Sievers v. Samuel

136 So. 33, 172 La. 1005, 1931 La. LEXIS 1799
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 25, 1931
DocketNo. 31088.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 So. 33 (Sievers v. Samuel) 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
Sievers v. Samuel, 136 So. 33, 172 La. 1005, 1931 La. LEXIS 1799 (La. 1931).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

Plaintiff sued for $263 alleged to be due for rent by the defendant, and in the enforcement of his lessor’s lien provisionally seized defendant’s effects in the rented premises. By agreement of counsel the seizure was released on a bond of $300, signed by defendant’s attorney as surety. Later, plaintiff obtained judgment on his claim. The amount of this judgment was reduced by payments made by defendant from time to time until, with the addition of the costs, it represented a decreased indebtedness of $192.90. This suit was instituted in the First city court of New Orleans against the judgment debtor and his surety on the bond to recover the amount of the said indebtedness, the property represented by the bond having practically disappeared. The court of first instance gave plaintiff judgment, but the judgment against the surety was reversed by the appellate court, 131 So. 485, and the ruling of the latter court is now before us for review.

Among other defenses, the surety alleged that he was not liable on the bond because it was not based on an order of court. The Court of Appeal sustained this defense on the authority of Honeycutt v. Whitten, 152 La. 1046, 95 So. 216.

A defendant’s right to bond property provisionally seized arises under article 287 and article 2S9 of the Code of Practice. The history and effect of these articles is set forth in the leading case of Conrad v. Patzelt, 29 La. Ann. 465.

As is shown by the opinion in that ease, the original Code of Practice authorized the issuance of the writ of provisional seizure in certain cases, but did not authorize the defendant to bond the seizure as in proceedings *1010 by attachment and sequestration. The process was made to apply to ships and other vessels, and, because of their inability to bond, masters and owners frequently submitted to unjust demands in order to prevent the costly idleness of their vessels pending the decision of the suit. The Legislature' remedied this situation in 1S39 by the adoption of Act No. 53, § 12, providing that, “Whenever ships or other vessels be provisionally seized, the defendant shall be permitted to have the seizure set aside on executing a bond in favor of the plaintiff, as in eases of attachment.” Under article 259 of the original Code, the release bond in attachment cases was absolute, without qualification, that the defendant would satisfy such judgment as might be rendered against him in the suit.

In 1852, article 259 was amended so as to permit defendant to obtain the release of the attached property on executing bond conditioned to “satisfy such judgment, to the value of the property attached, as may be rendered against him in the suit pending.” Release bonds of ships or other vessels were subject to this modification. Hence, as the law then stood, ships and other vessels provisionally seized could be released on bond, but property provisionally seized for rent could not.

But in 1867, by an act approved on July 6th (Act No. 205), the Legislature declared that, “whenever ships, vessels, or any other property, are provisionally seized, the defendant shall be permitted to have the seizure set aside, on executing his obligation with a good and solvent security for whatever amount the judge may determine as being equal to the value of the property to be left in his possession, or the condition of said bond to be that he will satisfy such judgment as may be rendered against him or return the property.”

This provision, with the exception of the italicised word “or” between the words “possession” and “condition,” is incorporated in article 289 of the Code of Practice, third paragraph.

In 1868, by act approved September 9th (Act No. 60), the Legislature again amended the Code of Practice relative to provisional seizures. -This statute applies exclusively to lessors, and permits the lessee in all cases to have such seizure released, “upon executing a forthcoming bond or obligation, with a good, solvent security for the value of the property to be left in his possession, or for the amount- of the claim, with interest and costs; provided, further, that the value of the property shall be fixed by the sheriff, or one of his deputies, with the assistance of two appraisers selected by the parties, twenty-four hours’ notice being previously given to the lessor or his counsel to select an appraiser.” This act now forms part of article 287 of the Code of Practice.

As pointed out by the court in its opinion, at page 472 of 29 La. Ann., there is no conflict between the Codal articles, and both are in effect. Hence, no matter whether property be provisionally seized by a lessor for his rent or by any other person for any of the other specified causes, the defendant is permitted to have the seizure released (a) by giving bond for whatever amount the judge may determine is the value of the property, conditioned to satisfy such judgment as may be rendered against him or to restore the property and (b) by executing a bond for the value of the property, or the amount of the claim, to be contradictorily fixed by appraisement, without any action by the judge being-required thereon.

The Codal articles are remedial in their nature. One article applies to every possible case of provisional seizure, and the other article applies to seizures by lessors alone. Both articles are intended for the cc\nvenience *1012 and benefit of tbe defendant only, and if a' lessee he may avail himself of the relief afforded by either article.

Neither of the Oodal articles is referred to in the bond under review. But tbe language of the instrument indicates rather strongly that it was executed under the general and not tbe exclusive law regulating tbe dissolution of provisional seizures on bond. Thus, after describing the property and reciting its seizure and detention by the constable, the bond declares that tbe property bas been released and delivered to tbe defendant hy order of court, upon tbe execution and delivery by tbe surety of tbe obligation. And tbe condition of tbe instrument is that tbe defendant “shall not send the above described property out of the jurisdiction of the Court, and that be will faithfully present tbe same in case be should be decreed to restore the same to the said Constable or shall satisfy said judgment as may be rendered in the suit pending as above mentioned,” etc.

But conceding that the defendant desired to avail himself of tbe permission granted by article 289 of the Code of Practice, and, therefore, should have applied to tbe judge to fix the amount of tbe bond, tbe question then arises, Could and did tbe defendant and his surety waive the statutory requirement?

The surety contends that the rule of Civ. Code, art 11, invoked by plaintiff, that individuals can renounce what the law has established in their favor, when tbe renunciation does not affect tbe rights'of others and is not contrary to tbe public good, is not applicable to judicial bonds, which tbe sheriff or constable can only accept in the manner and under tbe conditions prescribed by law.

The instrument under review is, properly speaking, a legal and not a judicial bond. A legal bond is that which is given pursuant to law. A judicial bond is that which is furnished under judicial direction.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Salmon v. Martin
164 So. 345 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 So. 33, 172 La. 1005, 1931 La. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sievers-v-samuel-la-1931.