Eastin v. Dugat

4 La. 397
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 15, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 La. 397 (Eastin v. Dugat) 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
Eastin v. Dugat, 4 La. 397 (La. 1832).

Opinion

Martin, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petitioner states, that during the pendency of a suit brought by Dugat against Eastin, a judgement creditor of the former, had his claim against Eastin, which was the object of the suit, sold under a fieri facias, and it was purchased by Mayfield, who sold it to Eastin. On the second of May last, and on the fourth of the same month, Eastin not having pleaded this purchase, Dugat recovered judgement against him, and soon after sued out an execution. On this, Eastin procured an injunction, alleging that the claim of Dugat, on which judgement had been obtained, had been extinguished by confusion, Eastin, who was the debtor, having since the purchase become the creditor of it. Dugat obtained the dissolution of the injunction, and Eastin appealed.

The appellee has contended, jhat the injunction was improperly dissolved, as at the time of the trial of the suit in which he obtained the judgement, the appellant was, from his own showing, possessed of the means, if they really existed, of preventing a judgement against himself, and therefore, could not afterwards resort to these means the execution of the judgement. 1 Mar. N. S.'

A defendant must set forth in his answejjKlUMg'fiaeans - defence, otherwise he cannot avail himself^or then wards. C. Pr. 327.

An injunction is a remedial writ and cant unless the party applying for it shows he is ■ [400]*400remedy, and gives some different reason why he cannot be relieved otherwise. Harrison’s Chan. p. 171.

After the defendant has answered, if he becomes the owner of the claims on which suit is pending against him, he may amend his answer and plead confusion of claims; and if he had pleaded any other matter inconsistentwith the general is.sue, it would have been a waiver of that plea only. Amendments are admissible at any stage of the cause previous to trial, and will always be admitted when they promote justice. But if the defendant omits to plead confusion and lets judgement go, the doctrine of res judicata doesnotapply. He does not thereby lose the benefit of a defence by not profiting by it in time.

It is a settled practice in those states of the Union where law and equity courts are separated, and in England, that a bill for an injunction will not be maintained in chancery, unless the party shows he could not defend himself at law. 1 Hen. & Mun. 453. 4 Ibid. 423. The Code of Practice and the Acts of the Legislature of 1826, p. 170, § 9, and 1828, p.150, § 2, prescribe the cases in which injunctions may issue, and the present is not one of them. The party might have amended his answer in the original suit, and have had the benefit of the plea of confusion, if it existed; and if he had pleaded any matter inconsistent with the general issue, it would have been a waiver of that plea only. Amendments are admissible at any stage of the cause previous to the trial, and will always be admitted when they promote its justice.

The doctrine of res judicata is not applicable to the present case. The question is not whether the plaintiff has not lost the right of having the benefit of a defence he says he has, by not profiting it in time.

It is true that in the two cases cited from the new series, we held that an injunction could not be obtained to stay the execution of a judgement on the allegation of facts which might have been pleaded before it, and would have prevented its being rendered.

An examination of these cases will show they were decided on principles not applicable to the present.

Dessesart had obtained a judgement in the District Court against Lafon’s executors. They obtained an injunction on the ground that the active debts of the testator left nothing for the payment of his legacies. The injunction was dissolved because relief was sought by an attempt to set aside the judgement, by preventing its execution, on the allegation that it had decided the legacy was to be recovered from the executors, while it ought to have decided that it was not, they having no iunds of the estate applicable to the payment of legacies. We supported the judgement of dissolution, and [401]*401said that if the original judgement was correct, it ought to be executed; if not, it ought to he by one of the means pointed out by law, i. e. by an appeal or the action of nullity. 1 Mar. N. S. 71.

McMicken obtained judgement against Monroe and others, as sureties of a curator. Monroe obtained an injunction, on the ground that the curator had failed, but on the day of his failure the succession was indebted in a large sum to a firm of which the curator was a member, and that the sureties were then subrogated to the curator’s claims against the succession, and that the dividend to which they were entitled, was more than sufficient to satisfy the judgement. There were some other grounds, but this was the prominent one.

We again supported the judgement of dissolution, thinking that the time to have presented these matters of defence was before judgement. It is clear that in this, as in the former case, the party sought to avoid the judgement by preventing its execution, without a resort to any legal means pointed out by law to reverse or annul it. 8 Ibid. 513.

The present case is widely different from either of the above, in both of which the judgement was alleged to have allowed to the plaintiff what he was not entitled to receive.

In the present case, the facts presented show, that Dugat was the creditor of Eastin for the sum recovered. But that before judgement the claim had been seized and sold by a creditor of Dugat and finally had become the property of Eastin. After the sale of the claim, the purchaser of it might have intervened and prayed to he admitted as a plaintiff, or considering him as his transferree, suffered him to proceed to judgement. Eastin, had he not been the purchaser, might have pleaded the assignment, had divested the plaintiff of his interest, and if he had not formal notice of the assignment, and had wished to have the extent of his debt legally ascertained, considered Dugat as the trustee of the purchaser and suffered him to proceed to judgement.

If, afterwards, Dugat had sought to avail himself of the judgement to the injury of the purchaser, by suing out exe[402]*402cution, he might have been defeated, and his execution set aside, on the allegation and proof of the transfer. He could not have complained of an injunction like the plaintiffs in the preceding cases, as avoiding the judgement by preventing his reaping the benefit of it by other means than those pointed out by law; because the law authorizes a court to set aside an execution irregularly issued; and the transferor of a claim cannot regularly issue an execution on a judgement obtained thereon, even in his own name, to the injury of the transferree from whom he has received the price of the claim.

confusion "of claims and preventjudgement, or if the cee'ds to judgepTe^Tcution! it may be per-joined. The defendant has two remedies, ei- ,vm noUicfdisthefectsof*the case show that on its dissolution the party ateíy be^ntitied to another on an application in another form.

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Bluebook (online)
4 La. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastin-v-dugat-la-1832.