Bacher v. Higgins

156 So. 826
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 1934
DocketNo. 14681.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 156 So. 826 (Bacher v. Higgins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bacher v. Higgins, 156 So. 826 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

LECHE, Judge ad hoc.

The only question we are considering at this time is whether or not the reconven-tional demand is properly before us on appeal. The trial court dismissed plaintiff’s suit at his cost, and dismissed defendant’s demand in rcconvention at defendant’s cost. Plaintiff appealed. Defendant did not appeal but filed his answer to plaintiff’s appeal and prayed “that the judgment of the lower court be affirmed in so far as it dismisses plaintiff’s suit at his cost, but that the judgment of the said lower court be reversed so as to allow your appearer, Donald Higgins, plaintiff in reconvention, judgment against William Bacher, defendant in reconvention, in the full sum of four hundred four and 05/100 (¡¡5404.05) dollars, with interest thereon at the legal rate of five (5%) per cent per annum from judicial demand until paid, and for all costs of court; and for such further relief as equity, law and the nature of the case may require.”

The contention is that, inasmuch as defendant and reconvener did not appeal, the judgment dismissing the reconventional demand is not subject to review by this court.

The case of De Bellevue v. Couvillion, 3 La. App. 568, cited in appellee’s brief, is not in point as it does not appear that there was a reconventional demand or an answer to the appeal.

In the case of Wilson v. T. L. James & Co., 14 La. App. 593, 122 So. 137, decided by the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit, the circumstances are identical with the present case, and the court held:

“Defendant did not appeal from the judgment rejecting its reconventional demand, and the ruling rejecting the demand cannot be reviewed on the answer to the appeal from the judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demands (Westermeier v. Street, 21 La. Ann. 714, Clement Bros. v. Creditors, 37 La. Ann. *827 692), and the only question presented by the appeal is as to the correctness of the judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demands.”

The case of Clement v. Creditors, 37 La. Ann. 692, cited above, is not in point, nor is Westermeier v. Street, 21 La. Ann. 714.

In the Westermeier Case the question was whether the judgment in favor of plaintiff had been appealed from, and the court held that it could not be reviewed on the answer of appellee.

In the ease of Mitchell v. Holomon et al., 10 La. App. 219, 120 So. 672, the facts were similar to the present case and the court there again relied on the Clement Bros, and Westermeier Cases, and decided that the demand in reconvention could not be reviewed.

In the case of Chavez v. United Motor Car Co., Inc., 151 So. 807, 808, the facts were identical with those in the present case, and this court held:

“The reconventional demand is not before us because the defendant and plaintiff in re-convention did not appeal and the answer to the appeal filed by it is not the proper procedure to accord it the right of having the correctness of the judgment nonsuiting the reconventional demand reviewed.”

In Farnsworth v. Harris, 151 So. 809, the ruling in the Chavez Case was affirmed by this court.

In the Chavez Case, numerous cases were there cited as authority in support of the ruling. A careful research of those authorities shows that aside from the case of Wilson v. James, supra, none of these cases are directly in point, but enunciate a different principle of law.

We are convinced that Wilson v. James, Mitchell v. Holomon, Chavez v. United Motor Car Co. and Farnsworth v. Harris, supra, are not in accord with the settled jurisprudence of Louisiana on the point at issue.

In the case of Lange v. Baranco, 32 La. Ann. 697, the court said:

“The judgment rendered below dissolved the injunction and dismissed both plaintiff’s petition and defendant’s reconventional demand, without any reserve of rights.
“From this judgment the plaintiff has alone appealed, but in her answer here the defendant,' considering that she also had cause to complain, stated the points on which she thought she had sustained wrong and injury and prayed that the judgment be amended so as to recognize and enforce her demand in reconvention, with a reserve of her right to sue in damages, on account of the wrongful issuance of the injunction.
“The plaintiff objects to the trial of the case here as regards the reconventional demand, on the ground that the defendant did not appeal from the judgment dismissing that demand.
“It was unnecessary that she should do so. A judgment is the solemn adjudication of a court, established by law, made in a suit upon the relative claims of parties thereto, as disclosed by the record, and which passes on the matters so presented for determination. When it decides the issues submitted, it is an entirety, and, strictly, is indivisible; not so, however, as to compel a party who is only partly benefited to appeal from 'the judgment in his behalf. It may be rendered partly in favor of or against a litigant, and partly in favor of or against others. The party who appeals, whoever he be, theoretically brings up the entire judgment for revision to the appellate court; absolutely, as far as it aggrieves him, and conditionally as it affects others who are the appellees, and who can ask that the judgment, as to them, be re-examined and reformed. The Code of Practice, art. 888, recognizes undoubtedly this theory, by permitting expressly the ap-pellee, in his answer, when seasonably filed, to ask a reversal in part and a confirmation in part, as he may choose to do.
“The whole judgment is therefore before us for review.”

In the case of Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Railroad Co. (J. H. McCormick, Receiver) v. W. N. Traylor, Sheriff, et al., 104 La. 284, 29 So. 141, 147, the court said:

“We now direct our attention to the claims set up by the defendants in their answer. There are two demands contained therein; one covering a demand for interest and attorney’s fees, resulting from the first injunction, and the second claiming interest, attorney’s fees, damages, etc., resulting from the last injunction. A question has been raised as to whether these demands, having been disallowed by the district court, and defendants not having appealed themselves, are before us on the present appeal, through a prayer for an amendment of the judgment below.
“Appellees declare that particular question was passed upon in Lange v. Baranco, 32 La. Ann. 697-699.
“The claim for damages as resulting from the second injunction is incidental to, and directly connected with, plaintiff’s proceedings in the present suit. It fails, therefore, *828 under the doctrine announced in the case cited. The claim for damages, etc., resulting from the first injunction occupied the same relation to that particular proceeding which the other does to the second; but, instead of passing upon it, when judgment was rendered in the first suit, the rights of the parties touching the same were reserved.

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Related

Alengi v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.
165 So. 8 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1935)
Bacher v. Higgins
157 So. 800 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bacher-v-higgins-lactapp-1934.