Horn v. Bayard

11 Rob. 259
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Rob. 259 (Horn v. Bayard) 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
Horn v. Bayard, 11 Rob. 259 (La. 1845).

Opinion

Oakland, J.

The plaintiffs claim the sum of $8,982 58, with interest, as damages sustained by the corporation they now represent, in consequence of the defendants, in the month of February, 1842, suing out an attachment against the bank, and having certain bonds of the Planters’ Bank of Mississippi, and notes of the Commercial and Rail Road Bank of Yicksburg, seized and sold, when, on appeal to this court, the judgment rendered in favor of the defendants was reversed, and a judgment given against them. They allege that the value of the notes and bonds aforesaid was determined by the fluctuations in the market, and that, at the time of the attachment, and for some months subsequently they were worth the sum of about $18,500, yet the defendants had them sold, in August, 1842, at a sale by the sheriff, at a great sacrifice, and, that they only brought the sum of $9,140. The difference between these sums they claim as damages.

The defendants deny all the allegations in the petition, and especially do they deny the corporate capacity of the bank, and also the alleged capacity of the plaintiffs, as assignees.

On the trial, the institution of the suit by the defendants against the bank was proved by the record; the execution of the attachment was shown; and a reversal of the judgment which the defendants had obtained. See 4 Rob. 262. The appeal taken was a devolutive one. The sale by the sheriff was proved by the execution and return on it. Twelve of the bonds of $1,000, with coupons for $35, were .sold for $353 each; and ten others, each for said sum with a coupon, were sold for $345 [261]*261each. Ten thousand dollars of the Vicksburg bank notes were sold at six and a half cents on the dollar, making $650; and ten thousand dollars more were sold at eight cents on the dollar, making $800. It was further proved that these bonds and notes had been sent to the Commercial Bank of New Orleans for sale, at a certain price, which was above their value at the time ; but there is ample proof that about the time of the attachment, and for a considerable time subsequently, the bonds were worth from fifty to fifty-five cents on the dollar, and that the notes of the Commercial Bank of Vicksburg ranged from fourteen and a half to twenty cents on the dollar, at the same time ; the prices varying according to the supply and demand.»

The act of the legislature of the State of Pennsylvania chartering the bank was produced, and also a deed of assignment from the corporation to the plaintiffs, made in obedience to the resolutions of the board of directors, which includes the claim in controversy.

The court gave judgment for $5,145 damages, and the defendants have appealed.

Our attention has been called to two bills of exception taken by the defendants. The first states that the plaintiffs, for the purpose of proving the assignment to them, offered in evidence a document with certain certificates thereon, one of which purported to be a certificate of the prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas of the county of Philadelphia, that the deed had been approved -according to law. The defendants’ counsel objected that the copy so certified, was inadmissible to show the approval of the alleged assignment by said court. That such approval should have been shown by a certified copy of the record of said court, authenticated by the certificate of the judge and clerk, with the seal of the court; but the court overruled the objection, and admitted the deed. We are of opinion that the court did not err in admitting the certificate. The laws of Pennsylvania are in evidence, and from them we see that it is necessary that such assignments shall be approved by the court; and we also see that the prothonotaries are authorized to sign and certify the judgments of the courts of Common Pleas. Purdon’s Dig. p. 833. From an inspection of the terms [262]*262and phraseology of the so called certificate, we think it is the judgment of approval by the court, written on the deed and signed by the prothonotary as authorized by law, and necessary to authorize its being recorded.

The other bill states that the plaintiffs offered in evidence for the purpose of proving the execution of the assignment to them, a document with certain certificates thereon, made part of the bill of exceptions ;

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Related

Gaines v. City of New Orleans
17 F. 16 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana, 1883)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Rob. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horn-v-bayard-la-1845.