Elmore v. Bell
This text of 2 Rob. 484 (Elmore v. Bell) 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.
Opinion
The plaintiff is appellant from a judgment discharging a rule, which he had obtained against the defendant, to show cause why the sheriff should not pay him a sum of money, to wit, one thousand dollars, more or less, which remains in the hands of that officer after having satisfied the claim of Florance on an order of seizure and sale obtained against Morrison, and directing the money to be paid to the defendant. The plaintiff and appellant claimed the money in the hands of the sheriff, as the owner of the property sold on the order of seizure and sale( under a conveyance from Morrison, who had mortgaged it to Flo-rance, with the clause de non alienando. The sale of Morrison to the plaintiff was sous seing privé, executed in the State of Kentucky, and recorded in Mason county in that state, and afterwards in the office of the Register of Conveyances in the city of New [485]*485Orleans. It is dated the 27th of May, 1841, and the registry in New Orleans took place on the 30th of June following. The instrument sous, seing privé was acknowledged by the vendor before a notary public in the State of Kentucky.
The defendant claimed the money on the following grounds : He had attached the land sold by the sheriff at the suit of Flo-rance, in an action instituted by himself against Morrison, in which he obtained a judgment, and iook out an execution, which was levied on the money in the hands of the sheriff, now claimed by himself in the rule. It is objected that the sheriff first returned that his execution had been levied on the 30th of June, 1841; and that afterwards he procured an amendment of the return, whereby the execution appears to have been levied on the 29th. That according to the first return, he was entitled to no priority over the present plaintiff and appellant, who recorded his title in the office of the Register of Conveyances, on the day the execution was levied ; and that the court erroneously permitted an amendment which gave to the defendant and appellee a priority over his adversary. It was farther objected, that the return of the execution was made and amended by one, who had ceased to be a deputy sheriff when he made the amendment. The parish judge sustained these objections.
v The defendant and appellee has clearly shown his right, by the [486]*486levy of his execution against Morrison, to the money in the sheriff’s hands.
Judgment affirmed.
He dismissed the rule, however, on .other grounds, unnecessary to be noticed.
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2 Rob. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elmore-v-bell-la-1842.