Halsey v. Lange
Halsey v. Lange
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs proceeded via executiva to enforce the payment of defendant’s note for $2600, with interest, by causing to be seized a certain plantation belonging to the defendant, and situated in the parish of Pointe Coupee. The defendant enjoined the sale of liis property, alleging that the note sued upon had been paid, and that plaintiffs obtained fraudulent possession of it after it was paid, and with knowledge of that fact.
Judgment was rendered sustaining the allegation of the defendant that the note had been paid, and decreeing that it be canceled and annulled, and declared to be of no legal effect.
The plaintiffs have appealed.
The form of the plaintiffs’ action was charged to a proceeding via or-dinaria.
The facts elicited by the evidence are that Langp, in the latter part of the year 1870, bought at bankrupt sale a plantation in Pointo Coupee for the price of ten thousand dollars, taking title from Norton, the assignee. Half the price was paid in cash, and for the other half ho executed his two promissory notes, each for $2600, one payable ’on the first of December, 1871, the other on the'first of December, 1872. It is on the last-mentioned note, the one due in 1872, that this action is founded. This note was paid through Mouton, Lange’s commission merchant in New Or
We think tho plaintiff in injunction has fully made out his case, and that the decree of the lower court was correctly rendered.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W. F. Halsey v. Leopold Lange
- Status
- Published