Dorsey v. Ashford

200 So. 176
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1941
DocketNo. 17018.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 200 So. 176 (Dorsey v. Ashford) 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
Dorsey v. Ashford, 200 So. 176 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Henry and Willie Dorsey, having secured against Mrs. Edna G. Ashford a final judgment for $254 with interest, costs, et cetera, found themselves unable to effect amicable collection of the amount due them under the judgment and provoked the issuance of a writ of fieri facias. The civil sheriff seized certain household furniture and effects. thought to be the property of the judgment debtor, Mrs. Ashford, and, on the same day, Mrs. Ashford’s sister, Mrs. Belle Giurard White, filed with the civil sheriff an affidavit in which she declared her ownership of the seized property. Thereupon the judgment creditors, Henry and Willie Dorsey, filed this rule against the civil sheriff and Mrs. White, alleging the statements made by Mrs. White in her affidavit to be untrue and charging that the pretended sale and transfer of the said effects by Mrs. Ashford to Mrs. White was a mere, sham and simulation.

After a trial, there was judgment dismissing the rule, and movers, Henry and Willie Dorsey, have appealed.

*177 In this court Mrs. White has filed an exception of no cause or right of action, attempting thereby to challenge the method of procedure adopted by the judgment creditors, the contention of exceptors being that the sale by Mrs. Ashford to her sister, Mrs. White, may be annulled only in a direct and independent proceeding brought against both parties to the sale and that the attack upon the affidavit of Mrs. White may not be made collaterally, by rule, in the main proceeding in which the judgment sought to be executed was obtained.

It is best to set forth chronologically the events which led up to the filing of this rule. In the original proceeding, Henry and Willie Dorsey sought judgment against Mrs. Ashford. In the district court there was judgment against them, but, on appeal to this court, we, on November 15, 1937, rendered a decree in their favor for $254 with interest and costs, as prayed for. 177 So. 88. Our decree having become final, it was, on January 31, 1938, recorded in the Civil District Court and was made the judgment of that court. On the next day, February 1, 1938, Mrs. Ashford and Mrs. White appeared before a notary public and executed what purported to be an act of sale. ’ In that document it was set forth that, for' a cash consideration of $400 paid at the time, Mrs. Ashford sold and transferred to Mrs. White all of the household effects which are involved in this rule. On March 18, 1938, when the writ of fieri fa-cias was issued, Mrs. White executed the above referred to affidavit, in which she claimed to be the owner of the said household effects. Prior to February 1, 1938, counsel for plaintiffs had written to counsel for Mrs. Ashford — who are not the present counsel — concerning the judgment and had indicated an intention to issue execution if Mrs. Ashford should fail to pay the judgment, and, on February 2nd, not knowing of the purported act of sale, counsel had written again, threatening execution.

There are many most suspicious circumstances which we shall later discuss. But first we find it necessary to dispose of the contention that there should have been an independent revocatory action to annul the sale.

The answer to that contention is very simple. In the first place, no attempt is made to annul a sale. It is contended that there was, in fact, no sale; that it was a mere sham — a simulation. And, in the second place, a complete answer to the proposition that there should have been an independent revocatory action is to.be found in Article 398 of our Code of Practice, for there it is provided that “* * * in all cases where personal property is seized upon mesne or final process, and is claimed by a third opponent, the seizing creditor may be allowed in his answer to the third opposition to allege and prove his title fraudulent, and the court shall try and decide the issue thus made”.

Directing attention for the moment to the article of the Code, from which we have just quoted, we find that the Supreme Court, in First National Bank of Ruston et al. v. Lagrone, 166 La. 626, 117 So. 741, 744, has decided the issue presented. There the court said:

“* * * As to the complaint that the proceeding was a collateral attack upon the dation en paiement, it is sufficient to say that, according to the proviso in article 398 of the Code of Practice, as amended by Act 46 of 1886, p. 65, if Mrs. Lagrone had opposed the seizure and sale of the stock, the seizing creditors would have had the right, in defense of her claim, to show that her title was simulated or fraudulent.”

In Southland Investment Company, Inc. v. Michel, 149 So. 177, 178, our brothers of the Second Circuit discussed the question fully and held that, where movable property is involved, there is no doubt of the application of Article 398 of the Code of Practice and that there need be no independent, direct revocatory action in such situation as exists here. There the court said:

“The lower court manifestly is in error in holding that a defendant in a third opposition wherein the title to personal property is involved cannot, by answer, tender the issue vel non of the fraudulent nature of the title set up by the third opponent. The right ‘to do this is clearly granted by article 398 of the Code of Practice, as amended by Act No. 46 of 1886. This article, before being amended, directed that, in cases where the opposition had for its object the setting aside of an order of seizure as having been effected on property not owned by the defendant, but on the contrary owned by the opponent, it must be done by petition and citation, as in ordinary suits, and considered as a separate demand from the suit in which the order was granted. The 1886 act adds the following:
*178 “ '* * * Provided, that in all cases where personal property is seized upon mesne or final process, and' is claimed by 'a third opponent, the seizing creditor may he allowed in his answer to the third opposition to allege and prove his title fraudulent, and the court shall try and decide the issue thus made/
“This amendment specifically provides that, where personal property is seized and claimed by third opponent, the seizing creditor has the right in his answer to allege and prove his title fraudulent, and the court is bound to try and decide that issue. This is exactly what the seizing creditor is seeking to do in this case. She alleges that the title asserted by the third opponent is fraudulent and the transfer to it a fraudulent preference as between the debtor’s creditors.
“The case referred to by the lower court was decided prior to the adoption of the 1886 amendment to article 398 of the Code of Practice (Act No. 46 of 1886). It does not reflect the law as it presently exists.
“In First Nat. Bank of Ruston et al. v. Lagrone, 166 La. 626, 117 So. 741, 742, it was held (quoting syllabus) that: ‘Under Code Prac. art. 398, as amended by Act No. 46 of 1886, where the wife of a judgment debtor opposes the seizure and sale of stock certificates standing in her name, the seizing creditors have a right, in defense of her claim, to show that her title is simulated or fraudulent.’
“The same doctrine was laid down in Lahitte v. Frere, Sheriff, 42 La.Ann. 864, 8 So. 598, and in Whitney-Central Nat. Bank v. Sinnott, 136 La. 95, 66 So.

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200 So. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorsey-v-ashford-lactapp-1941.