert Company, Limited, intervened in the .suit, claiming a balance due for advances to make the crop of the Knoll Company and a superior privilege, and obtained the release of the seized sugars on a bond of $40,000.

On February 17th J. B. Brunson instituted a suit similar to that of Haas, and sequestered the same sugars. In April following, J. B. Levert, on behalf of the Levert Company, and in order to avoid a contest between it and either of the litigants above named, as to the rank of their respective privileges, .agreed that he would pay the amount for which either of them should obtain judgment, with recognition of the privilege asserted, the meaning of the agreement, as we understand it, being that Haas accepted the obligation of J. B. Levert as a substitute for the bond of $40,000, and Brunson, as a substitute for any other bond that might have been required for the release of the sugars from his seizure.

On May 25th Mrs. Bradshaw obtained judgment against the Knoll Company, and seized the sugars in question under a writ of execution, though the Knoll Company took a ■devolutive appeal from the judgment, and the Levert Company filed an intervention, asserting a claim against the sugars and their proceeds, and thereafter appealed suspensively from a judgment rejecting its demands. On June 22d the sugars were adjudicated, under the execution in the Bradshaw Case, to the Levert Company, for .$10,000.

By agreement between the counsel representing Mrs. Bradshaw and the Levert Company, respectively, no money was paid to the sheriff, but instead he was authorized to receive, and did receive, a draft for $10,000 drawn by the attorney of the Levert Company, on J. B. Levert, accepted by him, and made payable to the order of the sheriff, upon the 'following condition, as expressed in a letter from Mrs. Bradshaw’s attorney, of date July 3, 1912, to wit:

“You are to hold the draft until the contest between J. B. Levert Co., Ltd., and Mrs. Bradshaw is terminated; and, if it should be decreed by the court that Mrs. Bradshaw is entitled to the proceeds from the sale of said sugars, then, and in that event only, you are to cash said draft, and not until then.”

On January 15, 1913, counsel representing W. D. Haas and the Levert Company filed a joint motion, in the suit of Haas v. Knoll Company, reciting that the sugars in question had been seized and sold in the Bradshaw Case, and that the Levert Company had entered into an agreement—

“in regard to the rank and privilege that the claims of plaintiff should bear, and the plaintiff and defendant [should be intervener] now desire to release the bond and its surety, furnished to release the writ of sequestration”

—which was followed by an order of court canceling the bond of $40,000 which had been given by the Levert Company, and releasing the surety. On the following day (January 16th), Brunson obtained judgment against the Knoll Company, with recognition of privilege, and on the same day the Castagnos Cane Loader Company, Jos. T. Cafiero, and J. Pollock & Co. also obtained judgments on claims held by them, respectively, against the Knoll Company. On February 1st the Levert Company bought the judgment which had been obtained by Brunson. On March 29th executions were issued on the judgments obtained by the Castagnos Company, Cafiero, and Pollock & Co., .and notices of seizure were served on the sheriff, and on April 24th those litigants proceeded, by rule, in the district court, alleging their judgments, and that they had “caused the seizure thereunder of the $10,000, proceeds of sale of the XX sugars and molasses, seized and sold as aforesaid, under the Bradshaw, Haas, and Brun[1077]*1077■son writs, which, fund is still held by the .sheriff under said writs,” and requiring the sheriff and the Levert Company to show ■cause why the sheriff should not desist from requiring indemnity bonds for the maintenance of the seizures, or reduce the amounts demanded, which was followed by another rule, in which the plaintiffs in the first rule are joined by Mrs. Bradshaw and W. D. Haas, and in which all parties allege that “they have an interest in a certain fund, or sum, ■amounting to $10,000, now in the possession of one Francis R. David, sheriff,” and pray that the sheriff be ordered to hold said fund, and that he and the Levert Company be required to show cause why “it should not be distributed and paid out, in the way of á •concursus,” to the parties interested therein.

The Levert Company filed exceptions of misjoinder, nonjoinder, no cause of action, and no right of action by rule, and after-wards an answer. The two rules were consolidated and tried, and on May 16th there was judgment, making the first rule absolute, on the ground, in effect, that the sheriff had no such fund as that mentioned, in his possession, and hence that there was no reason for the giving of indemnity bonds on account of its seizure; and the second rule was dismissed on the same ground. On May 12th this court refused a rehearing in the case of Mrs. Bradshaw v. Knoll Company, in which the judgment of the district court had been reversed and Mrs. Bradshaw’s demand rejected, and on June 9th reversed the judgment, on the intervention of the Levert Company (which came up as a separate appeal), and gave judgment for the intervener. See Bradshaw v. Knoll Co., 132 La. 829, 61 South. 839.

In the opinion, in the case last mentioned, it was said:

“The two matters were argued in this court at the same time, and a judgment has been rendered in the main suit, and is now final, rejecting the demands of the plaintiff therein [Mrs. Bradshaw], from which it follows that she is * * * eliminated from this proceeding, since, having no judgment and no claim against the Knoll Company, or the property which was seized, she has no interest and no standing to contest intervener’s claims thereto. The other party, the Knoll Company, did not appeal from the judgment herein rendered by the district court; and, though it filed a general denial to the intervention, its former president and former bookkeeper appeared in that court only to admit the correctness of the account sued on by the intervener, and it has not appeared in this court, through counsel or otherwise.”

The decree handed down in the case condemns the Knoll Company to pay the Levert Company $59,910, with interest on different amounts from different dates, and proceeds as follows:

“It is further decreed that said J. B. Levert Company, Limited, be recognized as having a privfiege and right of pledge upon, and to the full extent of, the $10,000 realized from the sale of the sugars and molasses seized in the suit of Mrs. Lee Porterfield Bradshaw _v. C. F. Knoll Planting & Manufacturing Company * * * superior to any right asserted by said Mrs.

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Related

Bradshaw v. Knoll
61 So. 839 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)
J. B. Levert Co. v. Bradshaw
62 So. 488 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
69 So. 843, 137 La. 1074, 1915 La. LEXIS 1795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castagnos-cane-loader-co-v-david-la-1915.