Blanchard v. Donaldsonville Motors Co.

176 So. 669
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1937
DocketNo. 1747.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 176 So. 669 (Blanchard v. Donaldsonville Motors Co.) 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
Blanchard v. Donaldsonville Motors Co., 176 So. 669 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

Plaintiff sued the defendant in damages for an alleged breach or violation of contract-to repair his damaged automobile and for wrongful and illegal detention of the same after it had been repaired. The defendant denied the alleged breach and set out on the contrary that it had fully complied with the contract and defended its retention of the car on the failure of the plaintiff to have paid the bill for repairs. Assuming the position of a plaintiff in re-convention, defendant then asserted its claim against the plaintiff for the repairs made and for parts furnished in connection therewith and also for charges for storage of the car in its garage since the time it had been ready for delivery. The amount of the bill for repairs including labor and parts is alleged to be $102.30 and the storage is fixed at 50 cents per day. Judgment is accordingly prayed for in reconvention against the plaintiff in the sum of $102.30, with interest, and for the further sum of 50 cents per day for each day since the car has been in storage, to wit, .May 16, 1936.

Judgment was rendered in the court below against the plaintiff on his demand for damages and in favor of the defendant on the reconventional demand in the sum of $102.30, with interest and costs. The claim for storage charges was not allowed.

From the judgment as rendered, plaintiff took an appeal, both suspensive and de-volutive to this court. While tKe appeal was pending, plaintiff, on July 2, 1937, paid to defendant’s attorney, the sum of $144.80 and took from him a receipt worded as follows:

“July 2, 1937.
“C. A. Blanchard vs. Donaldsonville Motor Company, Inc.
“No. 4447
“Received of C. A. Blanchard, the sum of $144.80, in full payment and satisfaction of the following:
Judgment rendered in favor of Re- . convenor $102.30 Interest on said judgment 5.75
Stenographic fees paid by Recon-venor 36.75
Total $144.80
“It is understood and agreed that all rights of appeal are specially reserved.”.

Claiming that by the payment thus made plaintiff has acquiesced in the judgment and has suffered the loss of his appeal, the defendant has filed a motion to dismiss the same. In the alternative, it is urged that even though it does not constitute an acquiescence in the whole judgment, by it, plaintiff at least has forfeited his right to appeal from the judgment against him on the reconventional demand.

In support of the motion to dismiss, defendant relies on that part of article 567 of the Code of Practice which reads as follows :

“The party against whom judgment has been rendered can not appeal:
"1. * * * if he have acquiesced in the same, by executing it voluntarily.”

Pretermitting the question as to whether the payment as embodied in the quoted receipt constituted a voluntary acquiescence as far as the judgment on the reconven-tional demand was concerned, or not, we cannot see how it could be considered as an acquiescence at all in the judgment dismissing plaintiff’s demand for damages. It is noted that that judgment is not mentioned and is in no way involved in the payment as shown by the receipt. On the contrary, the receipt specifically recites that the payment is made in satisfaction of the judgment rendered in favor of recon-venor.

The position of the defendant is that there being but one judgment and one decree handed down and but one appeal taken from that judgment, it must be considered as a whole, and any action taken on the appeal must necessarily relate to that judgment in its entirety. But in this case, there were in reality two judgments and decrees. One disposed of the plaintiff’s claim for damages against the defendant' and the other of the defendant’s demand against the plaintiff in reconvention. The latter demand enjoyed the status of an independent suit and was as distinct a cause of action as if it had been filed in a separate proceeding (see Stringfellow v. Nowlin Bros, et al., 157 La. 683, 102 So. 869), and the appellant has the right to maintain his appeal from the judgment disposing of that demand regardless of what happens to the appeal in so far as it concerns the judgment on the main demand. It is well settled now that even in the same judgment, a part of which is favorable and the other unfavorable to the *671 appellant, lie can maintain his appeal from the unfavorable part although he is shown to have acquiesced in the favorable part of the judgment. Foster & Glassell Co., Ltd., v. Harrison et al., 173 La. 550, 138 So. 99. So much the more do we think he should be permitted to maintain his appeal with regard to either one or the other, where, as here, the judgment, although handed down as one, in reality disposes of two separate and distinct causes of action. We are certainly of the opinion that the appellant has not forfeited his appeal in so far as the judgment rejected his demand for damages against the defendant and it now remains for us to consider the alternative proposition urged by the defendant that the appeal should be dismissed in so far as it concerned that part of the judgment which awarded it its claim in recon-vention.

On this point, jt is the contention of the defendant that the payment of the judgment, even though made with reservation of • the right of appeal, was such an acquiescence as to forfeit the appeal under the provisions of the article of the Code of Practice herein relied on. No reservation, it is urged, “is effective to do away with the legal consequences the law attaches to the act” and, in support of the contention, we are referred to the cases of Jolley v. Vivian Oil Co., 131 La. 937, 60 So. 622, and Raines v. Dunson, 143 La. 321, 78 So. 574. We find that in each of those two cases the appeal was from an indivisible judgment part of which was favorable and the remainder unfavorable to the appellant, which, as we have shown is not the situation in the case before us. Moreover, most of the authorities cited and apparently relied on by the court in those two cases are the same which appear to have been overruled in the later decision of Foster & Glassell Co., Ltd., v. Harrison et al., supra. This last decision makes plain what is the court’s interpretation of article 567 of the Code of Practice and Chief Justice O’Niel’s concurring opinion rather emphasizes the point that the only acquiescence there can be by the party against whom a judgment has been rendered is the voluntary payment or satisfaction of that judgment. We cannot for our part see how the payment of a judgment, with reservation of the right of appeal, can constitute a voluntary acquiescence in such judgment within the contemplation of the article of the Code of Practice. A very good reason which suggests itself why a party cast under such a judgment may want to pay and still maintain his right of appeal is to minÍT mize, as much as possible, the amount of interests and costs or perhaps some penalties which attached to it, pending the appeal.

The motion to dismiss the appeal is, for the reasons stated, overruled.

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176 So. 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanchard-v-donaldsonville-motors-co-lactapp-1937.