Marin v. Lalley

ON motion to dismiss an appeal from the Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana; the case being thus:

In Louisiana a mortgage creditor may apply to a judge at chambers, or in court, upon non-payment of the mortgage debt, and obtain from him an order of seizure and sale, when the mortgage imports a confession of judgment. It is said to import such confession when the mortgage has been 'passed before a notary public in the presence of two witnesses and the debtor has declared or acknowledged the debt for which the mortgage is given.' The order of seizure and sale, called executory process, is said to be issued as upon a judgment by confession.

The Code of Practice requires that three days' notice be given to the debtor; and the judge is required to examine and 'decide whether the instrument unites all the requisites of the law necessary to authorize this summary proceeding.'

In this state of law Marin and others having passed to Lalley their mortgage, executed in the manner mentioned, Lalley, on the 28th of March, 1872, filed his petition in the Circuit Court of the United States, praying for executory process on it. Upon this petition an order was made thus:

'ORDER.

'Let executory process issue as prayed for, and according to law.

W. B. WOODS,

'Judge.

'March 28th, 1872.'

On the 4th of April, 1872, a petition for writ of error was granted to operate as a supersedeas, and a writ of error, bond and citation, were issued and served accordingly.

On the 11th of April the defendants filed their objection to the order for executory process and prayed that the same be quashed.

On the 16th of April, 'the cause coming on for hearing on the opposition and answer of the defendants to the order for executory process, herein granted on the 28th day of March, 1872, and on the application therein to quash the writ of seizure and sale'-it was ordered 'that the writ of seizure and sale be quashed as prematurely issued, that opposition be dismissed, and that the order of 28th of March, 1872, be now made final.' An order was then entered, that the writ of error originally filed, and which was set aside on the 16th day of April, be now reinstated to operate as a supersedeas, and that the said order setting 'aside the said writ be cancelled and annulled.'

A rule was then taken by the petitioner, for reasons stated, to set aside and annul the reinstatement of this writ of error and the supersedeas.

On the 8th of May it was ordered 'that all decrees herein made, subsequent to the last order granted by the presiding judge be vacated and rescinded, leaving to the parties their remedy, if they see fit to do so, to file a bill on the equity side of the court and apply for an injunction upon good cause shown.'

Another opposition to the seizure and sale was filed on the 9th of May, and in this involved condition of the case it was ordered, on the 10th of May, by the district judge, 'that the matter be submitted to his honor, the circuit judge.'

On the 25th of May the circuit judge ordered 'that the said opposition be dropped from the docket,' and on the 3d of June he ordered 'that the objections and answers of the defendants to the order and seizure of sale be overruled.'

On the 13th of June the defendants prayed for an appeal 'from the order for executory process, 28th of March, 1872, and made final on the 3d of June, to operate as a supersedeas upon giving bond for costs and all just damages for delay only.'

Whereupon it was ordered by the district judge that an appeal be granted to operate as a supersedeas, and that said appeal be made returnable to the Supreme Court on the first Monday of December, 1872.

A bond was approved and filed in the penalty of $1000, conditioned to pay such damages and costs as may accrue in case it should be determined that 'the said appeal was wrongfully obtained.'

The citation, dated the 14th June, summons the party to appear pursuant to a motion for appeal.

Mr. P. Phillips, in support of the motion to dismiss:

1st. The order for executory process is not a 'final judgment' which can be reviewed by writ of error.

2d. The proceeding being on the law side of the court an appeal does not lie, even if there were a final judgment.

The case of Levy v. Fitzpatrick, decided in 1841, and which was a case coming from the same court as the present, shows that a writ of error will not lie on an order for executory process.

Mr. T. J. Durant, contra.

The CHIEF JUSTICE delivered the opinion of the court.