Source: https://casetext.com/case/succession-of-hoffman
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 12:47:05+00:00

Document:
May 7, 1962. Rehearing Denied June 4, 1962.
Proceeding by testamentary executor to show cause why sum which had been paid over by bank from succession's account to judgment creditor of succession should not be returned to succession's account. The Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans, Fred J. Cassibry, J., dismissed the rule, and the testamentary executor appealed. The Court of Appeal, Regan, J., held that garnishment was not void for lack of notice and that testamentary executor, who had simply and unconditionally accepted the succession as universal legatee, was not entitled to notice of seizure of succession bank account under fieri facias which formed basis of garnishment and seizure by succession's judgment creditor.
Alcide J. Weysham, New Orleans, for Warren A. Doll, mover-appellant.
Roger H. Fellom, New Orleans, for Lynne Humphreys, respondent-appellee.
Clem H. Sehrt, Edward J. Boyle, Sr., Virgil M. Wheeler, Jr., Philip J. Foto, Edward J. Boyle, Jr. Peter J. Butler, Philip J. Foto, New Orleans, for National American Bank of New Orleans, respondent-appellee.
George J. Haylon, New Orleans, for L.J. Scanlon, Civil Sheriff for Parish of Orleans, respondent-appellee.
Before McBRIDE, REGAN and SAMUEL, JJ.
Plaintiff-in-rule, Warren A. Doll, in his capacity as the testamentary executor of the Succession of Louis A. Hoffman, filed a rule therein, against the defendants-in-rule, Lynne Humphreys, a judgment creditor thereof, the National American Bank of New Orleans, and L.J. Scanlon, the Civil Sheriff for the Parish of Orleans, to show cause why the sum of $1280 should not be returned to the Succession's account. He insisted that the writ of fieri facias and the garnishment proceedings which were successfully executed through the Sheriff by Lynne Humphreys against the Bank to satisfy her judgment against Doll individually were null and void.
This is a contradictory motion. See LSA-C.C.P. Art. 963.
The Bank pleaded the exceptions of no cause or right of action asserting that Doll had simply and unconditionally accepted the Succession as universal legatee and as such was liable for the debts thereof. The record should, but unfortunately does not disclose the disposition of these exceptions.
In any event, the trial judge dismissed the rule, and from this judgment the plaintiff-in-rule, Doll, has prosecuted this appeal.
The record reveals that much tortuous litigation has emanated from the Succession of Hoffman and although there is no necessity for a review thereof herein, some pertinent facts extracted therefrom will serve a useful purpose in pointing out the specific issues now posed for our consideration.
The record discloses that on April 11, 1960, Lynne Humphreys obtained a judgment in the amount of $1200 against the Succession. On April 28, 1960, Doll as the executor and universal legatee, accepted the Succession simply and unconditionally and was therefore sent into possession thereof.
Lynne Humphreys then filed a rule on May 18, 1960, to have the judgement against the Succession made executory against Doll individually, which was made absolute on May 27, 1960, and affirmed on appeal in January of 1961; writs were likewise denied on April 7, 1961.
Succession of Hoffman, La. App., 126 So.2d 774 (1961).
On April 17, 1961, Lynne Humphreys caused a writ of fieri facias to be issued, directed to the Bank as garnishee of Doll individually which ordered it to answer under oath the usual interrogatories which accompany such a petition.
In response thereto, the Bank acknowledged the existence of a safety deposit box and the sum of $1,837.36 which was contained in a checking account in the name of the Succession of Louis A. Hoffman, W.A. Doll, testamentary executor, thereof. In conformity with an order of the lower court, the Bank paid to the Sheriff the sum of $1280 to satisfy Lynne Humphreys, the judgment creditor.
It is this payment which provoked Doll to file the contradictory motion referred to in the first paragraph hereof, and to prosecute this appeal from the dismissal thereof.
In this court the plaintiff-in-rule, Doll, initially insists that the garnishment and seizure by Lynne Humphreys of the money on deposit in the Bank was null and void since he had received no notice of the seizure from the Civil Sheriff in conformity with the rationale of Article 2293 of the Civil Code of Procedure.
LSA-C.C.P. Art. 2293 — "After the seizure of property, the sheriff shall serve promptly upon the judgment debtor a written notice of the seizure and a list of the property seized, in the manner provided for service of citation."
6 La. Ann. 535 (1851).
"We find no law rendering it necessary that notice should have been given of the seizure to Creevy. If the sheriff had been directed to sell the claim, it would have been necessary to have given notice to Creevy, that he might appoint an appraiser. But having seized an incorporeal right, the proper and legal mode of realizing it, was to cause it to be collected. * * *"
175 La. 969, 144 So. 730 (1932).
"It is not necessary that the defendant judgment debtor, Myrtle Grove Syrup Company, Inc., be served with a notice of seizure under the fieri facias which formed the basis of the garnishment process. (citations omitted)"
On the other hand, it is well settled that when a seizure and a sale are ordered under a writ of fieri facias, notice must be given to the judgment debtor after the seizure, or the sale is a nullity. Hence, it is to cases of this nature that the rationale of Article 2293 of the Code of Civil Procedure addresses itself, but not to a case wherein no sale of the seized property occurred nor was any contemplated.
Lamorandier v. Meyer, 8 Rob. 152 (1844); Ball v. Crockett, 9 La. Ann. 293 (1854); Lapene v. McCan, 28 La. Ann. 749 (1876); Acadian Production Corp. v. Savanna Corp., 222 La. 617, 63 So.2d 141 (1953).
The second alleged error which Doll complains of was that the Bank in its response to the interrogatories made no unconditional or unqualified admission of its indebtedness to Doll individually, but instead revealed assets which appeared in the name of the Succession of Louis A. Hoffman, W.A. Doll, testamentary executor; therefore the Bank at its own risk paid to the Sheriff this money for the benefit of Lynne Humphreys which was owed by the Succession of Hoffman.
Key v. Salley, 218 La. 922, 51 So.2d 390 (1951) and cases cited therein.
Also see Arts. 1424, 1426, LSA-R.C.C. of 1870.
"The effect of the simple acceptance of the succession, whether express or tacit, is such, that when made by an heir of age, it binds him to the payment of all debts of the succession, not only out of the effects which have fallen to him from the succession, but even personally, and out of his own property, as if he had himself contracted the debts or as if he was the deceased himself; * * *"
We therefore find no merit in Doll's ultimate contention that Succession funds had been illegally paid by the Bank to the Sheriff for the benefit of Lynne Humphreys in order to satisfy a judgment rendered against him individually.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.

References: Art. 963
 Art. 2293
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