Cox v. Robinson

2 Rob. 313
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Rob. 313 (Cox v. Robinson) 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
Cox v. Robinson, 2 Rob. 313 (La. 1842).

Opinion

CaRland, J.

The petition alleges that in April, 1830, the defendant Robinson commenced a suit by attachment in the District Court of the First District, against the plaintiff, and one Joshua Cox, to recover about $4600 with interest, which he alleged to be due to him on a promissory note executed by Joshua Cox and the present plaintiff, by virtue of which writ fourteen slaves belonging to the plaintiff were seized ; that for the purpose of obtaining the writ of attachment, the defendant Robinson entered into bond, and gave Nathan Morse as his security, for the sum of $7000, conditioned that they would jointly and severally pay all such damage as the defendants in the attachment suit should suffer, in case the attachment should prove to have been wrongfully sued out.

It is further alleged, that sometime subsequent to the filing of the first petition, Robinson presented a supplemental petition, in which he claimed of the plaintiff and Joshua Cox, the sum of $5903 87 with interest and costs, which, was prayed to be satisfied out of the slaves attached; and that in order further to secure and indemnify the petitioner and Joshua Cox, Robinson, with N. [314]*314& J. Dick & Co., entered into another bond, in the 'usual form, for $9000, conditioned to pay all costs and damages which might be sustained by the defendants in the attachment, in case it should be wrongfully sued out.

The petitioner represents that the said attachment was wrongfully sued out, and that, in April, 1834, Robinson was nonsuited on his original and supplemental petitions.

The plaintiff further represents that in consequence of the wrongful suing out of said attachment he has suffered damage to the amount of $30,000. The said damage is alleged to have been caused by the wrongful seizure and detention of the fourteen slaves, whereby the plaintiff was “ deprived of his property and of the services and wages of said slaves,” since the day of April, 1830. He avers that he has sustained damage to the amount of $10,000, in the loss of their services and wages, besides the de-'prival of his property, the expenses and charges accrued in defending the suit, the time necessarily consumed and the vexation ^caused by it, amounting in the whole to $30,000, which the defendants refuse to pay. After the ordinary prayer for a citation, &c., the plaintiff asks that the defendants may, jointly and severally, be decreed to pay the said sum of $30,000, and that all such further and other relief may be had as the nature of the case shall require.”

It is not necessary to notice the answers of the widow and heir of Nathan Morse, as they are not appellants from the judgment against them ; nor that of N. & J. Dick & Co., as the proceedings against them were discontinued by the plaintiff previous to the trial.

The answer of the defendant Robinson, denies that the plaintiff has sustained any damage as alleged. He avers that his attachment was issued in good faith and for a debt justly due, and only intended to secure the debt in a lawful manner ; that it was discontinued for technical causes and reasons, not in any manner affecting the merits of the case ; that another attachment was issued for the same debt, immediately after the dissolution of the first, which is still pending, on which ample security is given, and that the plaintiff must look for final indemnity to the bond given in that case.

[315]*315On the trial it was proved that, sometime in the year 1825, the defendant Robinson became possessed by endorsement of a promissory note given by Joshua Cox and Bartley Cox to one Powell, for about the sum of $4600. In September,- 1826, Robinson commenced a suit on this note in Madison county in the State of Alabama, against both the drawers. They made a defence to the action, Joshua Cox being the most active and principal defendant. In Api'il, 1830, Robinson, who is a non-resident of the State, meeting with the plaintiff in New Orleans, where he had the slaves, who were attached, for sale, commenced a suit against him, and had his property seized, without saying any thing about the suit which had been pending in Alabama for several years previously. The defendant, at different times, asked to see the notes or instrument of writing on which this demand was founded, before filing his answer; but it was not produced, although twice ordered by the court. Jn December, 1830, the defendant Robinson filed his supplemental petition, in which he stated the fact that he had, before issuing the attachment, commenced a suit in Alabama, and further stated that he had since obtained a judgment on the note, inclusive of principal and interest, amounting to $5903 87 and costs, and prayed for a judgment for that sum, with interest and costs, to be paid out of the property attached. Pie made affidavit to the justice of the claim, and produced a record from the Circuit Court of Madison county, Alabama, to sustain his demand, but did not state, what was the fact, that Joshua and Bartley Cox had taken out a writ of error, under which the case was then pending in the Supreme Court of Alabama.- Sometime after the filing of this supplemental petition, the Supreme Court of Alabama reversed the decision of the Circuit Court of Madison county in favor of Robinson, and remanded the cause for a new trial; whereupon Robinson voluntarily dismissed his suit in that court, and upon the production here of the record from the Supreme Court of Alabama, he was nonsuited, having failed to appear and prosecute the suit. It was further shown, that when the slaves were attached in April, 1830, Bartley Cox consented that they should remain in the possession of Robinson, and he at once took possession of them, and has had them ever since. Parol evidence was given of the value of the slaves and of their services. The jury found a verdict for the [316]*316plaintiff, for “ six hundred dollars as naked damages for wrongfully suing out the attachment, and, for the value of the fourteen slaves including all interest, &c. to date, the sum of eleven thousand three hundred dollars” against Robinson, and for one hundred dollars against the heirs of Morse ; upon which, after an ineffectual attempt to obtain a new trial, the defendant Robinson appealed.

In consequence of the jury finding the sum of $11,300 as the value of the slaves, and saying nothing about their services or hire, the question has been much discussed at the bar, whether the value of the slaves was claimed either by the allegations or the prayer of the petition. The verdict of a jury ought always to respond to the issues made by the pleadings, and we always, except in hard cases, give as liberal an application of the principle as we can, so as to maintain the verdict and do justice between the parties.

The counsel for the appellant contends most strenuously, that he was surprised on the trial by the attempt, on the part of the plaintiff, to prove the value of the slaves, as the allegations of the petition did not inform him that such was the character of the demand, nor was any such thing prayed for; that, therefore, he did not come prepared with his proof on that part of the case, and that injustice has been done to him in consequence of this course of proceeding.- We have looked carefully to the allegations in this petition, not with a view to criticise them, as in a hard case, but to ascertain what is really claimed.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Rob. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-robinson-la-1842.