Cassard v. Tracy

52 La. Ann. 835
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,240
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 52 La. Ann. 835 (Cassard v. Tracy) 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
Cassard v. Tracy, 52 La. Ann. 835 (La. 1900).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by Monroe, J.

On rehearing- by Blanchard, J.

Statement op the Case.

Monroe, J.

It appears from the record that E. A. Cassard brought suits against relators, upon paving contracts, for sums exceeding $100, but not exceeding, in the aggregate, $500; that the suits were consolidated, by consent, and tried together in Division “D,” of the Civil District Court, before the adoption of the present Constitution, and that there was judgment against Tracey for $56, and against Zacharie for $155. Under the Constitution then in force the cases were ap-pealable upon questions of law alone, which were required to be taken up by means of bills of exception, or assignments of error, accompanied by statements of fact, agreed on, or prepared by the trial judge. The defendants, however (relators here), reserved no bills of exception; nor did they agree upon, or obtain from the trial judge, any statements of fact. When the judgment was rendered against them, they moved for a new trial, but alleged no other grounds than that the judgment was contrary to law and the evidence and that they were aggrieved thereby; and the new trial was refused. A suspensive appeal was then taken, and after lodging the record in the appellate court, an assignment of error was filed, setting forth that the judge a quo had given judgment on quantum meruit, when, as appellants alleged, he ought either to have given judgment on the contracts sued on, or else have rejected plaintiff’s demands. The cases were fixed for trial May 30th, 1898, eighteen days after the new Constitution went into effect; and, upon that day, appellants filed a motion to remand them to the trial court, for reasons, the substance of which will appear from the following excerpts from the opinion of the Court of Appeal, to-wit:

“A motion to remand is made on two grounds:

“1st. — That there is no evidence in the record, the testimony in the “lower court not having been taken down in writing; and that there “ is no statement of facts in the record, for the reason that opposing counsel could not agree upon the same, and the trial judge declined [837]*837“to make "the same, although applied to therefor, for the reason, “ assigned by his Honor, that he could not recall to memory the facts “ testified to.

“It is sufficient answer to this to say that the record does not dis- “ close that any application was ever made, to court or counsel, for a “ statement of facts, and that we may not, properly, look beyond the “record. We may add, however, that the proper course would have “ been to invoke, at the time, supervision of the action of the distriot “ judge, by writs in aid of our appellate jurisdiction.

“2nd. — That, under the new Constitution, the right is vested in “ defendants and appellants to have a trial, hearing and judgment on “ this appeal, and in this cause, both on the merits of the law and the “ facts.

“We have repeatedly ruled adversely to that contention, and our “ ruling has been sustained by the Supreme Court on a writ of review “ in the case of Rosetta Gravel, Paving and Improvement Co. vs. “ Mary-Louise Kennedy, recently decided. * * * Motion denied.”

The court then proceeded to decide the cases upon their merits, and affirmed the judgment appealed from. An application for rehearing was made and refused, and the appellants then made, to this court, the application, which we are now considering, for the review of the judgment of the Court of Appeal upon the motion to remand; and, in support of said application, they urge that the provisions of the present Constitution, conferring jurisdiction on said court, apply to their, cases and entitle them to a hearing, etc., on the facts, and that, in order to obtain the same, it is necessary that said cases be remanded to, and retried in, the lower court.

OPINION.

The relators proposition is, in effect, that the provisions of the present Constitution, which became operative May 12th, 1898, shall be so construed as to deprive Cassard, and relieve them, of the judgment which had been rendered by the District Court against them on March 22nd, 1898.

The question which first suggests itself is; whether the constitutional provisions invoked by relators are properly susceptible of the construction suggested? It is plain that the effect of this construction will be to give to those provisions a retroactive operation, and to [838]*838■undo something which had been, lawfully, done before^ they were brought into existence. The judgment obtained by Cassard, in the District Court, had been so obtained agreeably to the then existing law, constitutional and statutory. At that time, and under that law, he might have been deprived of it, by the action of the appellate court exercising the legal discretion vested in it; by an adverse judgment in an action to annul, founded upon pre-existing causes, specified by law, or by allowing said judgment to become prescribed. These conditions were as though written into the title by which he acquired, but they were the only conditions by which it was affected. Otherwise, and by the textual provisions of our law, the judgment was his property by an indefeasible title. Our Code of Practice, Article 548, reads: “A judgment, when once rendered, becomes the property of “ him in whose favor it has been given, and the judge can not alter the “ same except in the mode provided by law.”

After the judgment was signed, the judge, by whom it was rendered, was powerless to alter it, save through an action of nullity and for preexisting, specified, causes. When the appeal was perfected, he was ousted of jurisdiction except for certain limited purposes: and jurisdiction of the case was vested in the appellate court. Tn the exercise of that jurisdiction it was competent for the appellate court to have amended or reversed it, or if, in the exercise of a sound legal discretion, that court had reached the conclusion that the interests of justice would be best subserved thereby, it might have set the'judgment aside and have remanded the case to be tried de novo. But no authority was vested in any other department of the government either to set the judgment aside or to control the discretion vested in the appellate court in the premises, or in any manner, without due process of law, to deprive Cassard of his property.

If the convention which, after his acquisition of said judgment, adopted, the present Constitution, could, by conferring jurisdiction upon a court created by it, impose upon such court the obligation to annul or destroy said judgment, it would seem to follow that it' might have annulled or destroyed it by direct action, or by a general provision couched in some such language as the following, to-wit; “All judgments heretofore rendered by any of the courts of this State, and which are pending on, or subject to, appeal are hereby annulled and set aside and the causes in which they were rendered shall be tried de novo: And, if it was competent to have annulled such judgments [839]*839in. order that tire causes should be tried again in another way, it is difficult to perceive why, as a question of principle, they might not have been thus annulled for any other reason, or for no reason at all; the answer to all objections being that such action would merely affect the remedy.

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Bluebook (online)
52 La. Ann. 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassard-v-tracy-la-1900.