State ex rel. B. F. Avery & Sons v. Duffel

41 La. Ann. 958
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
DocketNo. 10,405
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 La. Ann. 958 (State ex rel. B. F. Avery & Sons v. Duffel) 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
State ex rel. B. F. Avery & Sons v. Duffel, 41 La. Ann. 958 (La. 1889).

Opinion

[959]*959Tlie opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

Relators are severally creditors of the firm, or planting-partnership of Kelley Brothers, and of John and William J. Kelley, the individual members composing- said firm, all of whom, in recent judicial proceedings, applied for and sought to obtain the benefit of the State in-sol vent law, and to that end tendered an appropriate petition and schedules of assets and liabilities, accompanying same with the requisite oath, and thereupon the respondent judge granted the usual ex parte order of acceptance of their surrender for the benefit of said insolvent creditors, and directing a convocation of a meeting of their creditors, for the purpose of proving their debts and choosing- a definitive syndic to take charge of their estate-, in due course of law.

To these proceedings B. F. Avery & Co., H. T. Cottam & Co., the Red River and Coast Line, and the Walter A. Moore Mowing and Reaping Company, filed sundry oppositions, which came on for trial, and oh which a final judgment was rendered, wherein the following-things were decreed, viz :

1st. That all of the oppositions be “ rejected and dismissed with costs.”

2nd. “That Joseph A. Shakspeare be, and he is hereby declared to be, and is recognized as the duly elected syndic of the-insolvents,” and directing letters issue to him as such, on his complying with- the requirements of the law.

3rd. That “the process verbal of the meeting of creditors held * on the 20th day of February, 1889, * * be and the same is hereby homologated.”

4th. That the insolvents “be and they are hereby declared to be entitled to the benefit of the insolvent laws; and be and they are hereby discharged from all the debts placed upon their biland'

This judgment was rendered and signed, in open court, by the respondent judge, on the 30th of March, 1889.

On the 3rd of April following, the opponents filed a petition praying for a suspensive appeal from said judgment, and upon that day the respondent judge granted them, in chambers, an order of suspensive appeal “from the definitive judgment rendered by this court on the 30th of March, 1889, in the matter of tlie above entitled and numbered cause, and on the oppositions of said petitioners,” and made it returnable to this court on the third Monday in January, 1890. The order fixed the amount ®f the appeal bond, and directed “that all parties in interest be cited,to answer the said appeal.”

[960]*960Opponents furnished and caused to be filed a suspensive appeal bond, on the 3rd of April, 1889, the same day the order was granted. They subsequently, and in due time, caused the several insolvents and Joseph A. Shakspeare to be duly cited, in conformity with the order.

Having thus completed and perfected their suspensive appeal, from said definitive judgment, the object liad in view by the,relators, is to maintain the status quo, and protect their appeal, their contention being that same lias been impaired and violated, and will be further impaired and violated by the respondent judge, Joseph A. Shakspeare, and the sheriff of the Parish of Ascension, during the pendency of said appeal, and to their great and irreparable injury; and they seek by our writ of prohibition to restrain and prohibit their acts of interference therewith, and in a cause in which said judge had ceased to have any jurisdiction.

Their complaint is that, at the petition of the co-respondent, Joseph A. Shakspeare, alleging himself to be “the duly qualified syndic of said insolvents,” the said respondent judge granted on the 15th day of April, subsequent to the perfection of said appeal, an ex parte order directing that a sale be made for cash,” of all the property surrendered by said “insolvents, and particularly and specially the ^Bocagé ’ plantation, * * with all the mules, agricultural implements, etc., thereon and thereunto belonging, etc.,” as described in the schedules of the insolvents.

Sliakspeare’s petition alleges that this plantation and its adjuncts, constitutes the “principal asset surrendered,” and says “that it requires a great outlay of money and labor to maintain said plantation in a condition suitable for the purposes for which it is intended and which alone gives it a value, and it is to the evident interest, and great advantage of all creditors of said insolvents, that said plantation, and all of its appurtenances, consisting of mules, agricultural implements, etc., attached thereto and thereunto belonging, should be sold at once.”

In said petition it is further alleged that Shakspeare, Smith & Co. are first mortgage creditors of said insolvents, on said plantation, to the extent of nearly $50,000 with interest, and, as such, they represent, “in amount, more than a majority of the. creditors of said insolvents,” and that, at the meeting of the creditors of said insolvents “the majority in number and amount voted to sell said property, and all of the property of said insolvents, for cash.”

This application is fortified by the affidavit of Shakspeare, Smith & Co.

Reference to the schedule of the insolvents shows that the plantation and appurtenances, which the said order directs to be sold, is valued at about $20,000, and the total of their assets is $21,457 20, only an insig[961]*961nificant sum, in excess thereof, and the claim of Shakspeare, Smith & Co. is fixed at $53,920 59, as against total liabilities of $77,330 98, or-about two-third of the whole.

Under this order of sale a writ was issued and addressed to Bateman, sheriff of ¿rssension parish, who proceeded to advertise said plantation, and all appurtenances for sale, to take place on 25th of May, 1889, and hence he is, also, made co-respondent with Shakspeare.

The respondent judge for answer makes, in substance, the following return, viz:

That the insolvents filed their petition and he accepted their surrender on the 16th of February, 1889, and on the following day Avery & Sons filed an opposition in which, inter alia, they prayed that the insolvency proceedings be revoked and set aside, and decreed null and void, and that the order appertaining to the syndic, be vacated.

On the 19th of February, 3889, the Red River and Coast Line, Avery & Sons, II. T. Cottam & Co., and the Ward Mowing and Reaping Company filed their oppositions, alleging that a meeting of creditors could not lawfully be held, and prayed that the proceedings of the meeting be decreed absolutely null and void; that the claim of Rufus Lish and Shakspeare, Smith & Co., as creditors, be declared simulated, fictitious and unreal.

All of those several oppositions were duly served.

On the 20th to the 23d of February, 1889, a meeting of creditors was held, and thereat J. A. Shakspeare was duly elected definitive syndic; and that on the 25th of February, afterwards he applied to him for letters as syndic, and that he rendered an order directing letters to issue to him, on his taking the requisite oath and furnishing bond.

On the 4th of March, said opponents filed supplemental petitions, in which they charge that the pretended meeting of creditors was a nullity and the pretended election of -Joseph A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 La. Ann. 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-b-f-avery-sons-v-duffel-la-1889.