Gordon v. Osborne
Gordon v. Osborne
Opinion of the Court
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Plaintiff sued defendant on a rent note given by him to her for $500.00, dated January 1, 1925, payable to her order on September 15, 1925, bearing eight per cent per annum interest from its maturity until paid and stipulating payment of ten per cent attorney’s fees if placed in the hands .of an attorney for collection.
In aid of her suit she obtained the issuance of a writ of provisional seizure in virtue of which the sheriff seized certain growing crops and other movables.
Clay Osborne intervened in the suit and claimed ownership of one mule and two cows and two calves seized. He claimed to
Plaintiff answered the intervention and denied intervenor’s claims and alleged, in the alternative, that if there had been a transfer of the animals from defendant to intervenor as alleged it was fraudulent and the result of a fraudulent conspiracy between defendant and intervenor to shield the animals from seizure and sale by plaintiff for her rent, and she prayed that the transfer be declared fraudulent and void. She also asked for damages against intervenor for fraudulent conspiracy.
. On these issues the case was tried and there was judgment against the defendant and in favor of the plaintiff by default for $500.00 with 8 per cent per annum interest thereon from September 15, 1925, less a credit of $218.24, as of date October 1, 1925, net proceeds of seized property sold, with recognition of plaintiff’s lessor’s privilege on all the property seized, except the mule claimed by intervenor.
On the intervention, there was judgment in favor of the intervenor for the mule, but rejecting his claim for the two cows and calves.
Prom this judgment plaintiff appealed. Intervenor did not appeal nor has he asked for an amendment of the judgment in this court.
OPINION
As the intervenor has not appealed nor asked for an amendment of the judgment by this court, th<j judgment, insofar as it is against him, must remain unchanged.
The evidence shows that about forty-five days before the seizure the defendant and the intervenor entered into a contract of exchange whereby the intervenor traded the defendant a horse for the mule claimed.
Transfer of possession of the animals was made at the time of the exchange, and the intervenor had worked the mule in his own field during the forty-five days preceding the seizure.
It is not contended by plaintiff that the horse given by defendant was of less value than the mule received by him, and a fair exchange having taken place the plaintiff • was not injured thereby and has no right to complain.
The trial judge who heard the witnesses testify and observed their demeanor on the witness stand decided that the mule belonged to intervenor. Under all the evidence we think that finding correct.
Both plaintiff and intervenor seem to have been in error as to their respective rights; the plaintiff in seizing intervenor’s mule, and the intervenor in attempting to deprive plaintiff of her lessor’s privilege on the two cows and two calves.
Their respective claims for damages mutually set each other off and were properly rejected.
Plaintiff complains that the judgment failed to allow her ten per cent attorney’s fees on her debt as stipulated for in the note. She is entitled to have the judgment corrected so as to allow these.
For the above reasons, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be amended, and it is now
It is further, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the intervention be sustained insofar as the mule therein claimed is concerned and that intervenor be decreed to be the owner and entitled to the possession of the mule, but that in all other respects intervenor’s 'demands be rejected. The defendant to pay all the costs of the suit.
And, as thus amended, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.