Succession of Marchand

2 Teiss. 261, 1905 La. App. LEXIS 52
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 1905
DocketNo. 3605
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Teiss. 261 (Succession of Marchand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Marchand, 2 Teiss. 261, 1905 La. App. LEXIS 52 (La. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinions

M'OORE, J.

A. Stofrs, Bennett & Co. and B. R. Forman were judgment creditors of John DeBoís, Paul A. Marchand and the Widow and Heirs of Earnest Marchand; the former for the sum of $713.75 with 5 per cent, per annum interest thereon from October 31, 1891, and the latter for $700.00 with legal interest thereon from judicial demand. In execution of their judgments, concurrent writs of fieri facias were issued, and thereunder there was seized and subsequently sold, certain movable property found in the premises No', no Chartres street in the City of New Orleans. The gross proceeds of the sale amounted to $1,309.75, Forman being the adjudicatee of the major portion of the property thus sold. As á Seizing creditor and as the attornejr of record of the other judgment creditors, A. Storrs, Bennett & Co., Forman retained in his hands the net proceeds of sale, $1145.60, to be applied, pro rata, to the satisfaction of his judgment and that of his clients.

Fifteen days after the Sheriff’s sale, and after all the property sold had been removed from the premises, Widow John Gauche filed her rule, wherein she averred that P. E. Marchand, Mrs. Georgiana Merveaux, widow of the late Ernest Marchand, individually and as natural .tutrix of her minor children, and Ernest Mac'hand, Jr., are indebted in solido to her in the sum of $720.00, “for rent of premises No. no Charters street for 16 months from March 1st, 1892, to date (July 26, 1893), at $45.00 per month, and for rent at said rate until possession of said property is delivered to her, with legal interest from the various dates of her judicial demands heretofore made in the succession of March- and, ten per cent attorney's fees, all costs of suits Nos. 22144 and 22103 °f First City Court for this P'arisli, in which she obtained judgment for rents of said premises for the months of March, [263]*263April, May and June, 1892that she has a lien and pledge on all the movable property contained in said premises; that 'said movable property has been sold under fi fa issued upon judgments rendered in favor of B. R. Forman and A. Storrs, Bennett & Co.; that said Forman became the adjudicatee of the major part, if not all, of said movable property, and now owes the Sheriff the price thereof: and that she is entitled to have sufficient amount of the price of said movable property paid by said Forman into the hands of the Sheriff,- or into her hands, to satisfy rent due her with interest, etc.; whereupon she prayed that B. R. Forman, Paul A. Marchand, Mrs. ■ Georgiana Merveaux, widow of Ernest March- and, individually and as tutrix of her -minor children, and Ernest Marchand, Jr., be cited to show cause “why he (sic) should not pay into the hands of the Sheriff, or into mover’s hands, a sufficient amount of the -price of the movable property contained in No. no Chartres St., adjudicated to him (sic) to satisfy mover’s claim for rent with interest, attorney’s fees and costs.” -Order to that effect was made and the 1st day of August, 1893, fixed as the return day.

This rule was sued out pursuant to the following agreement entered into on the day following the sale; the only parties thereto being Mrs. John Gauche and B. R. Forman individually:

“No. 31,906.
“Civil District Court, Division ....
“Succession of Ernest Marchand.
“On Rule of Mrs. Widow John Gauche.-
“It is hereby agreed and understood between undersigned counsel, that this rule is to be regarded the same as a direct action, coupled with a provisional seizure issued the day following the sale of property seized under execution by defendant in rule, -Mr. B. R. Forman, and before the removal of any of the said property from the premises, No. no Chartres street, and that the [264]*264mover shall have the right to assert any and all rights and privileges upon the trial of this rule that she would have had in a proceeding by provisional seizure or in any other proceeding taken on saici date, not waiving any legal right or the question whether or not the lessor had not lost her lien and privilege by reason of the Sheriff’s sale, the understanding being that the lessor shall have by rule any remedy to which she would at that date have been entitled.'
(Signed.) “GILMORE & BALDWIN,
“Attorneys' for Mrs. Gauche,
' “B. R. FORMAN.”

To this rule, Forman interposed the prescription of three, five and ten years, among several exceptions, which latter we need not notice, as, in our opinion, the plea of prescription, whidh was sustained by the trial judge, resolves the case against the appellant.

The plea Of prescription of ten years is leveled at the two City Court judgments referred to in the rule, but as no such judgments were produced, offered or filed in the cause no notice may be taken of the plea so far as this term of prescription is concerned.

The term of prescription applicable to the claim for rent, which is represented to be due but not sent to judgment, is three years. The rent is alleged to have been by the month, beginning on.the 1st day of March, 1892, and it is claimed for sixteen months, thus ending on the 1st of June, 1893. . The current of prescription began to run from the maturity of each monthly rent; and as more than three years have elapsed since then all the rent claimed is prescribed unless the course of prescription has been stayed.

It is contended by the plaintiff in rule that prescription has been interrupted, firstly, by the pledge of the property which the law accords the lessor as security for his rent; and, secondly, by [265]*265íhe institution of the present 'action 'by rule and its service thereof oil the lessees.

The pledge which the lessor 'had on the property found in the leased property, undoubtedly interrupted prescription on her claim for rent, but that interruption ceased when the property was removed from the leased premises.

The sale took place on the nth of July, 1893. Some of the property sold was removed on the same day, and within several days thereafter all -the property adjudicated had been taken out ■and carried away. Up to this latter period, say up to about the 15th of July, 1893, prescription was interrupted by the pledge, but from this date prescription began to run anew. Three years thereafter would bring the prescription period up to the 15th of July, 1896. Many years have elapsed since then; enough to prescribe the claim thrice over, unless the asserted legal interruption can be maintained. In our opinion it cannot.

Pretermitting the fact that the rule does not give the slightest intimation of a lease from Mrs. Gauche to any of the parties named in the rule,- or recite any state of facts from which may be implied that the relation of lessor and lessee exists between 'her and any named person or persons so as thus to give rise to the landlord’s lien and privilege (14 A. 169; 19 A. 101; 11 R. 280; 7 A. 654; 7 A. 22), it will 'be perceived that the rule recites so far as concerns the persons alleged to be indebted for rent, simply, that the Marchands are indebted unto mover in the sum of $720.00 for rent of the premises named, but there is no “demand” on them for the amount stated to be due, no judgment of any kind or character being prayed for against them.

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2 Teiss. 261, 1905 La. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-marchand-lactapp-1905.