Grivot v. Louisiana State Bank
Grivot v. Louisiana State Bank
Opinion of the Court
This suit is brought for an alleged balance in bank to the plaintiff’s credit on the twenty-fifth of April 1862.
1'he answer denies the material allegations, and avers that the bank was compelled by a military order of General Banks to surrender and deliver np to the military authority of tho United States all the funds and money in bank belonging to the plaintiff at the time set forth in plaintiff’s petition. That at the time the said military order was issued the city of New Orleans, the domicile of defendant, was entirely controlled and governed by martial law, and the authority of the civil government of the State of Louisiana, in the city of New Orleans, wholly suspended.
There was judgment in the court a qua against the plaintiff rejecting his claim and he lias appealed.
The plaintiff contends that the military order under which the defendant pretended to act was general in its character, and did not direct specially the seizure of his funds. That the order left it with the quartermaster and the bank to determine whoso funds were subject to it. That no special order to seize plaintiff’s funds by name or description being produced it was necessary that defendant should show that plaintiff came within all or either of the categories specified in the military order or in the letter of General Banks explanatory
The defendant, it is shown, paid over to the quartermaster, under this general order and explanatory letter of General Banks, the moneys ■deposited in plaintiff’s name in the Louisiana State Bank.
The plaintiff admitted that the United States proceeded in the year 1863 to libel his property, under the act of Congress of the twenty-ninth of July, 1862, entitled “ An Act relative to insurrection in the Southern States.” He also admitted that he left the city of New Orleans on the twenty-fifth of April, 1862, when the Union fleet arrived there, and did not'return to the city until after the surrender of General E. K. Smith, commanding Mississippi Department C. S. in May or June, 1865.
From the whole tenor of the evidence we do not see that the plaintiff has any just right to coerce the bank to make good to him a loss which it is clearly shown it was out of its power to prevent.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.