C. W. Greeson Co. v. Harnischfeger Corp.

54 So. 2d 528, 219 La. 1006, 1951 La. LEXIS 942
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 29, 1951
Docket39714, 39869
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 54 So. 2d 528 (C. W. Greeson Co. v. Harnischfeger Corp.) 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
C. W. Greeson Co. v. Harnischfeger Corp., 54 So. 2d 528, 219 La. 1006, 1951 La. LEXIS 942 (La. 1951).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

In this cause two appeals from separate judgments are being prosecuted by the ordinary partnership of C. W. Greeson Company and the individual members thereof, all of whom are domiciled allegedly in Bossier Parish and are hereinafter referred to as appellants. The judgments were rendered in favor of Harnischfeger Corporation, a non-resident entity domiciled in the State of Wisconsin and hereinafter referred to as appellee.

To give the background of this complicated litigation, it appears that in the year 1945 appellants purchased from appellee a large piece of machinery described as one P & H Model 1055 L C Dragline, paying in cash therefor approximately $55,000. Later, between September 26, 1946 and May 1, 1947, appellants, on terms of credit and by way of an open account, bought various goods and merchandise and obtained certain services from appellee.

On March 24, 1948, appellee filed a suit against appellants in the District Court of Bossier Parish, bearing No. 16,471 on its docket, to recover the sum of $2,372.13, allegedly the balance due on the open account. Answering the suit, appellants denied the correctness of the asserted balance; and, in reconvention, they demanded of appellee the sum of $12,566.62 for an alleged breach of contract to deliver the dragline (purchased in 1945) in good condition. ' Of -this amount, according to appellants’ averments, $2,666.62 was for replacing defective parts and the -balance was for loss of use of the machine for thirty-three days.

During the trial of that suit on February 28, 1949, after appellee had rested its case and one witness -on behalf of appellants had been examined, the attorney for the latter announced that the amount demanded in reconvention was much less than was actually due by appellee. Then he moved that the existing reconventional demand be dismissed as of non-suit and that he be permitted to file in open court, while the suit was still pending, ,a separate and distinct reconventional demand for a larger amount pursuant to article 377 of the Code *1011 of Practice. The district judge allowed the entering of the requested non-suit; but he refused permission to file the new reconventional demand in open court, stating that any further demand by appellants would have to be made in a separate proceeding by way of a direct action.

Whereupon appellants, as thus required, filed on the same date the instant action, being No. 16,965 on the docket of the Bossier Parish District Court, the petition of which shows that appellee is indebted unto them in the sum of $31,226.62 “for the reasons hereinafter alleged, for which indebtedness plaintiffs institute by way of reconvention this demand in consequence of that brought by defendant against them in . said suit No.’ 16,471.” The petition then alleges in detail the referred to reasons, they being substantially the same as those set forth in the rcconventional demand in suit No. 16,471 and which will be discussed hereinafter. The total amount claimed is itemized as $28,560 for loss of use of machine for sixty days and $2,666.62 for parts and labor in making repairs.

Service of citation was sought to be made on appellee through one of its representatives, who was'then a witness in court and also through the Secretary of State.

On March 14, 1949, the appellee filed exceptions to the jurisdiction of the court ratione personae and to the citations.

On March 26, 1949, appellants obtained a writ of attachment, the basis .for which was appellee’s non-residence; and thereunder they caused to be seized the rights,, title and interest of appellee (as plaintiff) in suit No. 16,471.

On April 12, 1949, appellee presented a. written motion in which it prayed that the-writ of attachment be dissolved and “that a fee for its attorneys in the amount of not less than $250 be taxed against plaintiffs herein for their services in obtaining a dissolution of said writ of attachment.”'

'In suit No’. 16,471 the district court on the-same date rendered a judgment in favor of appellee and against appellants for the principal sum of $2,373.13. It was signed on-April 26, 1949, and from that judgment the-partnership appealed. The appeal is docketed in this court as No. 39,500, Harnischfeger Corp. v. C. W. Greeson Co., 219 La. 546, 53 So.2d 488.

In the instant cause the district court, on June 14, 1949, sustained appellee’s exception to the jurisdiction ratione personae. Four days later it refused to reconsider that ruling, and it also overruled appellee’s motion to dissolve the writ of attachment.

To obtain a review of the ruling on the exception to the jurisdiction ratione personae, appellants applied here for remedial writs; but the application was denied on the ground that there was an adequate remedy by appeal. Thereafter, on October 14, 1949, the district court signed a formal judgment sustaining such exception and ordering that appellants’ action in personam against appellee be dismissed. Appellants prosecuted an appeal from this judgment, *1013 being No. 39,714 on the docket of this court, and it is one of the two appeals presently under consideration.

Also on October 14', 1949, appellee filed in the district court, in the instant cause, exceptions of no right and no cause of action, a plea to the court’s jurisdiction ratione materiae, and pleas of prescription of one and three years. All of these were overruled, except the plea of one year prescription which was sustained. In sustaining that plea the district court decreed a complete dismissal of appellants’ demand; and from the judgment appellants appealed. The appeal, being No.- 39,869 on the docket of this court, is the second in the cause requiring our attention.

Appellee has answeréd the appeals, asking for an affirmance of the judgments. In the alternative it prays that we sustain the exceptions to the citations, to the jurisdiction of the court ratione materiae, and of no right and no cause of action, all of which were overruled by the district judge.

The exception to the jurisdiction ratione personae, which was'sustained by the district judge and resulted in the dismissal of appellants’ action in personam, is grounded on the contention that this is an original or a direct suit involving a principal demand against a non-resident corporation that does no business in this state and, therefore, a personal judgment cannot be obtained herein.

In our opinion appellants’ demand is merely one in reconvention, just as it is termed in their pleadings, filed under the authority of Code of Practice, Article 377, reading:

“In all cases of reconvention, the defendant may plead it either as an exception ’in his answer to the principal demand, or institute a distinct and separate demand before the court in which the main action is pending; and the original plaintiff shall be bound to answer without pleading to the jurisdiction of the court, even if he has his domicil elsewhere, provided the court be competent.”

As before shown appellants, after non-suiting their initial reconventional demand (as was permissible) and while appellee’s main action was pending, sought to file this distinct and separate demand in open court and in the main action.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 2d 528, 219 La. 1006, 1951 La. LEXIS 942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-w-greeson-co-v-harnischfeger-corp-la-1951.