Court Opinion

ID: 7192318
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:58:25.480885+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:16:08.737855
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Poché, J.
A statement of the main facts underlying this litigation is necessary to a proper understanding of the issues presented by the pleadings.
By an authentic act, under date of July 31, 1877, which was ratified in another authentic act on the 24th of August, 1877, Mrs. Ella Both, the defendant, purchased from Widow Norbert Marionneaux, her mother and former natural tutrix, all the rights,titles, interest and claims of the latter in the property belonging to the succession of her deceased husband (defendant’s father), accruing to her as surviving partner in community, as usufructuary, or in any manner whatsoever.
*943In payment of said purchase, the defendant executed three promis.•sory notes, amounting together to $4000, to be secured by mortgage on ■the property which has been seized in this case at the instance of plaintiff, Hodgson, as the holder of said notes, which matured on the 20th of :March of the years 1878,1879 and 1880.
His executory proceedings were enjoined by the defendant, who obtained an injunction without bond, on the following grounds:
1st. That the mortgage and indebtedness on which the order of ^seizure and sale issued were null and void, because they were given to Mrs. Eugenie Marionneaux, her former tutrix, in settlement of the tutor.ship, in less than ten days after rendition of her account and the delivery •of the vouchers.
2d. The account which served as a basis for the notes, was grossly erroneous to petitioner’s prejudice. That she would not have given the notes if she had known of the errors which only came to her knowledge on 26th July, 1878.
3d. That she had instituted a suit against Mrs. Eugenie Marionneaux •.to have annulled said acts on which the executory process issued.
4th. That Hodgson was a holder after maturity.
6th. That said notes and mortgage were obtained from her unlawfully, and Hodgson was aware of the fact when he acquired the notes.
Subsequently, after her death, her executor having been made a party, filed a supplemental petition of injunction, alleging want of con.sideration of the notes sued on, on the ground that among the items of property transferred to defendant, were seven notes of J. A. Dardenne, .amounting together to $9000, represented as community property between her deceased father and her mother, and that suit having been .brought against Dardenne on said notes, the latter had set up as defence, .a reduction of the same by agreement between defendant’s mother and himself ; thus reducing the value of the property transferred to her, and making part of the consideration of the notes executed by her in favor of her mother.
Plaintiff objected to the filing of this amended petition, on the ground that the averments therein set forth would not entitle the petitioner to . an injunction without bond, and reserved a bill of exception to the ruling of the judge in allowing the petition to be filed.
The case was tried on the merits by a different judge, who had suc- • ceeded the judge who had overruled plaintiff’s- objection, and the latter judge, considering the ruling of his predecessor as erroneous, refused to consider the amended petition; and on the merits dissolved the injunction, with damages.
As we understand the case, the appeal taken by defendant presents . for solution the following questions:
*9441st. Whether the last judge in the lower court erred in refusing to consider her amended petition for injunction.
2d. Whether her injunction was properly granted without bond.
3d. Whether the judge erred in dissolving the injunction on its merits.
4th. Whether damages were properly allowed in dissolving an injunction in a case of executory process.
Eirst — Under Arts. 739 and 740 of our Code of Practice, the defendant in executory process can arrest the proceeding without bond, by alleging some of the following reasons: 1st. That he has paid the debt for which he is sued; 2d. That he has been remitted by the creditor; 3d. That it has been extinguished by transaction, novation, or some other legal manner; 4th. That time has been granted to him for paying the debt, although this circumstance be not mentioned in the contract; 5th. That the act containing the privilege or mortgage is forged; 6th. That it was obtained by fraud, violence, fear, or some other unlawful means; 7th. That he has a liquidated account to plead in compensation of the debt claimed; 8th. And, finally, that the action for the recovery of the debt is barred by prescription.
Defendant’s counsel contend that the averments of the amended petition are covered by the third reason enumerated in the article under consideration, but we cannot sanction their reasoning.
Their averment means that the obligation was null ab initio, for reason of the want of consideration, or, in other words, that it never has had legal existence. If that be the case, counsel have failed to inform us how an obligation which has never sprung into existence can be extinguished. Destruction presupposes existence or being. It is impossible to destroy or extinguish nothing.
