State ex rel. Garig v. King

104 La. 472
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,760
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 La. 472 (State ex rel. Garig v. King) 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. Garig v. King, 104 La. 472 (La. 1900).

Opinion

[473]*473Statement of ti-ie Case.

The opinion, of the court was delivered by

Niciiolls, C. J.

The applicalion in this case for a prohibition is based upon allegations that on the 27th of November, 1900, relators presented for filing and granting to the Honorable Fred. D. King, Judge of Division “B” of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, in suit entitled Mrs. Harriet Shwartz vs. Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Company, No. 63,385 of the docket of the Civil District Court, a petition for a suspensive appeal from a judgment rendered appointing a receiver to said company in said case, said judgment being rendered and signed by said judge on November 22nd, 1900.

That said judge granted said suspensive appeal returnable to the Supreme Court of Louisiana on the third Monday in December, 1900.

That before the ten days had elapsed from the rendering of the judgment appealed from, to-wit: on the 4th day of December, 1900, petitioners gave a good and solvent, bond in the full sum of two thousand dollars ($2000), the amount fixed by the court.

That in spite of said bond being given by relators, and in disregard of the delay accorded by law to petitioners to appeal, said judge made executory the judgment rendered by him on the 22nd day of November, 1900, suspensively appealed from.

That under the law said judge had no legal right to take the actiou he did in this matter, until the time allowed by law for taking a suspensive appeal had expired.

That the acts of said judge cause them an irreparable injury and damage. That in refusing to wait until the delay for taking this suspensive appeal should have expired, and issuing orders in conflict with relators’ legal rights, said judge exceeded the bounds of his jurisdiction, and caused relators an irreparable injury and damage.

That said judge had no right to act in the maltcr, pending the delay for a suspensive appeal, and the same was out of his jurisdiction, and any and all judgments or orders made by him during said period in conflict with rdlators’ suspensive appeal were, illegal, null and void.

That they desire to perfect their appeal, but the action taken by respondent judge herein will deprive them (unless a writ of prohibition is granted), of any benefit they could get from same.

That they are compelled to apply to this court for the protection.of their legal rights.

[474]*474The prayer of the petition was that a writ of prohibition issue directed to the defendant judge prohibiting him from taking cognizance of the case referred to and to abstain from exercising any jurisdiction over tite matters pertaining to the said case, until relators’ suspensive appeal has been legally disposed of.

Annexed to this petition was the following order of the District Court:

“On motion of Lazarus & Luce, of counsel for Peter Stifft, receiver herein, duly qualified under the decretal order rendered herein on Nov. 22nd, and which order appointing your mover as receiver was signed on the date of its entry; and on suggesting to the court that intervening petitioners moved this court on 27th day of November for a susIjensive appeal to the Supreme Court of this State, and that more than ten days have elapsed since the decretal order of appointment was rendered and signed, and that the said intervening parties appealing have not furnished a bond as directed by the order granting said appeal within the time limited by the statute in such cases, made and provided as per certificates of clerk of court, attached hereto, that the effect of their neglect to perfect their appeal has been, under the law, to abandon the same, and in consequence thereof, your mover is entitled to immediate possession of the assets and effects of said Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Co., of which he has been duly appointed as receiver.
“It is ordered, that Peter Stifft, receiver of the Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement. Company, he and is hereby directed to demand of Charles Mendelson, manager and acting president of the Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Company, possession of all its property and its effects and to hold the same until the further orders of this court, as receiver, for due and proper administration, and until the further orders of this court; and that he immediately proceed and take an inventory of the property delivered into his possession, and to return the same into this court with all reasonable dispatch; that he, the said receiver, hold himself at all times, and the property under his possession, as receiver, subject to the further orders of this court. (Signed) Fred D. King, Judge. . New Orleans, Dec. 4th, 1900.”

The district judge having been ordered to show cause 'why (he writ should not issue as prayed for, answered that in the cause entitled Harriet Shwartz vs. Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement Company, “allotted to the division of the Civil District Court over which respondent presides, after due hearing and for cause sufficient, in respondent’s [475]*475opinion, to justify judicial action, lie did, on Nov. 22nd, 1900, by formal decretal order, appoint Peter Stiift as receiver of said Rosetta Gravel Paving & Improvement. Company, and as appears by the record, said Peter Stiift furnished the bond directed under said decretal order, and qualified in accordance therewith.

That on the 27th of November, 1900, Wm. Garig and others, averring themselves to he creditors and stockholders of said Rosetla Gravel. Company, presented their motion for an appeal from the order entered in said cause appointing a receiver; that the amount of the appeal bond was fixed at $2000, and the moving parties made said appeal returnable to the Supreme Court on the third Monday in December, 1900, and that no appeal was either asked or taken by the Rosetta Gravel Paving k Improvement Company, the defendant in said cause.

That, while under Sec. 4 of the statute No. 159 of 1898, immediately upon the decretal order being entered, the receiver appointed is entitled to take possession with his functions suspended in the event of an appeal, except for conservatory purposes, respondent, at the request of counsel for said defendant corporation, and being advised that an appeal had been taken, suspended the receiver’s possession, until an opportunity was afforded the appealing intervenol-s to perfect their said appeal; that under, and by virtue of the 4th section of the Act above referred to, an appeal from a decretal order appointing a receiver must be taken and perfected within ten days from the entry of said decretal order; that said appeal, as appears by the record and the clerk’s certificate attached and made part hereof, was not perfected within the time limited by the statute — that is to say, within the ten days from the entry of the decretal order appointing the receiver, the bond only having been filed on Doc. 4th, at 2:45 p. m., after the order hereinafter referred to, had, upon motion of the complaining paifies, been entered with directions to said defendant corporation to surrender possession of its property, rights, credits, and assets, to the receiver appointed in the cause, and that respondent, as appears by said order directing the receiver to take possession, as aforesaid, acted upon the statements contained in said motion, and which are true in point of fact, as disclosed by the record and docket entries of the court in said cause.

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Bluebook (online)
104 La. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-garig-v-king-la-1900.