Bynum v. Gordon
Bynum v. Gordon
Opinion of the Court
In this proceeding the district court rendered a judgment in favor of the intervenors for the sums claimed, with a first mortgage ou twelve hundred and seventy-three arpents of land, and in favor of the plaintiffs for a part of their claim, with second mortgage on the above land and a first mortgage on two smaller tracts. From the judgment in favor of the intervenors the plaintiffs have appealed. The ground of their complaint is, that the district court refused to sustain their plea of prescription against the judgment of Intervenors rendered in 1851.
A certified copy of this judgment is in tho record, unsigned, and can not therefore, well he taken as a basis for the prescription interposed ; but considering it a final judgment, it can not be a barrier to -the intervenors’ demand in this action because not revived; for it only passed definitely on so much of their claim as was then due, and directed the sale of the mortgaged property to pay the amount decreed
But admit that the judgment of May, 1851, condemning the defendant therein to pay the sum decreed to be due, and ordering the property to be sold, is prescribed, it does not affect the intervenors’ right to enforce the payment of the sums which have fallen due since 1858. The allegations of their petitions hero do not make that judgment the basis of their action.
We find no error in the judgment to the prejudice of the plaintiffs in this respect. It is unnecessary to examine the other questions presented in argument.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mary and Matilda Bynum v. Smith Gordon, of of G. M. Long—Consolidated Association of Planters of Louisiana, Intervenors
- Status
- Published