State ex rel. Schwan v. Allen

52 La. Ann. 568
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,252
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 568 (State ex rel. Schwan 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. Schwan v. Allen, 52 La. Ann. 568 (La. 1900).

Opinion

[569]*569The opinion of the court was delivered by

WatkiNS, J.

The relators, William Sehwan, Odille Moreira and Julia Moreira were named as the universal legatees in the will of Yal-entine Sehwan and it having- been probated, they were put in possession of the property of the testator — they having unconditionally accepted his succession.

Subsequently, the brothers and sisters of the deceased and particular legatees, filed a suit against the aforesaid universal legatees in possession, mainly on the ground, that they were legally incapacitated from receiving- said bequest; and their prayer was that the will be annulled and the estate given to them as the heirs at law of deceased.

The petitioners accompanied their petition with a demand for a sequestration of the movable- property thereunder which was valued at $60,000, and same was sequestered into the possession of the sheriff, the writ having issued without bond.

The relators herein were cited as defendants, and they appeared in said cause and moved to have the sequestration set aside; and, upon a contradictory hearing, it was so ordered.

Thereupon, the plaintiffs applied for and obtained an order of appeal to this court, and gave bond.

Seeking- to avoid the effect of said appeal and to obtain an immediate release of their property (1) because no appeal will lie in such case; (2) that if it is subject to revision by appeal, the appeal taken was devolutive, and did not prevent the execution of the order of court dissolving- the writ, said defendants applied to this court, in the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction, to so decide.

State ex rel. William Schwan et als. vs. Hon. A. C. Allen, Judge, and Paul Pecot, Sheriff, 51st Ann., 1842.

But the relators’ application was denied and the effect of our judgment was to leave matters in statu quo.

It having- come to the knowledge of the plaintiffs in that suit that the sheriff intended to treat said appeal as devolutive, and to release the property from seizure, they applied to the district judge for a writ of injunction to restrain his action in the premises; but he declined to grant the same “on the ground that he had no jurisdiction over the “ subject-matter, the whole of which was before the Supreme Court.”

Thereupon, they applied to this court in the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction to grant them a writ of prohibition against the judge and sheriff to prevent them from causing the property seques[570]*570tered to be released from seizure, pending said appeal, and for a writ of mandamus to compel the judge to grant an injunction as prayed for restraining the sheriff from releasing the property from seizure.

State ex rel. Ludwig Schwan et al. vs. Hon. A. C. Allen, Judge, and Paul Pecot, Sheriff, 51st Ann., 1889.

The relators’ application was denied, on the ground that the respondent judge could not have granted “an injunction against the “ sherifE from complying with his own order as it was written, and so long as it remained unchanged.” But this court, in its opinion, said, that, under the circumstances stated, the respondent judge was “ entitled to fix the amount,of the bond for a suspensive appeal.”

The two opinions of this court that we have cited, give a full resume of the facts that are germane to the instant controversy — the relators in the former being the relators herein, and the defendants in the action to annul the will; and the relators in the latter being the plaintiffs in said action and the appellants from the order dissolving- the writ of sequestration.

Referring to the former proceeding on their part, relators, in the instant case aver, that before the judgment of this court became final by being transmitted to and filed in the district court, an application was made by three of the aforesaid plaintiffs and appellants, to the district judge for a second orde? of sequestration, and that same was entertained and granted by said judge upon said petitioners furnishing bond in the sum of $5,000, and thereunder, the sheriff was commanded to sequester the property the second time.

The relators complain of this application having been entertained and granted during the pendency of the said proceedings, and the aforesaid appeal, and of their rule on t-he sheriff to show cause why he should not release said property from seizure.

That immediately after the said second sequestration was granted, and before any seizure had been made thereunder, they sued out an injunction, restraining and prohibiting the sheriff from executing said order; and same was immediately served on the sheriff. That on the following day, the aforesaid rule on the sheriff to show cause, etc., came on for trial, and upon deciding same, the judge held, that the sheriff had no right to hold the property under the first order and writ of sequestration that had been dissolved, but that he must hold it under the second order and writ of sequestration; and he, thereupon refused to order the property surrendered, and notwithstanding their [571]*571injunction — the judge holding that the poceedings then pending in this court on the petition of relators was an admission that the property was' still in the keeping and legal custody of the sheriff, and was necessarily so at the time the second order of sequestration was granted; and the property being in custodiam'legis, no further seizure or taking possession was necessary, and that the relators’ injunction against the second sequestration had accomplished nothing.

Relators aver that the second order of sequestration issued on a bond entirely too small in amount, and same, if executed, will cause the sheriff to seize $50,000 worth of property, of which about one-half is of a perishable nature and liable to waste and deteriorate in value.

That The action of the respondent judge in thus refusing to order the sheriff to surrender the property to them, and granting the aforesaid second order of sequestration without sufficient bond, and thus attempting to perpetuate the illegal and tortious possession of the sheriff, “is unwarrantable, oppressive and illegal,” on his part, and works them great and irreparable injury — stating with great circum-stantiality, the manner in which damages will be inflicted on them.

The respondent judge makes an extended return in which he deals with all the complex details of this remarkable litigation, but there are two points made therein which strike our minds with great force, and they are (1) that his order granting the second writ of sequestration, did not violate the first writ of prohibition of relators’, because the decision of this court refusing to make said writ peremptory, had become final prior to the signing of said order, and he had been so advised at the time the petition was presented to him; (2) that when the property is already in the possession of the sheriff under'one writ, the placing in his hands of a second writ for the seizure of the same property, operates as a seizure under the second writ.

Without elaborating all the various points made pro et con,

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Related

Continental Supply Co. v. Hoell
129 So. 522 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1930)
Tell v. Senac
46 So. 618 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-schwan-v-allen-la-1900.