McGovern v. United Railway Men's Oil Ass'n.

103 So. 280, 157 La. 966, 1924 La. LEXIS 2250
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1924
DocketNo. 25814.
StatusPublished

This text of 103 So. 280 (McGovern v. United Railway Men's Oil Ass'n.) 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
McGovern v. United Railway Men's Oil Ass'n., 103 So. 280, 157 La. 966, 1924 La. LEXIS 2250 (La. 1924).

Opinions

In the suit, first named in the title, Edwin T. McGovern sued the United Railway Men's Oil Association for $2,216 and for interest thereon. Of this sum he alleges that $1,520 are due him as wages for services rendered and labor performed for defendant, as field manager, master mechanic, and laborer, and that the balance is due him on a promissory note executed by defendant. He alleges that he has a privilege on a drilling outfit, belonging to defendant, to secure the payment of said indebtedness, and that he fears that defendant will part with or remove, during the pendency of the suit, from the jurisdiction of the court, the property on which the privilege exists, and therefore alleges that he is entitled to a writ of sequestration to protect his rights. *Page 968 Plaintiff also alleges that defendant resides out of the state of Louisiana, and therefore that a curator ad hoc should be appointed to represent it, upon whom service may be made, and that he is entitled to the issuance of a writ of attachment. A curator ad hoc was appointed to represent defendant, and the writs of sequestration and attachment were ordered to issue. Service of the citation and the petition was made on the curator ad hoc and by posting on the courthouse door. Defendant, through its curator ad hoc, excepted to the manner of making service. The exception was overruled. Defendant then, through its curator ad hoc, after reserving the benefits of its exception, filed its answer. The case was tried and judgment was rendered for plaintiff on October 16, 1922, and was signed on December 23 of that year. Defendant has appealed from this judgment.

On June 30, 1922, about two months and a half after McGovern had filed his suit, the second suit named in the title of this appeal was filed. In it D.W.B. Kurtz, Jr., sued the defendant on a promissory note for $3,000, alleged to have been made by defendant, and for the recognition and enforcement of a chattel mortgage, alleged to have been executed by defendant in favor of Kurtz on certain property belonging to defendant, which property includes that seized by McGovern under his writ of attachment. On the same day that this suit was instituted an answer was filed, purporting to have been signed by defendant, admitting all of the allegations of Kurtz's petition, confessing judgment in favor of Kurtz for the amount sued for, and also confessing judgment in his favor, recognizing the chattel mortgage executed. On the same day that the suit and the answer were filed, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff in accordance with the confession of judgment made.

Shortly after Kurtz obtained judgment, *Page 969 and before McGovern's suit had proceeded to judgment, Kurtz caused execution to issue from the judgment obtained by him, and seized the property on which his mortgage had been recognized. As the property seized included that on which McGovern was claiming a privilege as field manager, master mechanic, and laborer in his suit against the United Railway Men's Oil Association, he filed a third opposition in the Kurtz suit, in which he sets forth the indebtedness of $2,116, which he claims is due him by the United Railway Men's Oil Association, the existence of the privilege mentioned above; his right, by reason of that privilege, to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale about to be made under the writ issued in the Kurtz Case, in preference to Kurtz, himself, and then alleges that the mortgage granted Kurtz, which is the mortgage recognized by the latter's judgment, is illegal, and that the indebtedness sought to be secured by the same is fictitious. He prays that the sheriff be ordered to separately appraise and sell the property on which he claims a privilege, and that he be paid out of the proceeds of the sale in preference to all other creditors of the United Railway Men's Oil Association. In accordance with the prayer of his petition the court granted him an order, directing the sheriff to separately appraise and sell the property on which McGovern claimed a privilege, and to hold the proceeds of the sale until the further orders of court.

At the first offering of the property made, under the writ issued at the instance of Kurtz, the property failed to sell. The sheriff then readvertised it for sale on twelve months' time, the purchaser to furnish a twelve months' bond. At the second offering Kurtz bid for the property, but the sheriff refused to adjudicate it to him for the reason that Kurtz declined to give a twelve months' bond, and instead offered the sheriff *Page 970 a receipt for the amount of his bid, which receipt showed that the amount thereof was to be credited on the judgment which was being executed by Kurtz. After the sheriff accepted service on a rule, tendered him for that purpose by Kurtz, the contents of which will be hereafter stated, he proceeded with the crying of the property, and adjudicated it to Jules Dupuy for $1,500.

When the sheriff refused to accept Kurtz's bid, Kurtz filed the rule above mentioned. The rule sets out that Kurtz caused execution to issue from his judgment; that under this execution the sheriff seized certain property and advertised it for sale; that at said sale Kurtz was the last and highest bidder therefor; that, notwithstanding the clerk's certificate showed the existence of Kurtz's mortgage on the property seized, the sheriff refused to accept his bid, for the reason that McGovern had filed a third opposition claiming the right to be paid in preference to Kurtz, and because the latter, notwithstanding said third opposition, refused to furnish a twelve months' bond, but instead tendered the sheriff the receipt heretofore mentioned, and requested the sheriff to credit the amount on his (Kurtz's) judgment. The prayer of the rule is that the sheriff be ordered to show cause why he should not execute proper title to the property to Kurtz, and also is that McGovern be ordered to how cause why the third opposition filed by the latter should not be dismissed.

The sheriff filed an answer, putting this rule at issue. He avers substantially that he was not called upon to accept Kurtz's bid for the reason that Kurtz refused to comply with the conditions of the sale, and that the only legal bid made was the one made by Dupuy, who complied with the conditions of the sale. He prays that the rule be dismissed.

McGovern also filed an answer to the rule. He denies, among other things, the legality *Page 971 of Kurtz's judgment, and avers that it was obtained by fraud, without citation or issue joined, and without legal proceedings had. He also denies the legality of Kurtz's mortgage, and prays that the rule be dismissed.

The foregoing rule and the third opposition of McGovern were consolidated for the purpose of trial. The trial court heard the evidence and rendered judgment, annulling the judgment rendered in favor of Kurtz; dismissing the rule filed by him, and dismissing the third opposition of McGovern.

The sheriff alone has appealed from this judgment. McGovern alone has filed an answer to the appeal. The United Railway Men's Oil Association obtained an order of appeal, but did not perfect it by filing bond, and hence is only an appellee.

Opinion.
As seen from the foregoing statement, there are two appeals before us — one by the United Railway Men's Oil Association from the judgment against it, rendered in favor of McGovern, and the other by the sheriff from the judgment on the rule and on the third opposition of McGovern.

We shall consider the appeal by the United Railway Men's Association first. In our opinion the exception to the citation filed by defendant, through its curator ad hoc, should have been sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 So. 280, 157 La. 966, 1924 La. LEXIS 2250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgovern-v-united-railway-mens-oil-assn-la-1924.