Creston Lumber Co. v. Estate of Cockerham

2 La. App. 29, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 340
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 1925
DocketNo. 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 La. App. 29 (Creston Lumber Co. v. Estate of Cockerham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creston Lumber Co. v. Estate of Cockerham, 2 La. App. 29, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 340 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

This suit was brought by plaintiff on February 9, 1923. It alleges that it is the owner of certain cypress timber which it purchased from the Estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr., on December 6, 1922, at Luella, Louisiana, which logs and timber are alleged to be worth $400.00.

Plaintiff alleges that it paid cash for said logs and that delivery thereof was made at the moment of sale; that said logs were left at the railroad station at Luella, Louisiana, for shipment, where they are at this time; and that the estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr., or some one unknown to petitioner is claiming the ownership of [30]*30the said logs and is seeking to deprive plaintiff of its ownership.

Plaintiff asked for and was granted a writ of sequestration under which the logs were seized by the sheriff.

The defendant, the Estate of J. W. Cockerhám, Jr., made no appearance in the case; but on February 19, 1923, Foster & Glassell Company, Limited, intervened in the suit claiming ownership of the said timber by virtue of its purchase through a judicial sale in the suit of Foster & Glassell Company, Limited, versus Mrs. Luella. Cockerham and John H. Cockerham, joint executors of the Estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr.

Intervenor alleges that it obtained judgment against said executors, had the same property inscribed in the mortgage records of the parish, which recordation, it is alleged, operated as a judicial mortgage on the land on which said timber grew, and that they procured the issuance of a writ of fieri facias under said judgment and had the said timber, which they allege was still the property of the Estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr., seized, advertised and sold, it becoming the purchaser.

And it especially denies that plaintiff has any valid title to said timber—

“There never having been any valid sale and delivery of the same as against the rights of your petitioner.”

And it especially avers that it is the owner of said timber.

In this court intervenor, appellee, has moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground—

“That the instrument purporting to be an appeal bond is not for any amount but for a blank amount and the court is without authority to speculate as to what amount the principal and surety intended to bind themselves for or whether they intended to bind themselves in any amount whatever.”

ON MOTION TO DISMISS.

The appeal bond found in the record is signed by the Crestón Lumber Company as principal and by D. W. Breazeale as surety and is properly filled out, except for the amount, which is left blank.

Appellee moves to dismiss the appeal on that account.

Act No. 112 of 1916, is an act to regulate the form and effect of bonds furnished in all judicial proceedings and—

“To provide for the correction of errors, inaccuracies and omissions in such bonds.”

Section 2 of the Act provides—

“That whenever any litigant in this state shall have furnished in connection with any judicial proceeding a bond and surety, and the said bond is insufficient in amount or incorrect by reason of errors or omissions therein, such litigant shall have the right to correct such insufficiency, error or omission in the court of original jurisdiction * * * .”

Section 3 of the Act provides that the adverse party or any party in interest who claims that the bond given in such case is insufficient as to form or substance, etc., must have a notice to that effect served by an officer, and the party who furnished the bond shall have two days in which to correct the error or furnish new or additional bond.

Section 8 provides that the provisions of the act shall apply to bonds in cases of appeal; and Section 9 reads as follows:

“That no appeal shall be dismissed, on account of any . error in the amount of the bond or. for any inaccuracy or omission in the bond until the party furnishing such bond shall have failed to correct the error * * * as herein above provided.”

If the appellee in this case desired that the appeal bond be corrected, it should have served proper notice on the appellant; otherwise the appeal will not be dismissed, [31]*31under the plain provisions of the cited and quoted act.

See—

Lampton Realty Co. vs. Kerr, 154 La. 843, 98 South. 266.

Succession of Huxen, 149 La. 62, 88 South. 687.

Bilich vs. Mathe, 149 La. 484, 89 South. 628.

ON THE MERITS.

There is no- appearance in the suit by way of answer by the Estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr.

John H. Cockerham, who is co-executor of the said Estate with his mother, Mrs. Luella Cockerham, was called as a witness on behalf of plaintiff, the Crestón Lumber Company.

He testified that, acting as executor of the estate, he had sold the timber involved in this suit to the Crestón Lumber Company, plaintiff herein, and that the purchaser had paid the price thereof, and, in substance, that he considered the timber the property of the plaintiff.

Therefore the only question before us is, whether the timber is owned by plaintiff or the intervenor; for, as stated, the defendant makes no claim to the ownership of the property but, on the contrary, one of the two executors appears as a witness and testifies that the property was sold to the plaintiff and that the estate has no further interest therein.

The undisputed facts are, that the timber involved grew on land belonging to the Estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr.; that the executors of this estate had the timber cut and removed to the railroad right of way at Luella in the months of July and August, 1922, in order that the same might be shipped when sold; that on December 6, 1922, John H. Cockerham, one of the executors of the said estate, representing the estate and with the concurrence of his mother, the other executor, sold said timber to the Crestón Lumber Company for $370.00, cash, and delivered the same to the purchaser on the railroad right of way at Luella, where said timber was at the time; of the sale; that the purchaser took possession of said timber by marking and branding the same; that the purchaser made arrangements with said John H. Cockerham to load said timber on the cars, for which service Cockerham was to be paid, as soon as cars could be obtained; and that timber was not shipped out because cars could not be obtained; and that subsequent thereto, on January 5, 1925, the intervenor procured the issuance of a writ of fieri facias under its judgment against Mrs. Luella Cockerham and John H. Cockerham as joint executors of the Estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr., and that on the same day the sheriff seized under said writ the said timber as the property of the Estate of J. W. ‘ Cockerham, Jr., and advertised and sold the same to intervenor, Foster & Glassell Co. Ltd., for the sum of $100.00, which amount, after deducting costs, was credited on the writ.

It will therefore be seen that the plaintiff claims ownership' of the timber and logs in this suit by virtue of its purchase thereof from the executors of the Estate of J. W. Cockerham, Jr., on December 6, 1922, and that the intervenor claims the same by virtue of its purchase of the same at sheriff’s sale under a writ of fieri facias issued in the suit of Foster & Glassell Co., Ltd., against the Estate of J. W.

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Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 29, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creston-lumber-co-v-estate-of-cockerham-lactapp-1925.