The most liberal construction of the article fails to show under which of its eight wings the averments of defendant’s amended petition could be sheltered, and forces the conclusion that the supplemental petition should have been excluded, and that the judge who tried the case did not ■err in refusing to consider the reasons therein advanced.
Second — -A careful examination of the five grounds of injunction averred in the original petition, fails to satisfy us that any one of them is covered by the provisions of the article providing an injunction without bond.
Oounsel for defendants seem to lose sight of the very material difference between a ground sufficient to maintain an injunction of an executory process in general, and the averments which can, in the exceptional cases enumerated in the Code, justify the issuance of an injunction without bond.
Admitting, for the sake of argument, that the account which served *945as a basis of the contract between the defendant and her mother, was grossly erroneous to the daughter’s prejudice, that she has instituted a suit for the nullity of the contract, that Hodgson acquired the notes after maturity, we' fail to perceive by what process of reasoning any of these averments can be assimilated to any of the eight reasons enumerated in the article of the Code.
If the fifth ground, charging that the notes and mortgage had been obtained from her unlawfully, had been more specific, so as to allow the introduction of evidence as to the illegal means resorted to, that ground would have approached the sixth reason contained in the article, but in its vagueness it was not susceptible of proof, and was properly considered as not complying with Art. 739.
Plaintiff’s counsel properly objected to the introduction of any testimony in support of allegations, other than those containing any of the reasons enumerated in Art. 739.
As a doubt might exist touching the first ground in defendant’s petition for injunction, wherein she charges the nullity of the contract with her mother, for the reason that said contract was executed in less than ten days after rendition of her account and the delivery of the vouchers, we have considered this ground as a probably sufficient averment under the sixth ground of Art. 739, and have, therefore, examined the evidence on that point.
The account was presented and the vouchers were delivered on the 14th of August, and the authentic act of ratification was executed on the 24th of the same month. Defendant’s counsel contend that the day on which the receipt was given and the day on which the contract was executed, should no.t have been counted in the computation of the ten days, contemplated by Art. 361 of the Oivil Code; and he relies upon several decisions of the Supreme Oourt expounding Arts. 180 and 318 of the Ooda of Practice.
The article of the Oivil Code strikes with nullity all agreements entered into between minors, arriving at the age of majority, and their tutors, unless the same are preceded by an account rendered and vouchers delivered, “ the whole being made to appear by the receipt of the person to whom the account was rendered ten days previous to the agreement.”
The articles of the Code of Practice relied upon have reference to the delay granted for the performance of certain judicial acts, Art. 318 containing the following language: “ In the delay given to the defendant for answering, Sunday is included like other days, but in all cases where delay is given either to do something orto answer, neither the day of serving the notice, nor that on which the act is to he done, or the answer to he filed, are included.”
*946The mere reading of the articles affords an easy solution of the ■difficulty suggested by counsel, and shows that the question raised is not a legal but a mere arithmetical proposition.
To ascertain whether an event which occurred on the 14th of a month happened ten days previous to an occurrence happening on the 24th of the same month, does not, in our opinion, require a recourse to the Code of Practice or its provisions for the computation of days in ■special cases provided for.
The article of the Civil Code does not provide that the day on which the receipt is given and the day on which the agreement is entered into are not to be included in the ten days contemplated, and we cannot legislate the rule to suit this 'case. The evidence, therefore, fails to sustain ■that element of nullity relied upon by defendant.
In conclusion, we think that the judge a quo did not err in ruling ■out an amended petition, the grounds of which were not covered by Art. 739, and in refusing to consider any testimony to sustain allegations, under which no injunction could be legally issued without bond: Williamson vs. Richardson, 30 An. 1164; Berens vs. Exs. of Boutté, 31 An. 112; and his judgment dissolving the injunction has our unqualified sanction.
Fourth — But he erred in allowing damages. The vexed question, as to whether damages could be allowed by the same judgment dissolving •an injunction in the case of an executory process, was recently reviewed •at length by this Court, and finally settled in the case of Testard vs. Belot, recently decided by us on rehearing; in which we held that in such cases the provisions of the act of 1831, embodied in Art. 304, Code of Practice, did not apply. Hence, we must amend the judgment of the lower court in this particular.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be amended so as to reject the claim for damages on the dissolution of the injunction, which damages are hereby refused, and that, as thus amended, said judgment be affirmed; appellee paying the costs of this appeal.