Gasquet v. Johnson

1 La. 425
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1 La. 425 (Gasquet v. Johnson) 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
Gasquet v. Johnson, 1 La. 425 (La. 1830).

Opinion

Mathews, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. This suit is by attachment, and brought on a protested bill of exchange which [430]*430was drawn by the defendant, Johnson, in favor of the plaintiffs on Kyle and Orr of ]>fash ville, Tennessee. Judgment was ren-4ere¿ jn t}le court below for the plaintiffs, from which the defendants appealed.

The cause was one previous to the present appeal before this court. The judgment of the district court was then reversed, and the ease remanded to be tried de novo.

The evidence on which the last judgment has been rendered in the court below, is fully spread on the record, to the admissibility of which several bills of exceptions were taken. But before examining them, or the merits of the suit; it is necessary to dispose of the claims and pretensions of certain intervening parties, Otis Loomer and Co. and others. The first attachment levied on the property of the defendant, was that of the plaintiffs Gasquet and Co. Afterwards the same goods were seized at the instance of other creditors, under attachments issued subsequently to that of the plaintiffs. Finding that Gasquet and Co. had obtained a preference on the property of the defendant, by the priority of their attachment, the other creditors then intervened with the avowed purpose of defeat[431]*431ing the action of the original plaintiffs, and allege various errors in the proceedings by which it was carried on. The first question to be settled in relation to these parties, is whether they have a right to intervene ? To show that they have, their counsel relies on the provisions of the Code of Practice, on the subject of intervention or interpleading, art. 389, declares “ an interventor or inter-pleader to be a demand by which a third person requires to be permitted to become a party in a suit between other persons ; either by joining the plaintiff in claiming the same thing or something connected with it, or by uniting with the defendant in resisting the claims of the plaintiff.” Art.*390, “In order to be entitled to intervene, it is enough to have an interest in the success óf either of the parties to the suit.” This we suppose must be a direct interest by which the intervening party is to obtain immediate gain, or suffer loss by the judgment, which may be rendered between the original parties; otherwise the strange anomaly would be introduced into our jurisprudence, of suffering an accumulation of suits in all instances where doubts might be entertained, or enter into the ima[432]*432gination of subsequent plaintiffs, that a de- . . iendant against whom a previous action was un(^er prosecution, might not have property sufgcjen(; t0 discharge all his debts. For as the first judgment obtained might give a preference to the person who should obtain it, all subsequent suitors, down to the last would have an indirect interest in defeating the action of the first. This certainl/ was not the intention of our legislators. The rights of different creditors are to be exa- ... ... mined m concurring only m cases of actual . 1 surrender on the part of a debtor. nsolvency, either by a voluntary or forced

The rights of different creditors are to be examined in concurrence only in cases of actual insolvency, either by a voluntary or forced surrender debtor. No distinction 6Xl$t8 D6tW66n in'^he Ordinary an'dttose’which attachment.^ by

js true, that in. cases of attachments, a contention and scuffle, for the property of the debtor, takes place among the attaching creditors, very similar to that which occurs in a concurso; but the rules by which these two species of judicial proceedings are governed, differ from each other. In relation to legal procedures against debtors not known to be insolvent, no sound distinction exists between su‘ts Prosecuted in the ordinary mode by c,tati°n? anc* those which are pursued by atiachment. We therefore conclude that [433]*433the intervening parties had no right to inter-_ . i • 1 xere in the manner by them attempted in the present case, and that their petition ought to have been rejected in the first instance; and here deserves no further notice.

,1" a su:t uPon a bill of exchange a? amendment, changing the amount of the mu, is not altering the nature of tha .suit.

The first objection made on the part of the defendant, to the correctness of the proceedings which took place in the court below, is to the permission awarded to the plaintiffs to amend their petition. His counsel insists that this amendment was illegally permitted on two grounds. 1. That it changed the nature of the action. 2. That according to the Code of Practice amendments are not allowable until after issue joined. As to the first of these grounds it is wholly untenable. The suit was brought on a bill of exchange, and in declaring on it, a mistake was made as to ' the amount for which it had been' drawn. An amendment by which- this mistake is J rectified,- most clearly, produces ho; change* 4/1 ° in the nature of the action. The second ground of defence- assumed against the ad- .... 0 missibility of this amendment, appears so novel, that it might be well passed unnoticed, were it not for the indefinite manner in which the subject of amendment is treated by the. [434]*434Code of Practice. It begins by stating, art. 419. “After issue joined the plaintiff may, jeave 0f the court, amend his ori-gjnaj petition,” &c. As no proviso is made for amendments previous to the contestatio lites ; it is contended that they are excluded from our practical jurisprudence. Previous to the promulgation of the Code of Practice, a court in the exercise of its discretion could allow amendments to a petition before issue joined, and such right of amendment awarded by law is certainly more reasonable, than that in virtue of which a petition is permitted to amend after a contestatio lites. It is impossible to believe that the legislature by the grant of a right, less just and reasonable, intended to abrogate one more fully sanctioned by a convenient, coiTect, and reasonable mode of judicial proceedings. The provisions of this art. of the Code, do not in our opinion present a case to which the maxim expressio unius, est exclusio atterius, is applicable. The amendment of the petition in the present suit was therefore properly allowed.

Amendments afterissuejoinedd

The only bill of exceptions in the cause which requires examination, according to the [435]*435opinion which we have formed of it, is that , . , , , . . which relates to the rejection of the testimony of the notary .public in Nashville, taken by interrogatories. It appears that the commissioner who was authorized to take the testimony of the witness, and certify his answers to the interrogatories which had been proprounded by both parties to the suit, through the agency of their attorneys, gave notice to the defendant of the time and place where the examination would take place. The certificate-of the commissioner that the deposition of the witness was made under oath, and duly subscribed by the deponent, bears date on the twenty-eight of September 1829, but refers to the caption of the proceeding for the time and place, at which his testimony was taken ; which seems to have been on the twenty-fifth of the same month, three days previous to the period at which the defendant had notice to attend.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hannon v. Union High School District No. 2
344 P.2d 769 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1959)
City of Gretna v. Gulf Distilling Corporation
21 So. 2d 884 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1945)
Arceneaux v. Louisiana Highway Commission
12 So. 2d 733 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)
Buchler v. Fourroux
190 So. 640 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)
State v. Jefferson Island Salt Mining Co.
163 So. 145 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1935)
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Livingston Graded School v. First State Bank
64 S.W.2d 485 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)
Strawberry Growers' Selling Co. v. Lewellyn
103 So. 823 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1925)
Moreland v. Monarch Mining Co.
178 P. 175 (Montana Supreme Court, 1919)
Reard v. Freiden
184 Iowa 823 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1918)
First National Bank v. Clark
21 N.M. 151 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1915)
Coffman v. Spokane Chronicle Publishing Co.
117 P. 596 (Washington Supreme Court, 1911)
Faricy v. St. Paul Investment & Savings Society
125 N.W. 676 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1910)
De Renzes v. His Wife
39 So. 805 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1905)
Dickson v. Dows
92 N.W. 798 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1903)
Vanmeter v. Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Co.
53 S.W. 10 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1899)
Yetzer v. Young
52 N.W. 1054 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1892)
Smith v. Gale
144 U.S. 509 (Supreme Court, 1892)
Gale v. Frazier
30 N.W. 138 (Supreme Court of Dakota, 1886)
Lewis v. Harwood
10 N.W. 586 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 La. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gasquet-v-johnson-la-1830.