Court Opinion

ID: 3467831
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 20:34:18.650214+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:04:40.620270
License: Public Domain

This proceeding is in a sense part of and a continuation of a concursus before the court in the case of Fritz Jahncke, Inc., v. Fidelity  Deposit Co. of Maryland et al., 166 La. 593,117 So. 729. But the issues now involved are not similar to and have no connection with those presented and decided in the reported case.
The controversy here involved is between the Globe Indemnity Company and Emery  Norton, Inc., two creditors of John Thatcher Son, the contractors who built a clubhouse for the Elks Lodge in the city of New Orleans, each creditor claiming a superior right to the balance of the contract price due the contractor after the completion of the work and the payment of all liens.
Neither of these creditors had any lien or privilege on the building, but were ordinary creditors of Thatcher  Son, which was a nonresident corporation. They brought attachment proceedings against the contractor, making the Elks Club a party garnishee, and seized or attempted to seize whatever funds were in the garnishee's hands due the contractor. *Page 707 
These attachment and garnishment proceedings were sued out and served on the same day, that of the Globe Indemnity Company being served first, giving it a privilege on the funds seized which ranked that of Emery  Norton, Inc.
When the building was completed, the Elks Club owed the contractor something over $60,000, which it deposited in the registry of the court in a concursus proceeding. After the payment of all creditors who had liens there remained in the registry of the court approximately $4,000 due the contractor.
Emery  Norton, Inc., obtained final judgment against the contractor by default on February 3, 1920, and under a writ of fieri facias seized this fund in the hands of the clerk of the civil district court, and it now claims a privilege thereon by virtue of said seizure. The Globe Indemnity Company claims a prior and superior privilege by virtue of its seizure in the garnishment proceedings.
The case is now before us on appeal from a judgment awarding this fund to the Globe Indemnity Company.
On January 31, 1931, the Globe Indemnity Company filed in this court a plea of prescription of ten years under article 3547 of the Civil Code, in bar of the claim of Emery  Norton, Inc.
The judgment of Emery  Norton was rendered on February 3, 1920. Under article 3547, "all judgments for money, whether rendered within or without the State, shall be prescribed by the lapse of ten years from the rendition of such judgments."
More than ten years have elapsed since the rendition of this judgment, and it is therefore prescribed on its face.
This ends the controversy between these litigants. Emery 
Norton, Inc., have lost *Page 708 
their claim against and their right to these funds by permitting their judgment to expire. They came into court in the present proceeding claiming this fund and asserting a privilege upon it by virtue of their seizure under a writ of fieri facias which was issued under their judgment. They had no claim and no privilege except that which resulted from the seizure.
When the judgment expired, the writ expired with it, and when the writ expired the seizure was dissolved and the privilege conferred by the seizure was extinguished. The right of Emery 
Norton, Inc., to the fund was claimed by it, not by virtue of its debt against Thatcher  Son, but by virtue of its judgment. Its judgment being extinguished, its claim is dead also. The foundation of its action in the present case has been swept away. Chapman, Executrix, v. Citizens' Bank, 31 La. Ann. 395.
Since the filing of the plea of prescription, counsel for Emery Norton, Inc., have filed a supplemental brief in which the contention is made that prescription of their judgment was interrupted or suspended by virtue of their seizure of the property under the judgment; that, when they seized the amount in the hands of the clerk, they obtained a privilege upon it and held it in "judicial pledge," and they say:
"So long as the possession of the pledge continues the said possession is a continuous interruption of prescription."
They cite authorities which support the proposition that the holding in possession by the pledgee of the thing pledged is a continuous interruption of prescription against the debt.
But this case does not involve the prescription of a debt, but the prescription of a judgment, which is but an accessory right. *Page 709 
Article 3547 of the Civil Code provides the only method by which a judgment creditor may prevent his judgment from prescribing or expiring, that is by filing suit to revive at any time before it is prescribed. Bailey v. Louisiana  N.W. Ry. Co. et al., 159 La. 576, 105 So. 626.
The plea of prescription is sustained.
Judgment affirmed.