State v. Judge of the First District

19 La. 167
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 19 La. 167 (State v. Judge of the First District) 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 v. Judge of the First District, 19 La. 167 (La. 1841).

Opinion

Simon, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an application, for a writ of prohibition. The applicant, D. T. Walden, alleges that on the 26th of October, 1840, he instituted a suit against the City Bank, praying that two mortgages executed by public act, amounting together to $200,000, be declared null and void; that in the mean time he obtained an order enjoining the said bank from suing out any order of seizure and sale on the said mortgages, and gave the bond and security required by the court. That on the tenth of November ensuing, a rule was taken to dissolve the. injunction, which was set aside by the court with damages, from which judgment he took a suspensive appeal. He further states that on the 8th of December, the City Bank filed their petition praying for an order of seizure and sale on the said mortgages, which was refused by the lower judge, from whose judgment an appeal was also taken and is yet pending before this court. That subsequently the injunction was tried on its merits, and a judgment of non-suit was therein rendered, from which the applicant took his appeal within the time required by law for staying execution, and gave bond and security in pursuance of the order of said court; and that on the 25th of May, 1841, the district judge granted ex parte an order of seizure and sale of the propertyjmortgaged by endorsing the same on the petition filed on the 8th of December, 1840, and now pending on appeal, and is about to carry the same into effect, unless arrested by a prohibition from this court.

The applicant’s petition having been served on the district judge and on the City Bank, said judge answered the rule by first representing that there was no proceeding now pending before his court against which, in his opinion, a writ of prohibition could properly issue; and after giving a statement of the several proceedings had before him, which are the same alluded to in Walden’s petition, he goes on to state: “thecause of [170]*170Walden vs. the City Bank has since been heard upon the me» Tits, and the court being of opinion that the plaintiff had failed to establish any right to the interposition of the court in his behalf, gave -judgment of non-suit. If no appeal had been , . . , . . , , , . taken from this judgment, it is apparent that the appeal from the judgment upon the rule to dissolve, would have become at once nugatory. The injunction granted was a mere accessory to the principal demand, the principal-demand being dismissed, it is obvious that its accessories, in whatever court pending, must share its fate.”

“ But an appeal was taken and bond given for two hundred and fifty dollars, the application of the bank for an order of seizure and sale upon its mortgages, purporting a confession of judgment, was then renewed. The question then presented to the decision of the court was whether an appeal from a judgment of non-suit with a bond of $250 could stay the execution awarded by law upon mortgages, to an amount exceeding two hundred thousand dollars. In the opinion of the undersigned, ffuch'aíf^4ff¡ect',.<could not legally follow such an appeal, and tfye order of seizure and sale was therefore granted.”

' “ TDuriin^'.tile interval between the judgment on the rule to dissolve, the injunction and the judgment on the merits of the suit of D. T. Walden vs. the City Bank, an order of seizure aüffsale was refused to the bank; but, in the view'of the undersigned, the circumstances were materially changed after judgment on the merits and it then became proper to award to the bank, the order which had formerly bsen refused.”

He also refers to the records filed in this court in the several suits between-the parties tSierein interested, and further alleges that when Walden’s petition of appeal was presented, his counsel disclaimed any intention of demanding a stay of execution, and that the appeal was consequently allowed with the security tendered.

The city bank also appeared, and referred us to the answer of the district judge as containing sufficient reasons why the writ of prohibition should not be granted.

am0un/°of the ,c°í.s one plaintiff ^junction,, is ñoñ-is en:d to a sus-pensive appeal, on giving- liis

We have examined the records referred to in the district judge’s answer, and have been able to ascertain that the facts iated and those alleged in the applicant’s petition are correct. It appears further that when'Walden obtained his in-therein stated and those alleged in the applicant’s petition are . . . junction, he gave a bond and security according to the order of the court in the sum of twenty thousand dollars ; that on the dissolution of the injunction, he and his sureties were condemned to pay in solido ten per cent, per annum on the amount of the injunction bond ; that on appealing from said judgment, he gave an appeal bond and security in the sum of six thousand dollars; that when the order of seizure and sale first applied fpr after the dissolution of the injunction, was refused, the district judge was of opinion that “ the' bant could not proceed against Walden by the via executiva, so long as the appeal was pending, for that appeal necessarily revived the injunction and that when the petition of appeal from the judgment of non-suit was presented to him, the-only required a bond and security in the sum and fifty dollars.

The judgment last appealed from, being only, it is clear that the appellant being boun bond and security for a sum exceeding one-hal! which the judgment was given against him, an ment being merely for costs, the bond was properly? the sum of 'two hundred and fifty dollars ; Code of Practice, art. 575. This was sufficient to make the appeal suspensive, 03? without reference to what had been previously done in the case.

But it is contended that in order to prevent the bank’s obtaining an order of seizure and sale, by virtue of the mortgage; that is to say: to give effect to and to revive the writ of injunction during the pendency of the cause before this court, the appellant ought to have furnished his appeal bond and security for three hundred thousand dollars, as the security on the injunction bond was only given to secure damages and not the debt. We cannot agree to this proposition: we conceive [172]*172that, by obtaining his writ of injunction and furnishing the secur]ty reqUire¿ by the judge, Walden became entitled to the protection of the court, and to its interposition so as to prevent the 'seizure and sale of the property mortgaged as long as the . . . , matter m controversy remained undetermined. On the dissolution of the injunction with damages in the court below, he took a regular suspensive appeal, which necessarily had the effect of maintaining the injunction and of leaving the case and all the orders taken in it, in the same state in which they were previous to its being dissolved. The district judge himself was convinced of the correctness of this course, when he refused to grant the order of seizure and sale first applied for, and we are ° .... unable to see a*y good reason why after the trial of the injunction suit on its merits, and after a suspensive appeal had been granted from his judgment of non-suit, he shouldhave thought himself authorized to destroy the effect of his first decision, J and to deprive the applicant of the legal protection which had . .. . . .. been extended to him by the issuing of the writ oí injunction.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

King v. Lambert
2 Pelt. 606 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1919)
Parks v. Hughes
79 So. 861 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1918)
Ruppert v. Fontenot
70 So. 331 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1915)
State ex rel. Parish Board School Directors v. City of Monroe
63 So. 513 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)
Roberson v. Goldsmith
55 So. 660 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1911)
Gleason v. Wisdom
45 So. 530 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
State ex rel. Columbia Debenture Co. v. Judge Division "B,"
25 So. 65 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1899)
State ex rel. Algiers Brewing Co. v. King
46 La. Ann. 490 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1894)
Malain v. Judge of the Third Judicial District
29 La. Ann. 793 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1877)
State ex rel. Roudanez v. Lynch
28 La. Ann. 517 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1876)
State ex rel. Coons v. Judge of the Superior District Court
27 La. 334 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1875)
State ex rel. Richardson v. Judge of the Fourteenth Judicial District Court
25 La. Ann. 653 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 La. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-judge-of-the-first-district-la-1841.