Barham v. Richard
This text of 692 So. 2d 1357 (Barham v. Richard) 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.
Opinion
Mack E. BARHAM
v.
Thomas E. RICHARD.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Robert E. Arceneaux, Travis L. Bourgeois, Barham & Arceneaux, New Orleans, for Relator.
Thomas E. Richard, Baton Rouge, in pro. per.
Before BYRNES, LOBRANO and LANDRIEU, JJ.
BYRNES, Judge.
We have granted relator's application for writ of certiorari to consider the validity of the trial court's judgment granting defendant's exception of venue. In deciding this writ application we find that:
(1) A promissory note is not a contract within the meaning of the venue article LSA-C.C.P. art. 76.1.
(2) The phrase "work or service" found in LSAC.C.P. art. 76.1 was not intended to apply to payment on a promissory note.
We reach these conclusions based on:
(1) Our analysis of the language of LSA-C.C.P. art. 76.1; and
(2) The specter of multi-parish lenders with a centralized payment center requiring small borrowers to defend themselves in the distant home parish of the lender's main office where the borrowers' *1358 only contact with that office is an address to which to mail payment(s).
Relator, Mack Barham, filed suit in Orleans Parish against the respondent, Thomas Richard, who is domiciled in East Baton Rouge Parish, to collect on a promissory note. The note was signed in Baton Rouge and provided that Richard was to pay Barham at his home in New Orleans. Richard filed an exception of improper venue arguing that the only proper venue was East Baton Rouge because he never resided or was domiciled in Orleans. The trial court granted the exception and transferred the case to East Baton Rouge Parish, citing this Court's opinion in Olinde v. Couvillion, 94-1275 (La.App. 4 Cir. 2/23/95), 650 So.2d 1241.
Relator applied to this Court for writs requesting that we reverse the venue ruling of the trial court. This Court grants writs in order to consider whether we should treat a suit on a promissory note as a suit on a contract or instead extend our ruling in Olinde which held that this Court would not treat suits on open accounts as suits on contract for venue purposes under LSAC.C.P. art. 76.1.
La. C.C.P. art. 76.1, provides:
An action on a contract may be brought in the parish where the contract was executed or the parish where any work or service was performed or was to be performed under the terms of the contract. [Emphasis added.]
Barham argues that venue in Orleans Parish, the place of payment, is proper under LSA-C.C.P. art. 76.1 because the promissory note constituted a contract and because payment of the note in New Orleans was the "service" to be performed by Richard.
Relator cites Jordan v. Central Louisiana Electric Co., Inc., 95-1270 (La.6/23/95), 656 So.2d 988. In Jordan the plaintiff contracted with the defendant to buy immovable property in Iberia Parish and signed the act of sale in that parish while the defendant signed in Rapides Parish. The plaintiff then filed suit in Iberia Parish seeking the return of his deposit; and, the defendant objected on the grounds that the only proper venue was its domicile, Rapides Parish. The trial court denied the venue exception, which ruling the court of appeal reversed; and the Supreme Court reversed the granting of the venue exception by the court of appeal. The court construed Article 76.1 as authorizing venue in any of the parishes in which the contract was executed and stated:
Our construction is consistent with our holding in Kellis v. Farber, 523 So.2d 843 (La.1988). Kellis held that the alternative, optional venue provisions contained in La. Code Civ. Pro. articles 71 through 85 "are an extension, supplement and legal part of the provisions of article [sic] 42." 523 So.2d at 846. As a result, these alternative venue provisions are no longer exceptions to Article 42's "home base" venue that should be strictly construed, as was formerly required under Hawthorne Oil & Gas Corp. v. Continental Oil, 377 So.2d 285 (La.1979). Rather, these alternative provisions are part and parcel of the general venue rule set forth in Article 42.
Id. at p. 2, 656 So.2d at 989.
In Olinde, while acknowledging the contractual component of open accounts, we attached greater significance to the ways in which the law has treated open accounts differently from contracts generally.
The same result was reached in Operational Technologies Corp. v. Environmental Contractors, Inc., 95-0413 (La.App. 1st Cir. 11/9/95), 665 So.2d 14, which cited Olinde as support. In Operational Technologies, the First Circuit distinguished Jordan by stating that an action on an open account could not be treated as an action on a contract so as to fit under the alternative provision of Article 76.1 when the law had historically considered an open account to be different from a contract.
We find the reasoning in Olinde and Operational Technologies applicable to this claim on a promissory note. Suits on promissory notes and open accounts have prescriptive periods different from the ten year period applicable to contracts generally and historically been treated differently in many respects from ordinary contracts. See LSA-C.C. art. 3498, referring to promissory notes specifically, and LSA-C.C.P. art. 3494, referring *1359 to open accounts specifically, providing for prescriptive periods for those two forms of consensual obligations different from the ten year prescriptive period made applicable to contract claims generally under LSA-C.C. art. 3499. See also LSA-C.C.P. art. 1702B(3) which provides that when "the sum due is on open account or a promissory note [emphasis added] or other negotiable instrument, an affidavit of the correctness thereof shall be prima facie proof for purposes of confirming a default, whereas LSA-C.C. art. 1702B(1) applies to defaults on conventional obligations, i.e., contracts generally.
Therefore, we hold that a promissory note is not a contract within the intendment of LSA-C.C.P. art. 76.1.
Barham does not allege that the promissory note was executed in the Parish of Orleans. Therefore, the facts of this case do not fall within the strict holding of Jordan which addressed only the question of where a contract was executed. In Olinde, which was decided by this Court prior to the Supreme Court's decision in Jordan, this Court noted that LSA-C.C.P. art. 76.1 was enacted as part of Act 217 of 1991 concerning "public and private works." This accounts for the reference in 76.1 to "work or service." However, in Jordan the Supreme Court chose to focus on the phrase "where the contract was executed" and did discuss that phrase in the context of Act 217 as a whole and did not discuss how the phrase "work or service" might be seen to limit the application of LSA-C.C.P. art. 76.1 within the context of Act 217 of 1991. Although this Court might not take as broad a view of LSA-C.C.P. art. 76.1 as the Supreme Court did in Jordan were this Court to be presented with the Jordan facts as a res nova issue, we recognize that we are now bound by that decision. However, where we find, as we do in this case, that to hold that LSA-C.C.P. art.
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692 So. 2d 1357, 1997 WL 170280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barham-v-richard-lactapp-1997.