First Nat. Bank v. Lagrone

114 So. 832, 164 La. 907, 1927 La. LEXIS 1838
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1927
DocketNo. 28681.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 114 So. 832 (First Nat. Bank v. Lagrone) 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
First Nat. Bank v. Lagrone, 114 So. 832, 164 La. 907, 1927 La. LEXIS 1838 (La. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The question presented in this application is whether a judgment debtor has the right to a suspensive appeal from a judgment ordering, his property to be sold by the sheriff, which had been seized in the hands of a third party under fi. fa. issued on the judgment.

The plaintiff bank obtained a judgment against the defendant Lagrone in the district court of Lincoln parish, and one in the district court of Grant parish, the two judgments aggregating the sum of $3,000, plus interest and attorney fees.

Having caused execution to be issued on the two judgments, the plaintiff filed a petition in the district court of Caddo parish, citing Mrs. Sarah Edenborn, widow of the late William Edenborn, who had been recognized -as his sole heir, as a party garnishee and pro *909 pounding to her the usual questions addressed to a garnishee.

In answer to the questions, Mrs. Edenborn said that she was not indebted to Lagrone in any sum whatever, directly or indirectly. She' stated, however, that she had in her possession and under her control a stock certificate for 50 shares of the capital stock of the Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Inc., issued in the name of Mrs. Della Bright Lagrone, and which the said Mrs. Edenborn understood to be Mrs. Lagrone’s property.

She further answered that she had in her possession and under her control a stock certificate for 200 shares of the capital stock of said Lumber and Creosoting Company, issued in the name of J. M. Dowden, but which the said Mrs. Edenborn understood to be the property of J. M. Lagrone.

In further answer, Mrs. Edenborn declared that the stock certificates referred to were held by her in pledge and to secure and guarantee the performance by said J. M. Lagrone of the obligations of a certain contract between him and William Edenborn of date May 20,1923.

After the answer was filed by the garnishee and within the legal delay, the plaintiff filed a rule on the garnishee to traverse her answers, and on a trial of this rule there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff, ordering the said Mrs. Edenborn tb deliver the shares of stock to the sheriff of Caddo parish, to be by him sold according to law to satisfy the plaintiff’s judgments, said sale to be subject to the pledge of said stock certificates under the contract between Edenborn and Lagrone.

The judgment so rendered was signed April 30,1927, and on May 4 the defendant Lagrone and his wife, Mrs. Della Bright Lagrone, through counsel, filed in open court a written motion for a devolutive and suspensive appeal to the Supreme Court, in which it was alleged that the judgment rendered was contrary to law and the evidence.

The motion was granted in favor of Mrs. Lagrone, but denied as to J. M. Lagrone.

Thereupon the present application was filed in this court.

In his return to the rule to show cause, the respondent judge alleges as his reasons for refusing the appeal that the motion did not disclose any pecuniary interest to be affected by the judgment; that Lagrone was not a party, other than as judgment debtor, and. made no appearance and took no part in the proceedings. The respondent further alleges that there was no reason urged why the property should not be sold as the law directs to satisfy the execution, and further cites authorities to show that property of any nature, held in pledge by a creditor, may be seized and sold at the instance of another creditor, but subject to the pledge.

We have no concern with the merits of the case, nor with the question as to the correctness or incorrectness of the judgment rendered. We cannot anticipate the issues raised or to be raised on the appeal, should one be allowed.

It may be that this court will find the judgment to be correct and that the defendant has suffered no injury that would justify the appeal. But such questions are outside of the present inquiry.

The Code of Practice declares that one máy appeal from all final judgments rendered in causes in which an appeal is given by law., whether such judgments have been rendered after hearing the parties, or by default. Article 565.

And it has been frequently said by this court that the right of appeal is a constitutional, valuable, and precious one, which should always be entertained with favor and never to be denied, save in cases where an appeal is clearly not allowable. State v. Judge, 30 La. Ann. 285; Allen August & Co. v. Cary et al., 32 La. Ann. 1126.

It is undisputed that the judgment sought *911 to be appealed from is a definitive judgment, and that the amount of the original judgment sought to be executed, as well as the value of the stock certificates ordered sold, exceed the lower limit of the appellate jurisdiction of this court. e

These jurisdictional facts are clearly shown, and are conceded by the respondent judge in allowing an appeal to the judgment debtor’s wife, who was likewise no party to the garnishment proceeding.

So that, if there is no right of appeal in favor of Lagrone, it must be found in the fact that he is to be viewed as a third party to the garnishment proceeding and without any pecuniary interest in the subject-matter adjudicated upon.

We confess our inability to find any law in this state, statutory or otherwise, which declares that a defendant ceases to be a party to a suit after final judgment is rendered against him.

Nor have we been able to find any authority to support the proposition that a judgment debtor has no pecuniary interest in the seizure and sale of his property under judicial process.

In order to constitute a suit or action, there must be at least two parties present or duly represented, though one of the two may fail to appear; it is therefore that they are called the principal parties to the suit. C. P. art. 99.

Besides the plaintiff and defendant, there are often other parties to the suit, such as warrantors, third persons intervening, and parties opposing. C. P. art. 101.

Article 246 also provides that a creditor may make any third person a party to his suit, by having him cited to declare on oath what property belonging to the defendant he has in his possession. This proceeding to make such third party a party to the suit may be had under an attachment' issued against the debtor, or after- a final judgment has been rendered, if the plaintiff has caused execution to be issued on his judgment.

In considering the foregoing articles of the Code of' Practice, this court said in Bank of Monroe v. Ouachita Valley Bank, 124 La. 803, 50 So. 720, 134 Am. St. Rep. 518:

“The law, however, seems to contemplate that the person sought to be made garnishee shall be made a party to, and proceeded against in; the suit in which the plaintiff is seeking to obtain, or has obtained, judgment against his debtor.”

In the instant case, it is true the proceeding was not taken out in the court that rendered the original judgment and the domicile of the debtor, but the style of the case in the caption of the plaintiff’s petition is given as that contained in the original suit, with the addition of Mrs. Sarah Edenborn, garnishee.

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 832, 164 La. 907, 1927 La. LEXIS 1838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-lagrone-la-1927.