TO SEQUESTER, civil
and eccles. law. To renounce. Example, when a widow comes into court
and disclaims having anything to do, or to intermeddle with her deceased
hushand's estate, she is said to sequester. Jacob, L. D. h. t.
SEQUESTRATION, chancery
practice. The process of sequestration is a writ of commission,
sometimes directed to the sheriff, but most usually, to four or more
commissioners of the complainant's own nomination, authorizing them to
enter upon the real or personal estate of the defendant, and to take the
rents, issues and profits into their own hands, and keep possession of,
or pay the same as the court shall order and direct, until the party
who is in contempt shall do that which he is enjoined to do, and which
is specially mentioned in the writ. 1 Harr. Ch. 191; Newl. Ch. Pr. 18;
Blake's Ch. Pr. 103.
2.
Upon the return of non est inventus to a commission of rebellion, a
ser-geant-at-arms may be moved for; and if he certifies that the
defendant cannot be taken, a motion may be made upon his certificate,
for an order for a sequestration. 2 Madd. Chan. 203; Newl. Ch. Pr. 18;
Blake's Ch. Pr. 103.
3.
Under a sequestration upon mesne process, as in respect of a contempt
for want of appearance or answer, the sequestrators may take possession
of the party's personal property and keep him out of possession; but no
sale can take place, unless perhaps to pay expenses; for this process is
only to form the foundation of taking the bill pro confesso. After a
decree it may be sold. See 3 Bro. C. C. 72; 2 Cox, 224; 1 Ves. jr. 86; 3
Bro. C. C. 372; 2 Madd. Ch. Pr. 206. See, generally, as to this species
of sequestration, 19 Vin. Abr. 325; Bac. Ab. h. t.; Com.; Chancery, D
7, Y 4; 1 Hov. Supp. to Ves. jr. 25 to 29; 1 Vern. by Raith. 58, note 1;
Id. 421, note 1.
SEQUESTRATION, contracts.
A species of deposit, which two or more persons, engaged in litigation
about anything, make of the thing in contest to an indifferent person,
who binds himself to restore it when the issue is decided, to the party
to whom it is adjudged to belong. Louis. Code, art. 2942; Story on
Bailm: §45. Vide 19 Vin. Ab. 325; 1 Supp. to Yes. jr. 29; 1 Vern. 58,
420; 2 Ves. jr. 23; Bac. Ab. h. t. 2. This is called a conventional
sequestration, to distinguish it from a judicial sequestration, which is
considered in the preceding article. Sec Dalloz, Dict. mot Sequestre.
SEQUESTRATION, Louisiana
practice. The Code of Practice in civil cases in Louisiana, defines and
makes the following provisions on the subject of sequestration. Art.
269. Sequestration is a mandate of the court, ordering the sheriff, in
certain cases, to take in his possession, and to keep a thing of which
another person has the possession, until after the decision of a suit,
in order that it be delivered to him who shall be adjudged entitled to
have the property or possession of that thing. This is what is properly
called a judicial sequestratian. Vide 1 Mart. R. 79; 1 L. R. 439; Civil
Code of Lo. 2941; 2948.
2.
- Art. 270. In this acceptation, the word sequestration does not mean a
judicial deposit, because sequestration may exist together with the
right of administration, while mere deposit does not admit it.
3. - Art. 271. All species of property, real or personal, as well as the revenue proceeding from the same, may be sequestered.
4. - Art. 272. Obligations and titles may also be sequestered, when their ownership is in dispute.
5.
- Art. 273. Judicial sequestration is generally ordered only at the
request of one of the parties to a suit; there are cases, nevertheless,
where it is decreed by the court without such request, or is the
consequence of the execution of judgments.
6.
- Art. 274. The court may order, ex officio, the sequestration of real
property in suits, where the ownership of such property is in dispute
and when one of the contending parties does not seem to have a more
apparent right to the possession than the other. In such cases,
sequestration may be ordered to continue, until the question of
ownership shall have been decided.
7.
