Catalogne v. Bauries
Catalogne v. Bauries
Opinion of the Court
The judgment of the court (Rost, J. absent,) was pronounced by
The petitioner alleged that, at various times, from 1845 to 1849, he had advanced $1,205 to Bauries, who had applied it to the establishment of a
The respective rights of the plaintiff and intervenor to bond, and the right of the latter to the writ of injunction, were presented to the court below on rule. The judgment of the court below sustained the injunction, and gave the intervenor leave to bond. The cause has not been tried on its merits, and the only question now pending is, the correctness of the interlocutory decree.
At the trial of the rules, after much testimony had been taken pro and con, the investigation was arrested by an admission on the plaintiff’s part, for the purposes of the rule, that all the allegations of Tisnel's petition were true.
We think there is no error in the interlocutory decree. Tisnet, for the purposes of the present inquiry, whatever may be the result of the investigation upon the merits, stands before us as a third person holding actual possession, under a bona fide purchase from Bauries, before the sequestration issued; and was therefore entitled to hold possession under bond until the final hearing of the cause, and to enjoin. Nor was the right lost by the expiration of the ten judicial days after the levy of the writ. He had not been made a party defendant, and consequently was not estopped by the lapse of time, under the statute of 1842, p.- 204.
The fact that the’ injunction was not signed by the surety in the presence of the clerk, seems to us immaterial. The genuineness of the surely’s signature and his sufficiency 'were satifactorily proved; and the clerk’s approval of the bond must be presumed from his issuing the writ, the order of the judge being that an injunction should issue upon a bond with a surety being given.
The affidavit for the injunction Was formal and sufficient.
Judgment affirmed.
The vacheries consisted of cattle, horses, carts, and the necessary utensils for carrying it on. There was no land or house sold with it. R.
Reference
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published