Britt v. Caldwell Norton Lumber Co.

55 So. 778, 129 La. 243, 1911 La. LEXIS 743
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 8, 1911
DocketNo. 18,782
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 55 So. 778 (Britt v. Caldwell Norton Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Britt v. Caldwell Norton Lumber Co., 55 So. 778, 129 La. 243, 1911 La. LEXIS 743 (La. 1911).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

It appears from the application, exhibits, and return in this case that on February 4, 1911, the district court for the parish of Natchitoches rendered and signed a judgment in favor of the widow and heirs of P. M. Britt and against the Boleyn Lumber Company, decreeing plaintiffs to be the owners, entitled to immediate possession, [245]*245of a certain tract of land, and condemning the defendant company in the sum of $935.-<3S, with costs, also condemning D. G. Petty Lumber Company, Limited, as warrantor of defendant, for a like sum, save $7 of costs, which defendant was condemned to bear; that on the same day D. G. Petty Lumber Company, Limited, warrantor, moved the court to grant it a new trial; that on February 11th the motion for new trial was overruled, and the court thereupon made an order granting to “defendants” a suspensive and devolutive appeal to the Supreme Court, “suspensive appeal bond fixed according to law; devolutive, at $250”; that on February 26th D. G. Petty Lumber Company, Limited, filed an appeal bond (as for a suspensive and devolutive appeal) in the sum of $2,000; that thereafter plaintiffs ruled “the defendant and appellant” to show cause why a writ of fi. fa. should not issue, on the ground that the appeal bond had not been filed within 10 days from date of the signing of the judgment, and hence that the condition upon which the suspensive appeal had been granted had not been complied with; that, after hearing, there was judgment on said rule as follows:

“The application of the plaintiffs and appellees to have the order of appeal amended and restricted to a devolutive appeal is hereby denied, and the plaintiffs and appellees are hereby restrained and prohibited from having execution issued on the said judgment, for the reason that a suspensive appeal bond was filed in due time, within ten days from the date the motion for rehearing was refused.”

Upon the case thus presented the judge of the district court was ordered to show cause in this court why the order so made by him should not be annulled and plaintiffs allowed to issue execution on their judgment, and he has answered to the effect that in his opinion the appeal bond filed within ten days from the date of the overruling of the motion for new trial was in time to secure to the appellant a suspensive appeal from said judgment.

Opinion.

Article 117 of the Constitution reads:

“District courts shall hold continuous sessions during ten months of the year. In districts composed of more than one parish, the judge shall sit alternately in each, as the public business may require. Until otherwise provided by law, judgments shall be signed after three days from the rendition thereof, and become executory ten days from said signing.”

It is “otherwise provided by law” to the following extent: Act 163 of 1898:

“See. 5. * * * That all judgments rendered by the district courts shall be signed within three (3) judicial days from the date of the rendition of such judgment; provided, that, within such delay, an application for a new trial may be filed and the granting of a new trial shall have the effect of setting aside the judgment signed within said three days; provided that judgment in confession may be signed at any time in open court.
“Sec. 6. * * * That all judgments of the district courts shall become executory ten (10) days, exclusive of Sundays, after being signed by the judge. Any person aggrieved by the judgment may suspend the execution thereof by obtaining an order of appeal and furnishing bond for a suspensive appeal, within the delay above mentioned, in such sum as the law requires or may be fixed by the judge. * * * ”

Section 7 contains the usual repealing clause.

Act No. 40 of 1904 amends the section 5 (above quoted) of the act of 1898 by striking out the word “judicial,” thereby requiring judgments to be signed and applications for new trials filed within three calendar days from the rendition of the judgments.

There is nothing in these statutes to prevent a judge from signing a judgment on the day of its rendition, and nothing to prevent the filing of an application for new trial within three days from the rendition of the judgment, whether it be signed at the time of such filing or not. As to the right to stay the execution of a judgment by appeal, the act of 1898 is plain, unambiguous, and susceptable of no other construction than the language imports. In order to produce that effect (i. e., stay the execution), the party aggrieved must within 10 days, exclusive of [247]*247Sundays, from the signing of the judgment, obtain an order of appeal and furnish a bond in such sum as the law requires, or (in eases in which no specific amount is awarded) in such sum as may be fixed by the judge.

The statutes quoted make no provision with regard to devolutive appeals, and we find no reason to question the correctness of our ruling in the case of Durbridge v. State, 117 La. 842, 42 South. 337, wherein it is held that the delay within which a devolutive appeal may be taken begins to run from the “day when the court refuses a new trial.”

The learned counsel who have appeared herein for the appellant and for the respondent judge say:

“We submit that there is but one conclusion to reach, and that is the appeal does not have to be asked for until the motion [for a new trial] is decided, and that the ten days for appealing, suspensively, runs from the day the motion is overruled. This is the only rational view to take of the case. A judge could, of his own motion, hold up a motion for new trial for over ten days from the rendition and signing of the judgment, and, under plaintiffs’ view of the law, cut off a constitutional right of appeal.”

We do not so understand it. The right of appeal (in a ease such as this) is granted by article 85 of the Constitution, which confers upon this court appellate jurisdiction in “all cases where the matter in dispute, or the fund to be distributed, whatever may be the amount therein claimed, shall exceed two thousand dollars, exclusive of interest.” The exercise of the right thus granted is regulated by the provision of article 117, reading:

“Until otherwise provided by law, judgments shall * * * become executory ten days from * * * signing.”

And by the provision of Act 163, of 1898, section 6, reading:

“All judgments rendered by the district courts shall become executory ten (10) days, exclusive of Sundays, after being signed by the judge. Any person aggrieved by the judgment may suspend the execution thereof by obtaining an order of appeal and furnishing bond for a suspensive appeal, within the delay above mentioned, in such sum as the law requires or may be fixed by the judge.”

There is nothing in the regulations thus quoted or elsewhere in the Constitution or the law which can give to the failure of the judge to act upon a motion for new trial within 10 days from the signing of the judgment the effect of cutting off the right of the aggrieved litigant to appeal within that delay.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vallo v. Gayle Oil Co., Inc.
646 So. 2d 859 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1994)
City of New Orleans v. Grosch
49 So. 2d 435 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1950)
McClelland v. District Household of Ruth
151 So. 246 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)
Milton v. Lincoln Parish School Board
94 So. 386 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1922)
State ex rel. Wellman v. Bell
77 So. 493 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1918)
Britt v. Caldwell-Norton Lumber Co.
57 So. 162 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 So. 778, 129 La. 243, 1911 La. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/britt-v-caldwell-norton-lumber-co-la-1911.