Poole v. American Bank & Trust Co.

416 So. 2d 1365, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 7751
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1982
DocketNo. 82-79
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 416 So. 2d 1365 (Poole v. American Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poole v. American Bank & Trust Co., 416 So. 2d 1365, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 7751 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

FORET, Judge.

A number of related actions brought to recover damages for wrongful seizure were consolidated for purposes of this appeal.1 These actions will be referred to throughout [1366]*1366the remainder of this opinion by their trial court docket numbers. This Court will render separate judgments in each of these cases for the reasons expressed in this opinion.

Defendants filed various exceptions in each of these actions. The trial court, after trial, rendered judgment sustaining defendants’ peremptory exceptions of prescription filed in actions # 73,782-1, 73,784-2, 73,-785-1, and 73,786-2, dismissing those actions without prejudice. The trial court further rendered judgment sustaining a dilatory exception of prematurity filed by certain defendants in 73,783-1 dismissing that action without prejudice.

Plaintiffs, in actions # 73,782-1, 73,784-2, 73,785-1 and 73,786-2, appeal devolutively from the trial court’s judgment and raise the identical issue of:

Whether the trial court committed manifest error in sustaining defendants’ peremptory exception of prescription.

Plaintiffs in action # 73,783-1 (our docket # 82-80), 416 So.2d 1369, also appeal devolutively from the trial court’s judgment sustaining defendants’ dilatory exception of prematurity. These plaintiffs2 have failed, however, to file a brief with this Court. Thus, we dismiss their appeal.

FACTS

These actions for damages for wrongful seizure all arise out of the seizure of certain property, allegedly belonging to plaintiffs, pursuant to a writ of fi.fa. issued on the basis of a default judgment signed February 12, 1975, in American Bank & Trust Co. v. Marbane Investments, Inc., et al, Docket No. 68,249-1, 27th Judicial District Court, St. Landry Parish, La. On remand from a judgment rendered in American Bank & Trust Co. v. Marbane Investments, Inc., 337 So.2d 1209, on rehearing, 337 So.2d 1213 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1976), the trial court declared the above mentioned default judgment to be a nullity3. American Bank & Trust Company v. Marbane Investments, Inc., supra, provides a concise summary of the pertinent facts leading up to the present litigation, and we see no need to repeat them here.

PRESCRIPTION

Plaintiffs contend that the trial court committed manifest error in sustaining defendants’ peremptory exceptions of prescription filed in the four actions noted above. They argue that prescription has yet to begin to run against their actions for damages for wrongful seizure because there has been no determination made as to whether their property was, in fact, wrongfully seized. On the other hand, defendants argue that plaintiffs’ actions have prescribed since they were brought more than [1367]*1367one year after the last seizure of property took place.

The crucial issue to be decided is whether prescription begins to run against an action for damages for wrongful seizure from the date on which the seizure took place, or from the date on which the seizure is judicially declared to have been wrongful. For the following reasons, we find that prescription begins to run against such an action from the date on which the seizure is judicially declared to have been wrongful.

Hernandez v. Harson, 237 La. 389, 111 So.2d 320 (1959), was an action with facts and circumstances similar to those found in the actions before us. Plaintiff in Hernandez had purchased an automobile. The motor number of that automobile had been erroneously included with those of two other automobiles on which a chattel mortgage had been granted by another person to secure a promissory note. Plaintiff’s automobile was seized when the holder of the promissory note brought a foreclosure suit via ordinaria to have the chattel mortgage recognized and enforced. A judgment was obtained decreeing the validity of the chattel mortgage and directing the sheriff to seize and sell the mortgaged chattels. Plaintiff’s automobile was seized while in his possession, and he and his mortgage creditor filed a third opposition to set aside the seizure insofar as it affected his car.

The trial court rendered judgment maintaining the third opposition, decreeing the third opponent to be the lawful owner of his automobile, and holding invalid the chattel mortgage, finding that the chattel mortgagor was never the owner of that vehicle. This ruling was upheld on appeal.

Hernandez was a suit for damages for wrongful seizure of the automobile brought by the former third opponent, who was now plaintiff. Hernandez stated, on page 322, that:

“It is manifest that the final judgment in the original case, supra, declaring the seizure of the Plymouth automobile void and invalid and that said vehicle on the date of the seizure was legally owned and possessed by plaintiff, is res judicata on the right to actual damages sustained by the true owner of the seized property. We adhere to this salutary principle of law recognizing that the owner of property is entitled to actual damages sustained where it is wrongfully seized by judicial process in a suit in which he is a stranger, his property being seized to pay the debt of a third person, the judgment debtor of defendant. Such a seizure is classified as a quasi offense, for which the seizing creditor is responsible in damages to the owner of the property seized. LSA-C.C. Art. 2315. Deliole v. Morgan, 2 Mart., N.S., 24; Edwards v. Turner, 6 Rob. 382; Soniat v. Whitmer, 141 La. 235, 74 So. 916, 919.”
(emphasis ours.)

A defendant in Hernandez had filed a peremptory exception of prescription (which was overruled by the trial court), apparently contending that prescription began to run from the date of the wrongful seizure.

Hernandez rejected this argument, holding at page 323, that:

“We concede that earlier eases relied on by defendant seemingly uphold his contention. Later decisions, however, have firmly established the rule that a party damaged by an illegal seizure of his property may file suit within one year after the final termination of the litigation, or in other words, that the running of one year prescription begins not from the date of the illegal seizure, but from the time the rights of the parties are finally determined. Obviously, the measure of damages grows out not only from the wrongful seizure but its continued illegal detention, the loss and deprivation to which the owner is illegally subjected. The soundness of this rule is instantly apparent in that the owner of property illegally seized is incapable of ascertaining or knowing the quantum of damages he has sustained until his rights to its ownership have been definitively decreed.”
(emphasis ours.)

[1368]*1368It is possible to distinguish Hernandez from the actions sub judice brought by Marvin Poole and Marbane Investments, Inc., in that Hernandez was concerned with actions brought by a third party, who was a stranger to the litigation that resulted in the seizure of his property. Marvin Poole and Marbane Investments, Inc., were judgment debtors in the action that resulted in the seizure of their property. However, Hernandez cited Commercial Securities Company, Inc. v.

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Bluebook (online)
416 So. 2d 1365, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 7751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-v-american-bank-trust-co-lactapp-1982.