Hammond State Bank & Trust Co. v. Hammond Box & Veneer Co.

149 So. 498, 177 La. 849, 1933 La. LEXIS 1762
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 7, 1933
DocketNo. 32256.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 149 So. 498 (Hammond State Bank & Trust Co. v. Hammond Box & Veneer Co.) 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
Hammond State Bank & Trust Co. v. Hammond Box & Veneer Co., 149 So. 498, 177 La. 849, 1933 La. LEXIS 1762 (La. 1933).

Opinions

ST. PAUL, Justice.

The nature of this appeal and of the issues involved are stated in a general way in Hammond State Bank .& Trust Co. v. Hammond Box & Veneer Co., Ltd., 176 La. 251, 145 So. 530, but these are not particularly pertinent at present. Suffice it to say that this court therein ordered the district judge to grant to the receiver of the defendant corporation an appeal from his judgment dismissing the latter’s intervention praying for the annullment of a certain sale under executory process.

I.

Our order to the district judge became final on January 3, 1933.

Ten days afterwards, to wit, on January 13, 1933, the trial judge granted the receiver an order for an appeal returnable to this court February 15, 1933, conditioned upon the receiver giving bond in the sum of $1,-000. Whereupon the receiver furnished thei required bond and thereupon filed his transcript in this court February 15, 1933.

II.

Meanwhile, to wit, on January 27, 1933, that is to say, between the granting of the appeal and the lodging of the transcript in this court, plaintiff, appellee here, served notice on the appellant of the insufficiency of the surety on the appeal bond, all in accordance with the provisions of Act No. 112 of 1916 and the amendment thereof by Act No. 284 of 1928, but no ruling on the sufficiency of said surety was made by the trial judge until February 20th, that is to say, until five days after the transcript had been lodged in this court.

*851 III.

Accordingly none of the matters on which appellee relies for'a dismissal of the appeal appears in the transcript filed under the number which appears at the head of this opinion, but only in a second transcript which came to us under the following cir-. cumstances, to wit:

On February 20th, five days after the transcript had been lodged in this court, as aforesaid, the trial judge ruled that the surety on the appeal bond was insufficient and allowed the receiver to furnish an additional or supplemental bond within the time prescribed by law.

On February 24th the receiver furnished an additional and supplemental appeal bond with a new surety.

On March 17th plaintiff challenged this new bond on two grounds, one being purely technical and the other substantive, to wit, (1) that no affidavit of solvency was actually taken by the surety on the appeal bond, said purported affidavit having been merely subscribed by the surety out of the presence of the notary public and attest'ed by the notary public without swearing the alleged affiant or even seeing him sign the alleged affidavit, and (2) that the surety was not worth the amount of the bond.

On March 23; 1933, the surety on the appeal bond made an affidavit with all the requisite formalities, without waiting for the judge to pass upon the sufficiency of his original affidavit.

On April 17th the trial judge declared the new bond sufficient. Whereupon plaintiff-took an appeal which was lodged in this court on May 6th under our No. 32,375. 1

IY.

This motion to dismiss is based on the same grounds on which plaintiff attacked the sufficiency of the appeal bond in the court below. And as plaintiff would have had the right to supplement the transcript for the purpose of supporting the motion to dismiss before this court, we have considered the transcript filed in appeal No. 32,375 as if it were part of the original transcript, especially as that appeal and this motion to dismiss involve the very same issues.

V.

We think the trial judge was correct in his conclusion that the second bond was sufficient and accordingly we think the motion to dismiss should be denied.

Under section 3 of Act No. 112 of 1916 as amended by Act No. 284 of 1928, an appellant has the right to furnish a new bond within four days after his first bond has been declared invalid for any reason whatsoever; but cannot furnish a third bond should this second bond be also declared invalid.

However section 9 of Act No. 112 of 1916 provides that no appeal shall be dismissed for any inaccuracy or omission in the bond until the party furnishing this bond shall have failed to correct the inaccuracy or omission within the time specified in the act, and it is our opinion that the prohibition against furnishing a third bond has no application to the correction of mere ■ inac *853 curacies or omissions in a bond otherwise valid; and accordingly such inaccuracy and omission may be corrected at any time before judgment rejecting such bond.

VI.

For the rest, we have examined the evidence as to the solvency of the surety on the second appeal bond and in our opinion, as in the opinion of the district judge, the surety on said bond is amply sufficient for the amount thereof.

Decree.

For the reasons assigned the motion to dismiss is denied.

1

Pending at date of publication.

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 498, 177 La. 849, 1933 La. LEXIS 1762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-state-bank-trust-co-v-hammond-box-veneer-co-la-1933.