Estate of Sassinot v. Demourelle

1 La. App. 160, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 69
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1924
DocketNo. 9846
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 La. App. 160 (Estate of Sassinot v. Demourelle) 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
Estate of Sassinot v. Demourelle, 1 La. App. 160, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 69 (La. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

STATEMENT OF FACTS.

BELL, J.

This case is before the court on appellee’s timely motions to dismiss the appeal herein taken for the following reasons:

1. That said appeal has been taken more than ten days from the rendition of the judgment, in contravention to the provisions of Act 128 of 1921.

2. That appellant has acquiesced in the judgment from which he has appealed devolutively.

If the first of these grounds for dismissal be maintained, the second may be disregarded.

The intricate facts pertaining to the issues raised under the motions to dismiss we find to be as follows:

The Estate of I,. R. Sassinot sued, in this present proceeding, A. S. Demourelle, on a note for One Hundred and Ninety-five and 80/100 Dollars ($195.80), with interest and attorney’s fees. After service upon Demourelle, judgment was obtained against him by default. In executing this judgment, Sassinot caused to be seized all of the right, title and interest of Demourelle in the suit entitled Demourelle vs. Gussoni, No. 93,018 of the docket of the First City Court of New Orleans. On May 21, 1924, J. Olin Chamberlain, appellant in the proceeding now .before us,, claiming to own [161]*161an. assignment from Demourelle of the latter’s rights in said judgment, prayed for and obtained an injunction stopping the sale of the judgment seized.

On May 23, 1924, the Estate of Sassinot, in answering the petition for injunction, pleaded certain reasons for dismissal of the. injunction, which need not be here noted. On the same day, by the same party, a motion by rule for recall of the injunction was filed upon the following grounds:

1. That the surety on the injunction bond was insufficient.

2. That the petition for injunction disclosed no right or cause of action.

Mover accordingly prayed to recover damages as for attorney’s fees to the extent of twenty per cent, on the value of the judgment in the proceedings under which execution had issued, to-wit: twenty per cent, on $235.01, or the sum of $47.00.

The first of the above exceptions does not appear by the record to have been passed upon by the trial court.

On June 11, 1924, the judgment now appealed from, and of which Chamberlain seems not to have been notified, was rendered as follows:

“JUDGMENT ON RULE TO DISSOLVE INJUNCTION.
“This matter' having been argued, submitted and taken under advisement by the court, for the reasons this day orally assigned,
“It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the rule filed herein by the Estate of Louis R. Sassinot to dissolve the injunction herein issued at the instance of J. Olin Chamberlain, be and it is hereby made absolute, and accordingly said injunction be and it is hereby dissolved, at the costs of the said J. Olin Chamberlain, with twenty per cent, damages on $235.01, or Forty-seven Dollars ($47.00), in solido, against J. Olin Chamberlain and Clancy A. Latham, surety on the injunction bond, in solido.”

On June 18, 1924, another judgment on the second of the above exceptions was rendered as follows:

“The exception of no cause of action submitted to the court and taken under advisement. The court consider the exception to be well taken.
“It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the exception of no cause of action filed by the defendant herein, Estate of Louis R. Sassinot, on May 23, 1924, be maintained, dismissing the suit of J. Olin Chamberlain as of non-suit. J. Olin Chamberlain to pay costs of suit.”

On September 23, 1924, Chamberlain filed a new petition for injunction on the same allegations as those set out in the first injunction proceeding and on additional allegations.

On September 26, 1924, a devolutive appeal from the judgment of June 11, 1924, was granted, on motion of J. Olin Chamberlain, returnable to this court on October 6, 1924. '

Appellee, Estate of L. R. Sassinot, has moved the dismissal of this appeal in two separate motions, wherein it is set forth as grounds for the dismissal, first, that the amount involved is over one hundred dollars, and that this fact is so, whether the judgment in this case be taken as a basis, or whether the judgment obtained by Demourelle against Gussoni, subsequently assigned to Chamberlain, be taken as a basis. It is, therefore, urged that inasmuch as the udgment appealed from involves an amount >ver one hundred dollars and not more than three hundred dollars, Act No. 128 of the General Assembly (Extra Session) of 1921 will govern, and that consequently the appeal is taken too late.

The second motion alleges acquiescence as the ground for dismissal.

Appellant, Chamberlain, answers the motions to dismiss by denying that he acquiesced in the judgment of June 11, 1924, [162]*162especially that part of the judgment awarding damages to appellee in the sum of $47.00. He further answers, denying that the devolutive appeal as herein taken has been taken too late. By way of exception, appellant pleads that neither the motion to dismiss on the ground that the appeal has been taken beyond the time allowed under Act 128 of 1921, nor the motion to dismiss on the ground of acquiescence, discloses any right or cause of action. It is further pleaded by way of exception that Act 128 of 1921 is violative of Article III, Section 16, and Article IV, Section 4, of the Constitution of 1921.

OPINION.

In considering the first motion herein filed for dismissal of this appeal, in which it is contended by mover or appellee, that the appeal has been taken too late, within the provisions of Act 128 of 1921, it is necessary at the outset to determine whether the appeal herein taken is from a judgment exceeding one hundred dollars and not more than three hundred dollars.

The judgment of June 11, 1924, dismisses the injunction proceedings which sought to enjoin the seizure of the assigned judgment in the case of Demourelle vs. Gussoni. The value of this assigned judgment, at the time of the seizure, amounted to $132.00, and we are of the opinion that the value of this seized judgment at the time of the seizure, as well as at the time of the injunction proceedings herein filed, determines the appellate jurisdiction of this court over the questions now raised by the motions to dismiss the appeal. Our conclusions on this point are based upon the following authorities :

Testart vs. Belot, 32 Ann. 604.
Meyer, Weis & Co. vs. Logan et al., 33 La. Ann. 1055.
Wickham & Pendleton vs. Nalty, 42 Ann. 423.
Causin vs. St. Tammany Bank and Trust Co., 146 La. 396.

In the first of the above cited authorities, Testart vs. Belot, the following ruling was made on motion to dismiss appeal:

“It is well settled that, where a third person enjoins the seizure under writs of fi-fa or seizure and sale issued against another, on the ground that the property belongs to him, the matter in dispute is the property and the ownership thereof, and the right to appeal is regulated by the value thereof.”

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1 La. App. 160, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-sassinot-v-demourelle-lactapp-1924.