Ohio Insurance v. Edmondson

5 La. 295
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 La. 295 (Ohio Insurance v. Edmondson) 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
Ohio Insurance v. Edmondson, 5 La. 295 (La. 1833).

Opinion

Porter, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties really litigant before this court are the plaintiffs,'and the defendant, Edmondson. The former claim a lien on an instrument of writing executed by Tallant, the original owner of the boat, in the State of Ohio. The latter sets up title to her under a sale made in the state of Kentucky, in virtue of a decree of one of the courts of chancery of that state.

It is unnecessary to set out the pleadings, for after any detailed statement of them, they would only exhibit what has been already stated, as the substantial issue between the parties.

Before, however, entering into the merits, one or two questions relating to the regularity of the proceedings, present themselves for decision, and must be disposed of.

■ The suit commenced by a service of the petition and citation on the defendant, Edmondson, and there was a prayer [299]*299for a provisional seizure. After service of the original pétition, a supplemental one was filed, in which the plaintiffs stated, they were obliged to ask for a sequestration of the boat. It was granted on an affidavit of their agent, in which he declared, that the allegations contained in the petition heretofore filed were true.

It is unnecesa*y for a party to swear to the swear to the a ctssuppfj¿éntai if||equ“stS^j§ aos^flctssta-petition!3 ousmal ¿ contract mada country win bo other, unless¡nju-ry is thereby til-rectiy or incüreetly done to the inhabitants óf the latter.

It is objected, that the allegations in the supplemental petition on which the writ of sequestration issued, are not sworn to, and that consequently the writ improvidently issued. However correct such an objection might be, in case the prayer for a sequestration rested on the facts set out in a supplemental petition, the court is of opinion the objection is not well founded in that now before it. In the supplemental petition, the plaintiffs allege no new facts; they on the contrary refer to the original petition, and make it the basis of their demand for a sequestration. The affidavit, therefore, of the agent repeating the averment of the truth of the alie- ° ° gations on which the plaintiffs claimed a lien on the boat, was the only one which could have been properly made; indeed any were necessary, after the oath previously taken by him, to the truth of the facts stated in the original petition,

But a more formidable objection has been raised against the regularity of the proceedings. The statutes and jurisprudence of Louisiana, it is contended, only confer the privilege of sequestration to enforce liens given by its laws; and that, in aid of which this remedy was extended here, was not one that had any force, or conferred any privilege-in our state, though it might have that effect in the country where it was made.

By the comity of nations a practice has been adopted by which courts of justice examine into, and enforce contracts made in other states, and carry them into effect accord- . ing to the laws of the place where the transaction took its ° A rise. This practice has become so general in modern times, that it may be almost stated to be now a rule of international law, and it is subject only to the exception, that the contract to which aid is required should not, either in itself, [300]*300or in the means used to give it effect, work an injury to the inhabitants ofjthe country where it is attempted tobe enforced.

a bin of excop-tions to the intro-auction in .evidence of a depo-ground that it has taken^ls too^gcií the110 thaUrva°iidUymTf to the deposition of the officer by whom it was ta-

The objection now taken raises a distinction in cases so circumstanced, between remedies before and after judgment; and we confess we are unable to see any solid grounds on which it can rest. If it be true, as we apprehend it is, that the court can and should enforce the personal obligation which a party, not a citizen of the state, may have entered into in another country, and that on the judgment so rendered, the foreign creditor could obtain the benefit of all writs of execution which an inhabitant of Louisiana might resort to against a domestic debtor, then we can see no good ground for refusing the auxiliary process in the first instance; whether it be an order to arrest the person of the debtor, and hold him to hail, or a writ to seize the property brought within the jurisdiction of a court, if it be the subject of contest. Both seem to rest on the same principles. And a familiar illustration of the common received opinion on this subject, may be given in the case of attachments, which are almost every day resorted to in aid of the foreign creditor against the foreign debtor; and yet there is nothing in our law more expressly giving that remedy to the stranger, than there is in the case of sequestration.

We, therefore, think the writ properly issued, and that the property seized under it, must abide the decision on the merits.

There was a bill of exceptions taken to the introduction . , x in evidence of depositions taken in the state of Ohio. The * otjectio11 made here is, that the return to the commission is under the official seal of the mayor; and that the Code of Prac-requires it to be under the private seal of the commissioner. It is unnecessary to say what weight this objection is entitled, to m a case where the commission is directed, as . ,, . . , , , ,. , , , 5 in this instance, to a public officer by his title, and not to him personally; for no objection was made on the ground taken here in the court of the' first instance. The reasons given in the bill of exceptions are, that the depositions had not been [301]*301legally taken. This is too genejal; it is the duty of the party to put his finger on the particular defect.

where maritime ved.Totifprincii mnsth’eriskedto obügation tila tenybond.

On the merits of the case, there is much more difficulty than in the points just disposed of. The plaintiffs, as we have already stated, claim a privilege on the boat in consequence of a contract entered into in the state of Ohio, with her then owner. By the instrument which evidences this contract, it appears, the plaintiffs lent him the sum of six thousand dollars, for the use of which for one year he was to pay nine hundred and sixty dollars. The boat was to be navigated on the waters of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers .during that time; a lien or privilege was given on her for the payment of the debt and interest; and it was stipulated that in case she was lost during the period just mentioned, the sum of six thousand dollars should not be demanded or recoverable from the debtor, but that the interest might.

It has been a subject of debate at the bar, whether this was not a bottomry bond. It certainly has many of the features of one; but we are inclined to the opinion that it cannot be considered such. Whether a bottomry bond may not be made to secure a sum of money lent with legal interest} payable at all events, seems to be a question not yet perfectly settled. But where maritime interest is reserved, the weight of authority appears to greatly preponderate in favor of the position, that both principal and interest’must be put at risk. See Story’s Abbott, 125. 4 Binney, 244. Park on Insurance, 416.

The plaintiffs’ right to recover must therefore be found, if it exists at all, elsewhere than in the maritime law.

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Bluebook (online)
5 La. 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-insurance-v-edmondson-la-1833.