Marx v. Meyer Bros.

23 So. 923, 50 La. Ann. 1229, 1898 La. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 18, 1898
DocketNo. 12,703
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 23 So. 923 (Marx v. Meyer Bros.) 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
Marx v. Meyer Bros., 23 So. 923, 50 La. Ann. 1229, 1898 La. LEXIS 370 (La. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

“Meyer’s Star Emporium” was a mercantile establishment located at Monroe, Louisiana, with a branch house at Alexandria.

These establishments were owned and conducted by Mrs. Alice Meyer, a married woman, separate in property from her husband, doing business as a public merchant.

Jonas Meyer, her husband, was charged with the direction and management of the business.

. In the summer and autumn of 1896 he made large purchases of goods in northern cities on credit, based upon representations of the solvency and prosperity of the firm.

These goods having been received at Monroe and Alexandria, sales and collections were pressed and much money was realized.

But no debts for the goods thus bought, beyond an inconsiderable amount, were paid.

The accounts and notes for these purchases were maturing. [1231]*1231District Oourt was in session in Ouachita Parish in December 1896. The term was drawing to a close and the final adjournment of the court occurred December 24th.

On the evening of December 22nd, about six or seven o’clock, after business hours, and after the office of the clerk of court had been closed for the day, counsel representing certain creditors of Mrs. Alice Meyer appeared at the Court House and dispatched a deputy-clerk to the residence of his principal for the key of the office. This - being procured the attorney presented and caused to be filed seven suits against the Meyer Star Emporium and its proprietor.

The claims upon which these suits were based aggregated over, thirty thousand dollars, and on each the debtor had confessed judg-.ment.

These favored creditors were Meyer Bros., B. & S. Adler, P. Lowenberg, Miss Eva Steinau, Benjamin Adler, the Monroe National Bank and the Merchants & Farmer’s Bank.

Meyer Bros, were merchants in Monroe, and brothers of Jonas Meyer, the husband and business manager of the debtor.

Besides their own claims against this debtor, they were sureties on the note for ten thousand dollars which the debtor had executed in favor of B. & S. A.dler, upon which note the suit of the latter was based.

Meyer Bros, were also endorsers on the paper held by the two banks named, and declared on in their suits.

P. Lowenberg was brother-in-law of Jonas Meyer, and Miss Steinau was the aunt of Mrs. Alice Meyer.

It thus appears that all the claims upon which judgments were confessed were either held by members of the family of the debtor, or secured by some of them.

It also appears that the claims thus confessed were not current indebtedness of the firm in the sense that they represented the recent purchases of goods, except possibly to a small extent-. They were, for the most part, over one year old and some of them two years old at the time the judgments were confessed. "

The seven suits referred to were entered on the judge’s docket on December 23rd., but not on the bar docket of the court. The confessions of judgment were proved up, not in the morning hour of the court, as is the custom at the Monroe bar, but some time in the afternoon (about 3 o’clock) of December 23rd. This was an hour when, usually, few attorneys are present in court.

[1232]*1232Judgments, based on the confessions, were immediately signed ■■and’executions thereon were issued at once, the same afternoon, in all the cases, and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Ouachita Parish, and alias writs thereof sent by speciat messenger, on that •evening’s train, to the sheriff of Rapides Parish.

The sheriff of-Ouachita immediately seized the Meyer’s Star Emporium at Monroe, and eirly the next morning, December 24th, the sheriff of Rapides seized and closed up the branch house at Alexandria. -

These seizures embraced everything owned and possessed by the debtor, including the books and accounts of the business; and all th6 property and effects, rights and credits thus seized, or attempted to be seized, were advertised for sale under all the writs in the-same advertisement at the same time. '

Information of the confessions of judgment, and proceedings taken thereunder, coming to the knowledge of other creditors of the debtor, fourteen of them did, on December 24, 1898, file suit's, separately, on their- claims, coupled with attachment, under which were seized all the goods, effects and property of the debtor — the same antecedently seized by the seven creditors, who had secured the confessions of judgment.

"These fourteen creditors, in aid of their attachments, then instituted the present action, the object of which is to set aside, revoke and annul the previous seizures made at the suit of the seven favored creditors, as being a fraud upon their rights.

Asserting a common cause, they unite in one suit and make parties defendant the seven creditors aforesaid, the debtor and her husband, Jonas Meyer, and also the sheriffs of-Ouachita and Rapides Parish.

The petition recites the facts and circumstances hereinbefore mentioned, and avers that the seven creditors had acted together •throughout with one common design to cover, absorb and exhaust all. the property of the common debtor, and that the acts complained of constituted one fraudulent and collusive proceeding inaugurated and carried out for the purpose of defeating the rights of the other • creditors and giving an unfair preference to those favored.

. They attack, the writs of fi. fa. and alias writs thereof, issued on ■the seven judgments confessed, as irregular, illegal, null and void, ■for the reason that they were issued before the judgments had become executory and exigible in this, that they issued before the [1233]*1233term of court, at which the judgments were rendered, had ended, and it is urged that no legal execution can issue on judgments until after the close of the term of court; that judgments do not have any effect, either for the purpose of seizure, nor as judicial mortgages, as against other creditors, until after the final adjournment of the court; and that, accordingly, the executions on the seven judgments, having been issued, without authority of law, conferred no power on the officers to seize property thereunder, and such seizures are illegal and void, made without final process, and no sales of property under the writs could legally be consummated.

They attack the confessed judgments, thems.elves, as void, on the ground that the common debtor was insolvent to the knowledge of the favored creditors, and, further, the allegation is made that the claims upon which the judgments were confessed were not just and due, and that Mrs. Alice Meyer owed nothing at all to Meyer Bros., nor B. & S. Adler, nor P. Lowenberg, nor Miss Steinau, nor to B. Adler.

It is represented that the confessions of judgment were given to avoid the effect of the law making it a crime for a merchant to sell goods, not paid for, out of the usual course of business with intent to defraud the vendor.

Injunction to stop the sale of the goods seized under the judgments and executions attacked was sought, and an order therefor made, but bond was fixed at thirteen thousand dollars, which plaintiffs could not give, and, thus, no injunction issued.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 So. 923, 50 La. Ann. 1229, 1898 La. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marx-v-meyer-bros-la-1898.