North Alabama Development Co. v. Orman

71 F. 764, 18 C.C.A. 309, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 1650
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 71 F. 764 (North Alabama Development Co. v. Orman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Alabama Development Co. v. Orman, 71 F. 764, 18 C.C.A. 309, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 1650 (5th Cir. 1896).

Opinion

BOARMAN, District Judge.

On November 28, 1891, W. A. Orman sued out two writs of attachment against the North Alabama Development Company in the state court of Alabama. The suits in which the writs issued were in the state court Nos. 1,569 and 1,570. After the sheriff had executed both writs, on defendant’s lands and other property, he returned both writs with an indorsement on each writ, separately, describing therein such property as he had seized. Both causes were removed to the circuit court for the Northern district of Alabama, wherein the two causes were consolidated and tried as one suit, which trial, October 31, 1892, resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, condemning the property levied on by the writs of attachment, and specifically describing the same, to the payment of Orman’s debt, and ordering the sale of said property so described. From that judgment the defendant company, unsuccessfully, prosecuted a writ of error to this court (5 C. C. A. 22, 55 Fed. 18): and the mandate sent down recited the description of the lands and other property, as described in the judgment of the lower court. When the writ of error prosecuted by defendant to this court came up, there was recited in the record only the sheriff’s return on one of the writs; that is, in suit No. 1,569. There was a note by the clerk at the foot of a page in the record, on which the said return appeared, saying that “the sheriff’s return or levy being the same, and on the same property, in each case, as stated in the transcript, he recited the writ hut once.” On the return of the mandate from this court, an order of sale issued from respondent’s court, and said order of sale describes lands and other property as shown in the sheriff’s indorsement on the levy writ in suit No. 1,569, which said writ came up with the record. The sheriff’s indorsement on levy writ in suit No. 1,569 does not describe the same lands and other property described in his indorsement made on the levy writ in suit No. 1,570, which said writ is now for the first time, as an exhibit to respondent's answer, brought to the notice of this court. Now, after the sa le was made of the lands and other property, described in the sheriff's indorsement on the levy writ in suit No. 1,569, the description therein purporting to be the same as that shown in the original judgment, and copied literally by the clerk of this court into the man-dab', the counsel for Orman, representing that all the lands and other property which were condemned to satisfy Orman’s debt by the original judgment bad not been sold by the marshal, under the original order of sale, moved the respondent to amend nunc pro tunc the original judgment and order of sale, so as to malee the said original judgment and order of sale correspond, in their descriptions of flic lauds and other property, with the descriptions of such lands and other property as were condemned in satisfaction of Orman’s debt. In aid of this motion, he alleges that the property shown to have been levied on by the sheriff in executing the above writs, if correctly described, would be as follows. And here, in his petition or motion, is given such a description of the lands and other property as he alleges were condemned to the payment of Orman’s debt. We do not think it necessary, for the purposes of this opinion, to [766]*766recite herein that description. The respondent, in an ex parte proceeding, so set up by Orman’s counsel, granted the amended judgment and order of sale as prayed for, and, in doing so, caused the lands and other property, as described in the counsel’s motion, to be included in and described in the said amended orders. Counsel for the North Alabama Development Company, on hearing respondent’s said amendments nunc pro tunc, filed a motion praying respondent to set aside his said two amended orders. Said motion is attached, as an exhibit, to the petition for mandamus, and it alleges a number of grounds which were urged by said counsel, before the respondent; on behalf of the said motion. The respondent, for himself, filed an answer to the rule, and annexed as an exhibit the levy writ in suit No. 1,570, and the sheriff’s indorsement thereon. The attorney for the defendant, North Alabama Development Company, filed a demurrer to that answer, and the counsel for Orman filed a motion to dismiss petition for mandamus — First, on the ground that respondent’s amendments nunc pro tunc relate only to corrections by the record; second, because the petitioner’s remedy, if he has any cause of complaint, is not by mandamus, but by a writ of error. All these papers make up the pleadings which show the issues heard and disposed of at this hearing. Under the view we take of the case, we may dispose of all the issuable matters of law and fact therein by passing upon two of the several grounds urged by the defendant company’s counsel on behalf of his motion, praying respondent to set aside the said amended judgment.

We will consider the two said grounds, which we think may be stated, substantially, as follows: (1) That the respondent, in passing said judgment and order of sale nunc pro tunc, did not limit his corrections to clerical errors shown in the record, but, in effect, the corrections asked for by Orman’s counsel, and allowed by respondent, materially altered and enlarged his (the respondent’s) judicial conclusions, as evidenced in his original judgment condemning all the property seized under the writs of attachment to the payment of Orman’s debt; (2) that the said amendments nunc pro tunc affect and alter materially the judgment of the circuit court of appeals, as shown in the mandate of this court.

It will be seen from the statement which we have made, substantially, of the case, and all the pleadings and matters presented to us on the hearing of the rule, that the question for us to determine, primarily, is a mixed question of law and of fact; that is, was the respondent authorized, jurisdictionally, by or from the record, to make such corrections as it seems to us he has made by granting the said orders nunc pro tunc? In considering that issue, the first thought that suggests itself to us is that the counsel for Orman admits, though the marshal was directed to sell all the lands and other property condemned in the original judgment, and shown in the venditioni exponas based thereon, to the satisfaction of Orman’s debt, that he did not sell certain lands, which were described in the sheriff’s indorsement on the. two writs shown, respectively, in suits Nos. 1,569 and 1,570. Now, keeping that admission in mind, together [767]*767witli (he fact that there was one levy writ issued in suit No. 1,569, and one in suit No. 1,576, and the further fact that the sheriff made his indorsements, respectively, on each of the two writs, a correct conclusion, as to the issuable matters of law and fact, may be more sat isfactorily reached. Aside from the admission of counsel which we have just mentioned, our examination of the descriptions of lauds and other property described, respectively, in the two indorsements made by the sheriff, leads us to the conclusion that the lands and other property described in the sheriff’s indorsement on levy writ in suit No. 1,569 (the writ which, it seems, was followed in making up the original judgment entry, and which came, in the transcript, to this court) are materially different from the descriptions of lands and other property found in the indorsements on writ in suit No. 1,570.

The counsel for Orman, we presume, would not contend that the corrections of errors made by respondent’s judgment nunc pro tunc were made by or from referring to the descriptions of lands and other property found in suit No. 1,569.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F. 764, 18 C.C.A. 309, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 1650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-alabama-development-co-v-orman-ca5-1896.