State ex rel. Dowdell v. Allen

105 La. 167
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
DocketNo. 13,704
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 La. 167 (State ex rel. Dowdell v. Allen) 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. Dowdell v. Allen, 105 La. 167 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

Previously, relator had presented a petition to the district judge in which he represented he was engaged in the business of getting out ties; that these ties were made from cypress timber; that he held a contract from the owners of a certain tract of land, which he described, authorizing him to take the timber therefrom; and that he had entered upon the land for the purpose.

He] alleged further that the representatives of the Orphans’ Home Society and of the Freedman’s Aid and Southern Educational Society were interfering with his work of taking timber from the land and that if this interference were persisted in it would completely break up his business and cause him irreparable injury.

[168]*168Verifying by oath the allegations of Ms petition he asked for a writ of injunction to prevent further disturbance.

On the ex parte showing thus made, the judge (respondent herein) granted the injunction.

To this petition, the Orphans’ Home Society and the Freedman's A. & S. E. Society, made defendants, answered, setting up in themselves, as owners in indivisión, title to the land whereon relator had entered and from which he was cutting timber.

They averred they had acquired this title in 1867 and had been in possession of the land as owners ever since, under recorded deeds; and adding to the period of their own possession that of their vendors, they had possessed as owners for over fifty years,, and this possession had been open, public and notorious.

They denied that any one had given the plaintiff, Dowdell (relator herein) authority to cut timber from the land, and that if any persons bad undertaken to do so, their act was null, since they were not the owners.

They further asserted that the plaintiff (relator) well knew the land in question was their property, for prior to going upon the same to cut ties he had applied to them for permission to take the timber therefrom and had been refused. They declared his attempt to gain possession through the writ of injunction was a subterfuge, using the machinery of the court to effectuate a purpose he had failed to accomplish by private agreement, and that his intention was to maintain the injunction only so long as he could get the timber off the land, which timber constituted almost its sole value.

The filing of this answer to relator’s injunction suit was followed by the institution before the same court of an action by the Orphans’ Home Society and the Freedman’s A. & S. E. Society against Dowdell in which their title to the land was set up substantially as given in their answer to his suit.

They referred to the adverse claim set up by Dowdell and to the injunction he had sued out, and represented that he and others in collusion with Mm were engaged in ai scheme to hold possession of the land until they could denude it of its timber.

They represented anew Dowdell’s previous acknowledgment of their ownership by seeking to contract with them for permission to cut the timber, etc.

They, averred their property was in danger of being despoiled to their [169]*169irreparable injury, since Dowdell and Ms associates were irresponsible, and that unless the court intervened the devastation and spoliation would be accomplished before the injunction sMt filed by Dowdell could be tried, and there would be left to the petitioners^ only “a ruined, dilapidated and plundered swamp” — Dowdell and his associates having reaped the harvest of timber and gone off with the only thing of value in the contest.

The prayer of this petition was for “such conservatory orders as the court may deem proper for the preservation of the property pending the litigation,” and for judgment decreeing their ownership, etc.

Oath was made to the truth of the averments contained in the petition.

On this showing and in view of the whole situation as presented to him by this double-barreled litigation, the judge of the District Court thought the interest of justice required the court’s further intervention, and, accordingly, he made an order in the last suit filed directing the judicial sequestration of the land and its timber, both standing and cut, the same to be held in the custody of the sheriff until the respective rights of the parties could be adjudicated.

After vainly endeavoring to secure an order of revocation of the judicial sequestration, Dowdell applied to this court, in the proceeding now before us, for its writ of prohibition and certiorari, to prevent the respondent judge from proceeding further in the matter of the judicial sequestration, and to obtain, the annullment of the same as being in violation of the writ of injunction which the relator had previously obtained.

The contention is that the judge, by directing the judicial sequestration, has practically disregarded and set at naught the injunction; that the latter can not be collaterally and incidentally nullified by the issuance of a counter writ from the same court; and that until regularly dissolved, the injunction must be- recognized, upheld and' enforced as a valid and effective writ, subject to attack, modification or dissolution only in the proceeding in which it was issued.

The judge justifies his action by thei statement that the litigation pending in Ms court showed an earnest contest over the ownership of real property, with the apparent right of possession in one litigant being no greater than in the other. Further, that his court was about to adjourn (at the time the judicial sequestration was issued) for the summer vacation, and it was made to appear by the sworn statéments [170]*170of the Orphans’ Home Society and its alleged co-owner that, pending the vacation and pending the trial of the suits filéd, the swamp land in controversy would be ruined by the action of the relator and further litigation over the same rendered fruitless.

He declares the case was one which, under C. P. 274, called for the action he took, viz :• — taking the possession of the thing in dispute from the disputants and putting the same in the custody of the sheriff until the question of title and right of possession could be finally adjudged; that from the averments of litigants must the judge decide whether or not the writ of judicial sequestration should issue; that to wait until the right of title was made clear, and that of possession made certain, would be to render useless and vain that provision of the law authorizing the resort to judicial sequestration, which is a conservatory writ to be exercised in the sound discretion of the court to protect real property pending the settlement of the question of its ownership.

He denies that the sequestration as ordered nullifies the previous injunction, but'merely suspends the operations of the selator in the matter of taking the timber from the land in dispute and maintains the status quo until the rights, of the claimants can be determined.

Ruling — The two suits, that of Dowdell against Orphans’ Home Society, et als., and that of the latter against Dowdell, are pending in the same court. It is one and the same controversy. The eases might well be, and should be, consolidated .and tried together.

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Related

City of New Orleans v. Postek
158 So. 553 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1934)
Dickinson v. Texana Oil & Refining Co.
80 So. 669 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1919)
Dowdell v. Orphans' Home Soc.
38 So. 16 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1905)
State ex rel. Des Allemands Lumber Co. v. Allen
34 So. 804 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1903)
Sanders v. Ditch
107 La. 333 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 La. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dowdell-v-allen-la-1901.