McKee v. Amonett

6 La. Ann. 207
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 La. Ann. 207 (McKee v. Amonett) 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
McKee v. Amonett, 6 La. Ann. 207 (La. 1851).

Opinion

The judgment of the court was pronounced by

Rost, J.

This action is brought to recover from the defendants two slaves, named Sam and Asbury, or their value. The defendants answered that they acquired title to the slaves on the 3d of August, 1846, at a sheriff’s sale, made by virtue of an execution issued in the suit of the Bank of Tennessee, fen' the use of W. and J. J. Amonett and J. Folkes, v. McICee; being a proceeding by executory process upon a judgment obtained in Tennessee against McKee, Follces et als. They also allege that they, with Folkes, were the owners in equal portions of that judgment; and pleaded its amount in compensation and reconvention. They cited Folkes in warranty by service of citation upon a curator ad hoc appointed to defend him. The curator filed an answer, in which he unites with the defendants in asserting the validity of their title, and also in their pleas. An unsuccessful motion was made by the plaintiffs to strike out the call in warranty. There was judgment in favor of W. and J. Amonett and Folkes, for the amount of the Tennessee judgment, after deducting the value of the slaves, which was estimated at $533 33. The plaintiff has appealed.

In order properly to appreciate the title which the defendants assert, under the sheriff’s sale, it is necessaiy to review the circumstances which preceded their purchase. It appears, that on the 23d January, 1846, a suit by attachment was brought in the district court for the parish of Madison by one Powell against McKee, a non-resident, upon an alleged indebtedness. The petition was signed by A. Pierce and the Messieurs Amonett as the attorneys of Powell. The attachment bond given in favor of the absent defendant, as required by law, to protect him from such damages as he might sustain if the attachment should be found to have been unlawfully issued, was signed by Pierce and James J. Amonett, as sureties. Under the writ, the sheriff on the same day seized, as the property of McKee, three slaves, Sam, Asbury and Rebecca, and also a [208]*208wagon and harness. On the same day, W. S. Thompson, purporting to act as the agent of McKee, the absent defendant, but who was in reality the accomplice of Powell, executed, with the consent of Powell, a forthcoming bond for the slaves and chattels, conditioned for the satisfaction of such judgment as might be rendered against McKee. This bond is signed by A. Pierce and James J. Amonett, as sureties; they, as we have already stated, being the attornies of record for and sureties of Ihe attaching creditor. At the foot of this bond is a memorandum of like date, signed by Powell, in which he states, that though the bond is conditioned to pay the judgment rendered against McKee, he only requires that the property attached be forthcoming, and acknowledges that one of the slaves, Rebecca, and the chattels attached have been placed in his possession. On the same day, an agreement, attested by J. J. Amonett, was signed by Thompson, purporting to act as agent for McKee, and by Powell, by which it was agreed that the two slaves, Asbury and Sam, should be left with Pierce, until the suit should be determined, with liberty to hire them out. They subsequently, it appears, came into the possession of the Messieurs Amonett. On the 21st of April, 1846, McKee appeared in the cause, by counsel, and moved the dissolution of the attachment, upon the ground that the property attached had been secretly and fraudulently removed from his domicil in the State of Mississippi by the plaintiff Powell. Upon hearing, on the 21st of April, 1846, a decree was made dissolving the attachment; and in the same month Powell obtained an order for a suspensive appeal. Pierce and the Messieurs Amonett signed the appeal bond as his sureties. The cause was determined in this court at the February term, 1849, by an affirmance of the judgment. The court then observed, what we may now reiterate, that, the evidence showed conclusively that the plaintiff Powell obtained fraudulent possession of the property attached, in the State of Mississippi, and clandestinely removed it to this State without the knowledge or consent of the owner and defendant, McKee ; and immediately levied an attachment upon it. We held, that the wrongful and fraudulent act of the plaintiff in bringing the defendant’s property into this State, gave no jurisdiction to our courts, and that the district court did not err in dissolving the attachment.

Being thus foiled for the time being in the attempt to deprive McKee of his property through the attachment, but, at the same time, holding on to the possession of the slaves, through the instrumentality of a suspensive appeal, another device was put in motion. William Amonett went to Tennessee, and, on the 14th of May, 1846, obtained from the clerk of the Circuit Court of Shelby County in that State, an authenticated transcript of the record of the suit of the Bank of Tennessee v. McKee, Folkes et als. Although the visit of MrAmonett to Tennessee is not expressly proved by the testimony of witnesses who saw him there, it results conclusively from the fact admitted at the trial of the present cause, that the body of the transcript is in his handwriting. On the 20th of May, 1846, a suit was brought upon this transcript in the name of the Bank of Tennessee, which is represented in the petition as “ suing for the use and benefit of Jepilia Folkes, of the State of Tennessee, and J. J. and William Amonett. And here, in passing, we may remark, that there is no evidence whatever offered by the defendants to show that the Bank made an assignment of its judgment, or authorized suit to be brought in its name for the use of Messrs. Amonett and Folkes, or that the Messrs. Amonett ever acquired an interest in the claim. The petition in that cause further stated, that McKee had been condemned in the Tennessee judgment, as principal debtor, and Folkes [209]*209as endorser; and that, as endorser, he had paid the amount of the judgment and costs, and thereby became the subrogated creditor of McKee. Upon this petition and transcript an ex parte decree was forthwith obtained, rendering the judgment executory in this State, and ordering a writ of seizure and sale to issue. On the 9th of June, 1846, a writ was issued; the slaves, Sam and Asbury, were seized, and, in the ensuing August, were sold at sheriff’s sale to J. J. and William, Amonett, the present defendants, for the sum of $533 32; which was settled, by direction of Messrs. Amonett, by crediting that amoun-, upon the writ. An appointment of curator ad hoc to represent McKee was made by the judge; but it does not appear from the record that the person named accepted the appointment, or took any action to protect the absent defendant, by notifying him of the seizure or otherwise. In the ensuing fall or winter, W. Amonett sold the slave Sam to Pugh, for an amount not shown by the evidence ; and the slave Asbury was sold by one of the Messrs. Amonett, for $375 or $400.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 La. Ann. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-v-amonett-la-1851.