Sprigg v. Beaman

6 La. 59
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 La. 59 (Sprigg v. Beaman) 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
Sprigg v. Beaman, 6 La. 59 (La. 1833).

Opinion

Porter, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action commenced by the assignee of a mortgage, to enforce it on property in the hands of a third possessor. The petition contains a prayer that the defendant be condemned to deliver up the property, or pay the amount due.

The answer presents a general denial; a plea of payment; an averment that the transfer of the mortgage was made by a person not duly authorised to alienate it: and, lastly, that the plaintiff paid no consideration for the debt, but, on the contrary, that he acquired it through fraud.

The proceedings throughout, took the form of the juicio ordinario, and the cause was submitted to a jury, who found a verdict in favour of the plaintiff, on which verdict the court rendered a judgment, similar to that given in a personal action, where the plaintiff establishes the debt sued for. From that judgment the defendant has appealed.

In anhypotiiccary action, the ^^¿"‘geSerai pSedh“i,i bth" £?th° ««t raise the objection on appeal, that the oath as to the debt ¡anotannexed to the pjaintiir’s petiíheTnftSmtion°of A surety who Pays aatI ,is subrogated to the [Í?ht^atastMura miíyTegaiiyíssuB nameofthéjudg-ment cl'e<utor- „Jnt ofVjudgl anTtin?°expil£ subrogation are of equal extent, and every right which the creditor possessed passes by the act of payment to him paymonu” mad?

An objection has been taken in this court, that there is nut annexed to the petition an oath, that the debt is justly due, and unpaid; and that payment has been in vain demanded thirty days before suit was brought.

This objection should have been presented asan exception ° A 1 in the court of the first instance, and should have béen pleaded in limine litis. It is foreign tojthe merits, and was waved by an answer embracing the general denial, a plea of , c pajmcnt, OEC. #

. It is next urged that the evidence 01 a demand on the ^ original debtor is insufficient, as the return by the sheriff of nulla bona, is made on an execution which was illegal and void. The nullity, it is contended, arises from the plaintiff having issued the execution in the name of the creditor, though the judgment had been already conveyed to the petitioner, and in support of this proposition, observations which fell from the court in the case, Gray vs. Baldwin, are principally relied on. The remarks then made, do certainly sustain the ground now taken, but they were not necessary J to a decision ol that case, and upon an attentive consideraA tion of the matter, we are satisfied they are erroneous. The true principle, we take it, is settled in the case of Cox vs. Baldwin. The judgment creditor, it cannot be doubted, might expressly confer such a right on his assignee. If the legal subrogation be as extensive as that which is express, and we think it is, then every .right which the creditors possessed, passes by the act of payment to him by whom that payment is made. 4 JV. S, 196, 1 Louisiana. JXepOVtS¿ 4U1. 1

. /» i . On the point now under notice, a further consideration x # was pressed on us. The sheriff returns that the defendant r had left the parish, that he could find no property belonging to him, and that the plaintiff could not show any. Reference is made to the 726th and 727th articles of the Code of Practice, to show that a demand must be made of the debtor, before a return of nulla bona. To this doctrine we accede, if it be possible to make the demand, but if the debtor [64]*64has removed from the baliwick of the officer before the writ comes into his hands, the demand cannot be made by him, ^ ' and the ulterior rights of the creditor cannot be defeated by the debtor absconding. The code in the articles cited, gives ^e general rule, and leaves it open by the exceptions which accompany all laws, and which necessarily grow out of circumstances that are inseparable from the affairs of men. . 4 7 4 Lex nemmem cogió ad vana sen impossibiha♦

Personal de* Sor, previous hypothecary ac'thw “Assessor8, will not be required where the debtor has absconded. a return by the sheriff sufficientis An upoTShisa°Mi8 hniaTnot stipíí w^feefbñt^aiti pected to be paid for his legal vices, and that it" was ins hfy-t, when he had not fee*tefehargejess theUMure, ítaL’if ceeíTami tílafhe byilisrSeofcontMsVas^n wá” ¿hat he was admissible as a witness for his client,

, . , 7 7 , _ On the trial of the cause, the plamtitt ottered his counsel x as witness, he was objected to on the ground that he was interested in the event of the suit, and was interrogated on his voir dire, to establish that interest. Hi; swore ‘'that he had not stipulated any particular fee with his client, but expected to be paid for his legal services; that it was his habit, when he had not stipulated for his fee, to charge less, should he fail in the cause, than if he were to succeed; and that he would feel bound by his rule of conduct, to apply it to this case.” We think the judge did not err. We are inclined on all occasions, where the strict rules of law do not controul us, to favour the admission of testimony, and leave the credit to be weighed by those who are required to decide p. The correct rule, as we understand it, is, that the interest which disqualifies a witness, must be a legal interest. The case cited in ‘ argument, is one of many which has been decided in the United Skates on this subject. It shows . , . . in that instance, an honorary interest excluded the witness. The authorities in our sister states conflict, though ■ ° they preponderate in favor of the proposition, that an interest wbich is not legal, will disqualify a witness. To produce that effect in England, the interest must be direct and legal. in the instance before us, though the witness felt the obligatlon which his habits of business had imposed, to vary his charge for compensation with the event of the suit, tnerc was ° * surely no legal obligation on him to do so. The legal responsibility of the client was to pay him the value r f his services, and this value was to be tested by the labour and pains bestowedon the cause, and the degree of responsibility incurred, not by the success which attended his efforts. The [65]*65physician who conquers a disease, is in law entitled to no more remuneration, than when he is baffled by it and sees all his exertions fruitlessly terminate with the loss of his patient’s life. Starkie on Evidence, part 4,746, 747, and notes to 747. Phillips on Evidence, 63.

liable in war™?which rm’SJy “the cáuso' Til0 authority necessarily implies the power to extinguish the right of the cred-¡tor in it, ana whether the payño v?aed the°’aSori pXtesrthaf the without recourse

There is another bill of exceptions taken to the opinion of the judge refusing to admit the original debtor as a witness, on the part of the defendant. The witness had a direct interest in the cause, and a legal interest too, for if the plaintiff succeeded in the action, the witness was responsible in an action of warranty to the defendant, who had purchased the property at a sale, under a writ of execution. See Code of Practice, 711.

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Bluebook (online)
6 La. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sprigg-v-beaman-la-1833.