Conrad v. Patzelt

29 La. Ann. 465
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1877
DocketNo. 6338
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 29 La. Ann. 465 (Conrad v. Patzelt) 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
Conrad v. Patzelt, 29 La. Ann. 465 (La. 1877).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mare, J.

Joseph Patzelt leased from Charles A. Conrad the store'No, 172 Camp street, for the term of one year, ending the thirty-first of [466]*466October, 1871, for nine hundred and sixty dollars, payable monthly, represented by twelve notes of eighty dollars each.

At the expiration of the term seven of these notes remained unpaid. Patzelt declined to renew the lease at a reduced rate, and held over, with the understanding that he was liable to be turned out at any time if Conrad should find a tenant by the year.

Patzelt leased the store No. 57 Camp street from James Jackson, and on the eleventh of March Conrad, having learned that he was about removing from No. 172 Camp street, brought suit for the rent due him,, say, for seven months up to the expiration of the lease and for five months after, up to April, 1875, in all nine hundred and sixty dollars; and he caused to be provisionally seized th.e furniture and effects which still were on the premises No. 172 and those which had been removed to No. 57 Camp street.

On the thirteenth of March counsel for Patzelt obtained an order of court that “ defendant be allowed to bond the seizure on furnishing good and solvent security in the sum of oue thousand dollars, conditioned as-the law directs.”

On the same day Patzelt gave bond in favor of the sheriff, for one thousand dollars, with security, the condition of which is such that if the said defendant shall satisfy such judgment as may be rendered against him in the suit pending, as above mentioned, then this obligation to be void, or else to remain in full force.”

The surety justified under oath, and on the same day the sheriff transferred the bond to the plaintiff, Conrad, as the law requires.

On the seventeenth of March the plaintiff, showing to the court that “ the bond furnished by the defendant, upon the execution of which the release of the property provisionally seized in this suit was ordered, is insufficient in amount and is not such a bond as is required by law in such cases,” took a rule on defendant to show cause why “ he should not furnish bond in the sum of two thousand dollars, conditioned according to law.”

This rule was submitted on the admission of Patzelt that the property provisionally seized was of a value not less than three thousand dollars» and the admission by Conrad that the bond already filed was “ sufficient in amount to cover the amount claimed, with interest accrued to the date it was filed.”

The court ordered defendant to furnish bond in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, “ conditioned as the law directs,” and on the twenty-fifth of March defendant gave a new bond, with the same surety, who again justified under oath. The second bond was immediately transferred by the sheriff to the plaintiff, and it was identical with the first in all respects except as to the date, the twenty-fifth of March instead of the thirteenth, [467]*467and the amount, fifteen hundred dollars instead of one thousand dollars.

The suit was contested, and final judgment was rendered in November, 1875, on which a writ of -fieri facias issued on the fourteenth of December, under which the sheriff seized and advertised for sale on the third of January, “ all the furniture and movable effects contained in the premises No. 57 Camp street.”

On the thirtieth pf December, before the sale, James Jackson filed his petition of intervention and third opposition, stating that he had let the premises to Patzelt, by lease in writing, for a term beginning the fifteenth of March, 1875, and ending the fifteenth of September, 1876, on account of which Patzelt was indebted to him in the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars for three months rent due and thirteen hundred and fifty dollars for nine months rent to become due, and he claimed a lien, privilege, and right of pledge on the movables seized, and prayed for judgment to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale about to be made by the sheriff.

The sheriff did not remove the property, but sold it on the premises, No. 57 Camp street, which Patzelt had occupied under the lease from Jackson from March, 1875, up to the sale, third of January, 1876.

The judgment of the court below dismissed the claim of Jackson so far as Conrad was concerned, but awarded him, as against Patzelt, the full amount sued for; and the ease comes up on Jackson’s appeal.

On the trial Jackson’s counsel took a bill of exceptions to the ruling of the court in refusing to allow him to prove that the surety on the release bond was well able to satisfy the obligation. The rights of the parties do not depend on the sufficiency of the surety. The surety justified, and, if the question were of any importance, as it is not, the legal presumption would be, in the absence of proof, that no change had taken place in his condition.

It was suggested in argument and in the printed brief of counsel for appellee that there had been laches and negligence on the part of Jackson in allowing Patzelt to become so largely indebted to him. If there were any force in this it would be somewhat diminished by the fact that Patzelt was in arrears to Conrad for twelve months rent, nine hundred and sixty dollars — seven months under the lease and five months under the reeonduction — while he owed Jackson for rent due four hundred and fifty dollars, for three months only.

Again, it is urged that Jackson had notice of Conrad’s rights; that the suit was notice; and, as part of the furniture was seized in the store let by Jackson to Patzelt, he must be presumed to have had actual knowledge.

So far as notice by suit is concerned, the correct rule seems to be this: where the title to property is in litigation, or where, there being no [468]*468dispute as to the' title, property is under seizure and remains in custocliam legis to enforce some right or lien or privilege upon it, the pendency of the suit is notice to this extent, that no one can acquire from or against one of the parties any right or title in or to the property to the prejudice of that which may bo awarded to the other party by the judgment. This is not because of any presumption of actual knowledge, but it is because the law, having laid hold on the property for the purposes of the suit, will not permit the ends of justice and the rights of those who have invoked its aid to be thwarted or defeated by transfers or changes or divestiture of title pendente lite. The reason of the rule ceases, and the rule itself is no longer applicable, when the law allows a bond to be substituted for the property, when the seizure is released, and when the law relinquishes its grasp on the thing itself, and permits the owner, or person claiming to bo the owner to resume the control and power of disposal of which he had been temporarily deprived by the seizure.

The fact that part of tho furniture had been seized in the store leased to Patzelt by Jackson does not create even a presumption that he had actual knowledge. Tho notes which Patzelt gave to Jackson for the rent were dated tho'seventeonth of February. The date seems to have been omitted in the lease, but tho term commenced on the fifteenth of March.

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Bluebook (online)
29 La. Ann. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conrad-v-patzelt-la-1877.