Laville v. Hébrard
Laville v. Hébrard
Opinion of the Court
This suit comes before us under "circumstances, nearly, if not entirely analogous to those of Samory v. Hébrard et al., reported in 17 La., 555. The plaintiffs having obtained against Frangois Lafargue two judgments, bearing date the 13th of January, and the 1st of May, 1838, applied for writs of fieri facias, and proceeded, under the thirteenth section of the statute of 1839, to
In the case above referred to, we said, that ‘ the proceeding under the act of 1839, was intended to get at property in the possession of third persons belonging to a defendant; but it cannot be used as a substitute for a direct revocatory action, the object of which is to test the validity of titles to property in such third persons. By such a proceeding, the latter cannot be deprived of any means of defence, or advantages they would have in a direct action brought against them.’ It is clear, that had plaintiff brought a direct revocatory action, in the present instance, to annul or revoke the sales made on the 18th of March, 1837, he would have been successfully met by the plea of prescription, because such sales were passed nearly three years before the institution of his suit, and more than twelve months after the date of his judgment. Civ. Code, arts. 1982, 1989. On the authority of the case of Thibodeaux v. Thomasson et al., reported in 17 La., 353, it has been strenuously contended, that the prescription established by these articles of the Civil Code, should not bar the plaintiff’s right to have these sales annulled. The case relied on refers to a different provision of the Code, and to a state of facts not presented in this case. It decides that article 1988, which refuses the revocatory action to a creditor whose debt has accrued after the contract sought to be annulled, applies to contracts apparently complete, and regularly carried into effect by the debtor; but that it does not extend to the case where the debtor has never ceased to be in the possession of the property apparently sold, and where third persons have treated with him, on the faith of his being the owner of the property they found in his corporal possession. It may be, that on such a case being presented tp us, under proper allegations, and in a proper
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jean François Laville v. Pierre Adolphe Hébrard and another
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published