Dabbs v. Hemken

3 Rob. 123
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 3 Rob. 123 (Dabbs v. Hemken) 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
Dabbs v. Hemken, 3 Rob. 123 (La. 1842).

Opinion

Garland J.

The plaintiff avers that Stevens, the sheriff of the parish of Ouachita, had levied on certain property under two executions in favor of Hemken, and was about to sell it contrary to law. He alleges :

First. That the sheriff refused to seize several tracts of land in the parish when pointed out to him by the present plaintiff, but insisted on taking other property, moveable and immoveable, and advertised it for sale.

Second. That the sheriff did not wait three days before advertising the property for sale.

Third. That the sheriff has not three executions in favor of Hemken, but only two.

Fourth. That the property first seized was sufficient to satisfy [124]*124the executions, and the seizure of more was illegal and oppressive, and.unnecessary to pay the debts.

Fifth. That he has a judgment in the Parish Court against Hemken, which he is entitled to compensate against one of the' judgments on which execution had issued.

Sixth. That the sheriff had no right to make an additional seizure of property, without first calling on the petitioner, and giving him notice; and that seizing contrary to his will, is illegal.

Seventh. That the sheriff has advertised the property for sale for cash, whereby he will be deprived of the benefit of appraise .ment.

He prays for an injunction, and judgment, in solido, for $3000 damages, against Hemken and the sheriff.

The property seized, consists of two houses and lots in the town of Monroe, a slave, and a twelve months’ bond given to Dabbs for about $650, with interest.

The defendants answer, that Dabbs did not, at the time the seizure was made, point out the land mentioned in the petition ; that he has no right or title to it; and they deny, generally, all the allegations of the petition. They pray for a dissolution of the injunction, and for damages against Dabbs, and his sureties on the bond.

George W. Copley then presented a petition of intervention, setting up a title in himself to the twelve months’ bond, under a transfer made before the seizure, and asking a judgment for it, and $500 damages. This intervention the judge would not permit to be filed, on the ground, that it was an indirect mode of obtaining an injunction, without an affidavit, or giving bond and security, to. which opinion Copley excepted. This was at the October term of the court in 1841, and the intervenor did not then appeal from the judgment against him.

At the April term, 1842, the cause came on for trial, when the plaintiff called on Stevens, the sheriff, to testify in the case. This was objected to, as he was a party to the suit, and a heavy claim made against him for damages. The plaintiff did not offer to release him, but offered to file an amended petition, to which he attached certain interrogatories, the purpose of which was to learn from the sheriff whether he (Dabbs) did not, when called on, point’ [125]*125out the land mentioned, and show a patent for it. The sheriff was then in court. This the court rejected as being offered too late ; the judge stating in the bill of exceptions, which was tendered and signed, that the petition was offered after the trial had begun, and the plaintiff had introduced a considerable portion of his testimony.

The injunction was dissolved, and a judgment for interest and damages given against Dabbs, and Copley and Jessup, his sureties, from which judgment they all have appealed.

In this court, Copley urges, that the court erred in rejecting his petition of intervention, and insists upon his bill of exceptions. The counsel for the defendants argues that, we cannot notice it, as Copley is not an appellant from the judgment refusing to receive it. The latter contends that he is, and refers us to the petition of appeal and bond to sustain him. In the former, Dabbs, Copley, and Jessup join, and pray for an appeal from a final judgment rendered against them at the term of the court in April, 1842. In the bond, they all bind themselves as principals, and state that they have appealed from a final judgment rendered against them, on the 30th of April, 1842. Not a word is mentioned either in the petition of appeal, or bond, about the intervention, or judgment rejecting it, in October, 1841. The claims of Copley, as set forth in his petition, are adverse to the interests of both Dabbs and Hemlten, and it would be no more than right, if it were his intention to appeal, and thereby affect the rights of either, that he should give bond and security to indemnify them. The bond filed in no manner affords such indemnity.

From all the circumstances, we are bound to conclude that Copley is not an appellant from the judgment rendered against him, on his intervention, and cannot be heard in support of it now.

In the inferior court, the plaintiff offered an amended petition, praying that his cause might be tried by a jury. This was refused, and the plaintiff excepted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Rob. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dabbs-v-hemken-la-1842.