Hill Motor Co. v. Gardner

8 La. App. 327, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 510
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1928
DocketNo. 2450
StatusPublished

This text of 8 La. App. 327 (Hill Motor Co. v. Gardner) 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
Hill Motor Co. v. Gardner, 8 La. App. 327, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 510 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

WEBB, J.

The plaintiff, Pleasant Hill Motor Company, filed suit against L. E. Gardner to recover judgment for five hundred twenty-five dollars for material and work in repairing four motor trucks, and for recognition of a chattel mortgage on one of the trucks, with interest and attorney’s fees, and alleging it had an artisan’s privilege on the trucks and under appropriate allegations it obtained a writ of sequestration, uhder which the trucks were seized.

H. H. Mehaffey and Wiener-Hodges-Smith, Inc., each filed interventions claiming a privilege and chattel mortgage on the trucks and praying that their privilege be recognized as superior to the asserted privilege of plaintiff, and plaintiff answered the interventions, pleading, in effect, a general denial.

Pending the trial of the interventions, judgment was rendered in favor of the Pleasant Hill Motor Company against the defendant for the amount claimed, recognizing the asserted privilege and mortgage, and sustaining tne writ of sequestration and ordering the property sold, and a fi. fa. was issued and the property sequestered seized and sold for an amount less than the plaintiff’s judgment, and the proceeds of the sale held by the sheriff under an agreement of the parties.

On trial of the interventions there was judgment rejecting the demands of the intervenors and ordering the sheriff to pay the proceeds of the sale to the plaintiff, from which judgment intervenors appeal.

The intervenors in their briefs suggest that the judgment is erroneous in failing to rank their asserted privileges as superior to that of the plaintiff; however, we do not deem it necessary to consider that issue, as on the trial of the interventions the intervenors did not offer any evidence by which the property sequestered and sold under the writ of fi. fa. could be identified as the property on which they asserted a privilege.

The judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 327, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-motor-co-v-gardner-lactapp-1928.