Webster Lodge No. 4, K. P. v. Hunter

63 So. 383, 133 La. 863, 1913 La. LEXIS 2108
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1913
DocketNo. 20,121
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 So. 383 (Webster Lodge No. 4, K. P. v. Hunter) 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
Webster Lodge No. 4, K. P. v. Hunter, 63 So. 383, 133 La. 863, 1913 La. LEXIS 2108 (La. 1913).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Plaintiff sued Jesse Robertson, defendant, for $291.60 for rent due, and obtained a writ of provisional seizure on the 6th day of July, 1911, and provisionally seized property, to which we specially refer later.

W. S. Hunter intervened on the same day, claiming that he was the owner of a certain gum-slot machine seized by the sheriff, which was not the property of the defendant, as he alleged, and not liable for the defendant’s debt. He furnished bond for $90, its appraised value, and obtained its release.

On the 13th day of July following, the Knights of Pythias, plaintiff, filed a supplemental and amended petition, in which it alleged that since the filing of the original petition property, consisting of a cash register and a cigar case, was removed on which it had a privilege, and asked for its provisional seizure. It was provisionally seized.

On July 15th of the same year, the defendant, Jesse Robertson, petitioned the court to be permitted to bond four pool tables, one billiard table, one phonograph, a tobacco stand, and 12 chairs. On the same day Jesse Robertson and W. S. Hunter, the former as principal and the latter as surety, signed bond in the sum of $350, and obtained possession of property consisting, as stated in the bond, of four pool tables, one billiard table, 12 chairs, one phonograph, a cigar cutter, being, as alleged, the effects on the lower floor of the Knights of Pythias’ Hall in Minden, of which Robertson was the tenant.

The bond states that the inventory of the property was made part of it. We have not found a copy of this inventory.

The sheriff refers to this property as the bonded property which he sold under a fi. fa. He details the property sold.

On the i7th of July, 1911, the tax collecting authority brought suit against Jesse Robertson, tenant of plaintiff, for the sum of $75 and the statutory interest due thereon for nonpayment of a license tax, and obtained a writ of sequestration. The sheriff states in his return, dated July 18, 1911, that under the writ he took in his possession the following property: Four pool tables, one

billiard table, and all the fixtures, including ball racks, all as per inventory attached, and all appraised at $107.

The district court rendered judgment for $75 due the state for interest.

Returning to plaintiff’s case, Hunter filed an answer to plaintiff’s demand, in which he asserted that he complied with the conditions [865]*865of the forthcoming bond by surrendering the property, leased to him and to his principal, into the hands of the sheriff, and that at the same time he demanded cancellation of his forthcoming bond, but that the sheriff refused to cancel the bond for the reason that the sheriff was acting in collusion with plaintiff in an effort to enable the plaintiff to collect the amount of his judgment from the defendant, instead of from the property seized by the plaintiff as the property of his principal on said bond. He further alleged that the property released to him and Jesse Robertson on bond was, subsequent to its release, seized by the sheriff for a state and a municipal corporation license, amounting to the sum before mentioned, on which a judgment was obtained, as before stated, and in accordance with judgment obtained, as before stated, the property was sold.

Plaintiff charged the surety and defendant with conspiring to defraud.

We are informed by the record that Hunter intervened and abandoned his intervention and gave up the slot machine.

It further appears that plaintiff obtained a judgment against Robertson, its tenant, for the full amount claimed.

It is stated that on the 5th day of February, 1912, plaintiff under a fi. fa. had property, which was in the possession of Robertson, sold.

The return of the sheriff is not dated. It is sufiicient to state that property sold was applied to the payment of taxes.

Plaintiff instituted suit against Hunter as surety on the forthcoming bond after all the property had been sold and credited to the state.

To this suit defendant answered by alleging that he had surrendered, as above noted, the property to the sheriff, but that the sheriff had declined to cancel his bond.

Defendant complained of the action of the ■Knights of Pythias. in recognizing the superior claim of the state and of the town tax collector. Defendant criticized in the pleadings the counsel who represented the Knights of Pythias, as well as the tax collector, in that there was, in effect, a consent to the sale made by the tax collector.

It is true that counsel represented all these interests, but we have not found in his conduct the impropriety charged.

The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the district court, whereupon the Knights of Pythias applied to this court for a writ of certiorari.

The first point made by plaintiff here is that the surety, who contended that he had surrendered the property, ■ had no authority to surrender it and demand bach the bond; that Robertson, the other defendant, does not appear to have made such a surrender, nor to have ashed for the cancellation of the bond.

Whether the property! was surrendered, and the objection to the manner of the surrender of that which was surrendered, is one of the grounds, and the other that the superior right of the state for its claim and the sale of the property released the defendant on his bond.

All the property was turned over to the sheriff, who received it. Counsel for plaintiff joined in receiving the property by directing that the proceeds of the sale should be applied to the payment of the superior claim of the state. •

In the brief of counsel for plaintiff it appears that in February, 1912, the plaintiff obtained a writ of fi. fa., and had all the property found in the possession of Robertson sold, and afterward the more valuable property, as it is stated, which was in the possession of the surety, was sold. In fact, as well as we can read the poorly made up transcript, it appears that all the property was sold.

The manner of the surrender of the prop[867]*867erty by the principal and surety may not have been formal. There was no tender made, but it is too late to refer to that question. As before stated, it had been réceived and sold, and not the least objection was urged to the delay in giving up the property. As before mentioned, plaintiff, through counsel, in' effect accepted the surrender by directing the sheriff to sell the property and apply the proceeds as before stated. It is now too late to urge objection. Although the parties may not have surrendered the property with any degree of good grace, at the same time we have not found that they resorted to anything illegal in order to defeat the possession of the sheriff in any way.

Now as to the liability of the surety because the property was incumbered with a tax privilege which the surety failed to pay: Plaintiff’s contention is that the surety was liable on the bond; that it was incumbent upon him to pay the amount for which he was condemned by the district court, which judgment was reversed by the Court of Appeals, as above stated.

The following are extracts from the opinion of the Court of Appeals:

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 383, 133 La. 863, 1913 La. LEXIS 2108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-lodge-no-4-k-p-v-hunter-la-1913.