Evans v. Hamner

24 So. 2d 164, 1944 La. App. LEXIS 65
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 28, 1944
DocketNo. 6793.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 164 (Evans v. Hamner) 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
Evans v. Hamner, 24 So. 2d 164, 1944 La. App. LEXIS 65 (La. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

On June 21, 1920, Hamner Company obtained a judgment against plaintiff in this case and L.C. Crawley on a note claimed by Hamner Company to be a confession of judgment note. This judgment was acquired *Page 165 by L. Boyd Hamner at receiver's sale on January 25, 1929. In order to keep the judgment alive and in full force, L. Boyd Hamner filed a suit on June 17, 1930 to revive said judgment and continue it in full force and effect for an additional ten years. Service was made on defendant, the plaintiff herein, and L.C. Crawley. No further action was taken in the case until March 25, 1938, when a preliminary default was entered and confirmed on March 29, 1938.

In 1943 L. Boyd Hamner caused a writ of fieri facias to issue under the judgment rendered March 29, 1938 and the Sheriff of Bienville Parish seized certain movable property belonging to Benie Evans, plaintiff herein. After the seizure of his property, Benie Evans filed the present suit to enjoin L. Boyd Hamner and the Sheriff from selling his property to satisfy said judgment, attacking the validity of the judgment on many grounds and pleading the prescription of ten years against the original judgment.

Plaintiff's contentions are set out in his brief as follows:

This is a suit brought by the Plaintiff-Appellee, Benie Evans, against Defendant-Appellant, L. Boyd Hamner, the record transferee of Hamner Company, Ltd., alleging that a writ of fieri facias and a seizure under the writ of plaintiff's property is null, void and of no effect for the reason that a judgment attempted to be revived in suit No. 9250 on the Docket of the Second District Court in and for Bienville Parish was null, void and of no effect in that the original judgment in suit No. 5920 on the docket of said Court, and sought to be revived in suit No. 9250 was null, void and of no effect for the reason that it was attempted to be rendered without service and citation upon the plaintiff, and without giving him an opportunity to appear and defend said suit, and upon a null and void attempted confession of judgment and waiver of citation made in contravention of Article 91 of the Constitutions of 1898 and 1913 in that the attempted waiver of citation and confession of judgment was attempted to be made upon February 14, 1920, upon a debt not then due, but due at some future date and time, and in violation of a prohibitory law, and which was due on October 15, 1920.

"In the alternative, that the attempted revival of said judgment is null, void and of no effect for the reason that the petition of revival was filed on June 17, 1930, and of which no personal service was made upon plaintiff and he never did know anything about any suit of revival pending against him until after he was served with the notice of seizure on September 1, 1943, and was later informed by his attorney that such suit had been filed; that after the suit No. 9250 (suit of revival) was filed and the proceedings had therein on June 17, 1930, it lay dormant until March 22, 1938, for a period far in excess of five years, when the names of Barnette Phelps were enrolled as attorneys for the said L.B. Hamner, and that subsequently, on March 25, 1938, a default was entered, and on March 29, 1938, when judgment was rendered confirming the default, and that accordingly the said judgment of revival should be set aside, avoided and decreed to be null, void and of no effect, the said L.B. Hamner having abandoned his demand by the elapse of more than five years without any action being taken by him, and there being nothing to render a valid judgment upon, and that consequently the said original judgment in said suit No. 5290 is prescribed by the prescription of ten years, which abandonment is five years, and the prescription of ten years was specially plead.

"Plaintiff further alleged that he had no opportunity prior to the rendition of the pretended judgment of revival on March 29, 1938, to file any motion or proceedings to have the said suit No. 9250 dismissed for lack and failure of prosecution for a period of more than five years for the reason that he had no knowledge whatsoever of the pendency of the said suit, no citation having been served upon him, and he knowing of no pretended domiciliary service, and that not even a notice of lis pendens was filed in the records of Bienville Parish, Louisiana, to notify the public or himself of the pendency of the suit, and that the said original judgment was not even reinscribed in the mortgage records of Bienville Parish, Louisiana.

"He alleged further in the alternative, that the corn, fodder, hay, cotton seed and other crops gathered and ungathered by him upon what is known as the Jack Johnson Place and Thurmond Place are all necessary for him and are necessary supplies for him in carrying on his farming operations for the current year, he having *Page 166 a wife and/or family dependent upon him for support and being a farmer.

"By supplemental and amended petition he further alleged in the alternative that if for any reason the Court did not see fit to grant him the relief sought in Paragraph 4 and in the alternative in Paragraphs 5 and 6 of his original petition, then that the said judgment of revival is null, void and of no effect for the reason that a preliminary default was entered on Friday, March 25, 1938, and that before the elapse of two clear legal delays the said preliminary default was attempted to be confirmed and final judgment attempted to be rendered on Tuesday, March 29, 1938, contrary to the laws of the State of Louisiana, and especially Article 312 of the Code of Practice of Louisiana.

"After the filing of the suit all the property seized was released with the exception of the cotton and cotton seed."

Defendant herein answered denying all material allegations of plaintiff's petition and by supplemental answer set up the following defenses:

"6A. Further answering, defendant alleges that the suit entitled 'L.B. Hamner v. Bennie Evans et al', No. 9250 on the Docket of this Court for the revival of the judgment rendered in suit entitled 'Hamner Company v. Bennie Evans et al', No. 5290 on the Docket of this Court, was placed in the hands of his attorney, Bertram F. Barnette, to take the necessary legal action to have said judgment revived; that in the fall of 1930 the said Bertram F. Barnette informed his Agent, W.L. Hamner of Gibsland, Louisiana, that the suit had been filed and judgment rendered reviving the above mentioned judgment.

"6B. Further answering, defendant alleges that his said attorney, Bertram F. Barnette, died on the 28th day of November, 1936, and your defendant, through his agent, W.L. Hamner, employed Wm. B. Phelps, attorney at law, to take over and handle his legal business and his said Agent and attorney in checking through the files in his former attorney's office discovered that the judgment reviving the judgment hereinabove mentioned had never been rendered, which was the first knowledge that your defendant or his Agent had that the said judgment had not been revived, and that defendant and his Agent, W.L. Hamner, used due diligence in this matter and the only reason the same was not attended to was because of the neglect of his attorney, Bertram F. Barnette."

The lower court rendered judgment for plaintiff sustaining the plea of abandonment and held that Saturday was a legal holiday and that the judgment rendered March 29, 1938 was null and void. The judgment for the above reasons enjoined the defendant Hamner and the Sheriff from selling the property of plaintiff which had been seized. Defendant is now prosecuting this appeal.

In this court plaintiff has abandoned all other attacks made on the judgment except the two sustained by the lower court.

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Related

LeBlanc v. Thibodaux
162 So. 2d 753 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
Jones v. Desadier
46 So. 2d 664 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1950)
Evans v. Hamner
24 So. 2d 814 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 164, 1944 La. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-hamner-lactapp-1944.