- Art. 275. Sequestration may be ordered at the request of one of the
parties in a suit in the following cases: 1. When one who had possessed
for more than one year, has been evicted through violence, and sues to
be restored to his possession. 2. When one sues for the possession of
movable property, or of a slave, and fears that the party having
possession, may ill treat the slave or send either that slave, or the
property in dispute, out of the jurisdiction of the court, during the
pendency of the suit. 3. When one claims the ownership, or the
possession of real property, and has good ground to appre-hend, that the
defendant may make use of his possession to dilapidate or to waste the
fruits or revenues produced by such property, or convert them to his own
use. 4. When a woman sues for a separation from bed and board, or only
for a separation of property from her hushand, and has reason to
apprehend that he will ruin her dotal property, or waste the fruits or
revenues produced by the same during the pendency of the action. 5. When
one has petitioned for a stay of proceedings, and a meeting of his
creditors, and such creditors fear that he may avail himself of such
stay of proceedings, to place the whole, or a part of his property, out
of their reach. 6. A creditor by special mortgage shall have the power
of sequestering the mortgaged property, when he appre-hends that it will
be removed out of the state before he can have the benefit of his
mortgage, and will make oath of the facts which induced his
apprehension.
8.
- Art. 276. A plaintiff wishing to obtain an order of sequestration in
any one of the cases above provided, must annex to the petition in which
he prays for such an order, an affidavit, setting forth the cause for
which he claims such order, he must besides, execute his obligation in
favor of the defendant, for such sum as the court shall determine, with
the surety of one good and solvent person, residing within the
jurisdiction of the court, to be responsible for such damages as the
defendant may sustain, in case such sequestration should have been
wrongfully obtained.
9.
- Art. 277. When security is given in order to obtain the sequestration
of real property which brings a revenue, the judge must require that it
be given for an amount sufficient to compensate the defendant, not only
for all damage which he may sustain, but also for the privation of such
revenue, during the pendency of the action.
10.
- Art. 278. The plaintiff when he prays for a sequestration of the
property of one who has failed, is not required to give such security,
though that property bring in a revenue.
11.
- Art. 279. A defendant against whom a mandate of sequestration has
been obtained, except in cases of failure, may have the same set aside,
by executing his obligation in favor of the sheriff, with one good and
solvent surety, for whatever amount the judge may determine, as being
equal to the value of the property to be left in his possession.
12.
- Art. 280. The security thus given by the defendant, when the property
sequestrated consists in movables or in slaves, shall be responsible
that he shall not send away the same out of the jurisdiction of the
court; that he shall not make an improper use of them; and that he will
faithfully present them, after definitive judgment, in case he should be
decreed to restore the same to the plaintiff.
13.
- Art. 281. As regards landed property, this security is given to
prevent the defendant, while in possession, from wasting the property,
and for the faithful restitution of the fruits that he may have received
since the demand, or of their value in the event of his being cast in
the suit.
14.
- Art. 282. When the sheriff has sequestered property pursuant to an
order of the court, he shall, after serving the petition and the copy of
the order of sequestration on the defendant, send him return in writing
to the clerk of the court which gave the order, stating in the same in
what manner the order was executed, and annex to such return a true and
minute inventory of the property sequestered, drawn by him, in the
presence of two witnesses.
15.
- Art. 283. The sheriff, while he retains possession of sequestered
property, is bound to take proper care of the same and to administer the
same, if it be of such nature as to admit of it, as a prudent father of
a family administers his own affairs. He may confide them to the care
of guardians or overseers, for whose acts he remains responsible, and he
will be entitled to receive a just compensation for his administration,
to be determined by the court, to be paid to him out of the proceeds of
the property sequestered, if judgment be given in favor of the
plaintiff.
SEQUESTRATOR. One to whom a sequestration is made.
2.
A depositary of this kind cannot exonerate himself from the care of the
thing sequestered in his hands, unless for some cause rendering it
indispens-able that he should resign his trust. Louis. Code, art. 2947.
See Stakeholder. Sequestrators are also officers appointed by a court of
chancery, and named in a writ of sequestration. As to their powers and
duties, see 2 Madd. Ch. Pr. 205, 6; Blake's Ch. Pr. 103; Newl. Ch. Pr.
18, 19; 1 Harr. Ch. 191.
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