Landry v. Dickson

7 La. Ann. 238
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 La. Ann. 238 (Landry v. Dickson) 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
Landry v. Dickson, 7 La. Ann. 238 (La. 1852).

Opinion

By the court:

Etjstis, C. J.

This suit was instituted to annul a judgment rendered in favor of the defendants against the plaintiff, for the sum of §¡¡990 .06 and interest, on a garnishee process under an execution issued on a judgment, which the defen[239]*239dants had obtained against David,Meyers, in the Third District Court of New' Orleans. There was judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendants have appealed.

The grounds of the plaintiff, as alleged in his petition, are these, according to the summary in the brief of counsel: 1st. That the domicil of the plaintiff was in the parish of Ascension, and that he was therefore not amenable to the process of the court, or subject in any manner to the writ of fieri facias or proceedings under it. 2d. Because the petition and citation'of garnishment are insufficient and illegal, they being in the English language only, and French being his mother tongue. 3d. Because the judgment was rendered against him without any judgment by default being first taken, or any issue made, or any rule taken against him. 4th. Because the plaintiff was, at the time of the service of the process upon him, the Lieutenant Governor of the State and president of the Senate, and the Senate was then in session, and no process could issue to compel his attendance in court. 5th. Because said judgment was never notified to him in any lawful manner, and, by law, he was entitled to said notice and to an appeal to the Supreme Court ten days after notification. 6th. Because at the time of the service of the garnishee process he owed the defendant, Meyers, nothing, and had no property of his. 7th. Because the judgment was unduly and improperly obtained by the attorneys for the plaintiff in the original suit; that the judge of the district court signed the order for the present plaintiff to answer, under oath, the interrogatories to him propounded, under an error in the hurry of business, under a misapprehension of facts, and without the name of the petitioner being inserted in the order; that it was well known to the court and to the attorneys, at the time, that the plaintiff was the Lieutenant Governor, and the Senate was then in session, and that he was in the discharge of- his public duties, and was temporarily in New Orleans, where he did not reside; that when the process of the court was attempted to be served upon him, he minutely explained the whole case to the deputy sheriff, who had the process, and satisfied that person that he, the plaintiff, had no property in his hands belonging to Meyers, nor was he in any manner indebted to him ; and then and there offered to the person representing himself as the sheriff’s deputy, to go with him immediately to court and answer the interrogatories; whereupon the deputy sheriff then told him, the plaintiff, that he was perfectly satisfied that the plaintiff had no money or property of any kind belonging to Meyers, and was not indebted to him; that it was not worth while for him, the plaintiff, to go down to court and answer the interrogatories, and that he would inform the defendant’s attorneys of the facts of the case as represented by the plaintiff, and that these gentlemen would be perfectly satisfied.

The district judge decided the case on grounds not taken by the plaintiff in his petition. He considered the citation in the garnishment as defective in two respects; 1st, that it did not command the garnishee to deliver his answer in the clerk’s office; and, 2d, that the citation makes no mention of the place where the clerk’s office is held. For these reasons, he annulled the judgment rendered against the present plaintiff.

In the proceedings in garnishment, the judgment creditors filed their petition, in which they alleged, that they believed Trasimond Landry had in his possession, property of the debtor, or was indebted to him in an amount exceeding twelve hundred dollars. They ask for process against Landry as garnishee, and that, after due proceedings had, the property or debt in the hands of Landry may be applied, by judgment of the court, to the satisfaction of the execution in the hands of the sheriff. Interrogatories were annexed to the petition, and the [240]*240judge directed the “ garnishee herein named,” to answer the interrogatories within the legal delay. The sheriff returned, that he had served a copy of the petition, interrogatories and citation, personally on the plaintiff, on the 8th December, 1843. On the 9th of January, 1849, the garnishee having failed to answer the interrogatories, judgment was rendered against him for the amount due on the execution.

Several executions were issued against Meyers, on the judgment against him, without any success. On the 4th December, 1849, an execution was issued against the plaintiff, directed to the sheriff of the parish of Orleans, which was returned at the instance of the attorney of Diclcson and BoyJcen, and another execution was issued against Meyers. On the 2d of March, 1850, an alias fieri facias was issued against the plaintiff. Proceedings under this execution were enjoined at the instance of the plaintiff in the present action, and the petitioner asks, that the judgment against him be annulled, and the injunction granted, be made perpetual.

Having thus stated the proceedings, it remains to consider the several grounds presented in the plaintiff’s petition, and those on which the judge decided to annul this judgment. To begin with the latter.

The objections to the validity of the citation, are, that it does not command the garnishee to deliver his answer in the office of the clerk of the court; and contains no mention of the place where the clerk’s office is held. Both of which are required under the 179th article of the Code of Practice.

The citation in this case contains the title of the court, “ Third District Court of New Orleans,” and is in the name of the State, and under the seal of the court. It is tested in the name of the judge, and signed by a deputy clerk. It directs the garnishee to answer in writing, under oath, the interrogatories annexed to the petition within ten days of the service, otherwise judgment will be entered, &c.

The citation thus indicating in its title, that the Third District Court is held in New Orleans, and the clerk’s office being in point of fact and practice inseparable from it, the objections to its sufficiency seem to us too technical, even supposing that the citation to a garnishee is to be precisely in the same - form as the ordinary citation to a defendant, which nevertheless the article 252 of the Code of Practice seems not to require. But the answer given by the counsel for the defendants to these objections is, that they are not presented by the pleadings and cannot be noticed by the court. He refers to Landry v. L’Eglise, 3 L. R. 220, and 10 L. R. 169, Palmer v. Yarborough.

The annulling of a judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, is one of the gravest matters in the administration of justice. The code enumerates the causes for which a judgment may be annulled for defects of form. Code of Practice 604 and 605. One of them is, that the defendant has not been legally cited. This not having been alleged in the petition as one of the grounds on which the plaintiff asks to be relieved from this judgment, and it being not a palpable and radical defect, as the citation reads, we think it is not competent for the defendants to insist on the nullity of the judgment on that account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 La. Ann. 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landry-v-dickson-la-1852.