Gumbel v. Beer

36 La. Ann. 484
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1884
DocketNo. 9177
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 36 La. Ann. 484 (Gumbel v. Beer) 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
Gumbel v. Beer, 36 La. Ann. 484 (La. 1884).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Bermudez, C. J.

This is an action to recover, with lien, the price of cotton, attached and sequestered within five days after the day of sale, -in the hands of third persons who, by intervention and answer, assert adverse title thereto.

There was judgment against F. Beer, the purchaser, condemning him to pay the unpaid price, $8690 62, recognizing the lien on the cotton [485]*485seized and rejecting the interventions, intervenors being held to return the cotton which the3' had bonded and in default to pay: the one $6654 88, the other $2035 74, with interest and costs.

The intervenors alone appeal.

The contention is : that the seizure of the cotton was illegal, because of the insufficiency of the affidavits made to obtain the writs under which it was effected; that the plaintiffs are estopi>ed from questioning the ownership of Lionnet to the cotton; that the original law of 1854, securing the five days’ lien in favor of vendors of agricultural products, has been, if not repealed, at least modified, so as not to apply to cash sales and to cases where the vendor, although unpaid, has parted with possession of the cotton, which was subsequently pledged or transferred by the purchaser, in favor of or to innocent parties, who have acquired rights for valuable consideration.

I.

Much has been said and written to show the insufficiency of the affidavits made to obtain the writs of attachment and sequestration, under which the cotton sold by plaintiffs to Beer, was seized within five days after the sale.

The pith of the charges is: that the affidavits are insufficient, the first, in toto on its face; the second, because taken by the creditor himself, who swore to the allegations of the second petition as true, “ to the best of his Imowledge and belief," which is permissible only when the oath is taken by the agent.

The plaintiffs contend that the intervenors have no right to show any irregularity in the suit, for the sole purpose of rescuing their property, as, whether the plaintiffs, the court and the sheriff have been acting legally or not, is none of their business.

It must be noted that the intervenors had been made defendants in the suit by supplemental petition.

Conceding that the intervenors, either as such, or as defendants, or in both capacities which are practically one and the same, have a right to seek the dissolution of the writs and thus release the property seized in their possession, it by no means follows that the ground upon which they rely is well taken.

The first affidavit made to obtain the attachment and sequestration against Beer cannot be successfully attacked, as insufficient to procure the writs which were issued and executed within five days from the sale.

It is a decided mistake to assume that, because neither the petition nor the affidavit contains the averment that the affiant fears that the [486]*486defendant will conceal, part witli, or dispose of tlie movable property in his possession, during the pendency of the suit, the cotton was illegally seized and, therefore, should be released.

Were this position we.ll taken the suit would here, end as to the intervenors.

The law which authorizes a sequestration under the state of facts expressed in those terms, is paragraph 8 of article C.P. 275, but it does not prescribe that the writ shall issue only in such cases.

The article provides explicitly that a sequestration may be ordered in the following cases — stating them, eight in number, the seventh of which is: that a plaintiff may obtain a sequestration in all cases where he has a lien or privilege upon property or complying with the requisites provided by law.

The next, article 276, simply declares that the plaintiff, wishing to obtain the order in any one of the cases, must annex an affidavit setting forth the cause for which lie claims such order and his obligation, etc.

Paragraph 8 is section 6 of the Act of 1839, No. 53, p. 163, which was passed to amend article 275 of the 0. P. and which distinctly does so by providing: “that in addition to the cases therein mentioned, a sequestration may be ordered,” etc. it was, therefore, an additional or supplemental legislation which did not repeal previous laws.

A reading of the remaining six paragraphs show in what other cases the writ can issue. Each paragraph announces what the circumstances are to be in each case, which will justify the granting of the remedy

In the case mentioned in paragraph 7, the. creditor must swear to the existence of the debt, of the privilege on the property, and must state the circumstances which imperil the loss of the lien.

In Selleck vs. Kelly, 11 R. 15, the affidavit made to obtain the sequestration merely stated the debt and the lien and the court properly held that this was not sufficient, that the affiant should have set forth the cause for which the order was claimed.

Neither are the words to be used sacramental. It is sufficient, if from the words used, it appears that there exists a danger for the loss of the lien, namely: that the property will be illegally disposed of by the defendant. Dumonteil vs. Dubroqua, 1 R. 531.

It has likewise been held that the omission to use the words “during the pendency of the suit” is not fatal. Wells vs. St. Didier, 1 A. 119.

Now, by reference to the original petition, it is apparent that Lengs-field unequivocally swore not only to the existence of the debt and of the vendors lien, but also to the apprehended fraudulent conversion of [487]*487the cotton by the defendant, into money or evidences of debt, with intent to place it beyond reach.

It seems to be conceded that had the affidavit set forth the fear of a removal of the cotton, it would have followed the exigencies of tlio law.

There is no law which requires that the affidavit shall aver, in a case like the present, this or that. The law demands that a cause, a sufficient cause, be alleged. That the debtor is about to convert the cotton into money, to defraud his creditors, is surely good cause for the apprehension of the loss of the privilege. It is not only an equivalent but a broader averment than the allegation of removal. Property removed can be more easily reached by the executive officer of the law, than the proceeds thereof in the debtor’s pocket. Closely analyzed, it implies the essentials of even paragraph 8, which authorizes the writ when the party in possession is about to part with or dispose of the property.

Because the averment made in this case is such as can justify an attachment is no reason why it should not serve also for a sequestration, if it is, in itself, otherwise sufficient. The affidavit to the first-petition was designed to procure the two writs which are not antago-nistical or exclusive the one of the other. An attachment may issue as well when there exists a lien, as when there exists none. A sequestration always issues when a right to or on property is averred and there is danger of losing it.

The concurrence of tlio averments made was ample authority for the issuance of the writs.

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Bluebook (online)
36 La. Ann. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumbel-v-beer-la-1884.