Cassiere v. Cuban Coffee Mills, Inc.

74 So. 2d 193, 225 La. 1003, 1954 La. LEXIS 1283
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 31, 1954
Docket41212
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 74 So. 2d 193 (Cassiere v. Cuban Coffee Mills, Inc.) 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
Cassiere v. Cuban Coffee Mills, Inc., 74 So. 2d 193, 225 La. 1003, 1954 La. LEXIS 1283 (La. 1954).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

The widow and son of Germain Cassiere are appealing from the dismissal,-on exceptions of no cause of action and prescription, of their petition to revive the judgment rendered in this suit on March 23, 1932, in favor of Cassiere (who died on August 24, 1950) and against J. M. Robinson, the Estate of H. C. Robinson, E. A. Shaw and R. T. Lawhon, as receiver of Cuban Coffee Mills, Inc., in solido, for the sum of $6,750 wit'h'!8% per 'annum interest from September 25, -1931, until paid and 10% attorney’s fees on the principal and interest.

The petition to revive was filed on March 24, 1952, twenty years after the sighing of the judgment, and the widow and heirs of James M. Robinson' and E. A. Shaw were cited as parties defendant. They appeared and interposed the exceptions which were sustained below. In order to take the original judgment out of the applicable prescription of ten years, which appears to have accrued on the face of the petition, plaintiffs alleged that its current had been interrupted by a series of judicial acknowledgments, which had been made by one or more of the original solidary judgment debtors in a number of proceedings taken by Cassiere in his efforts to collect the judgment following its rendition and also by Cassiere’s subsequent interdiction in 1941 for insanity. 1 In addition, it was averred that certain legal proceedings, taken on behalf of Cassiere for recognition of the judgment as offsetting another judgment obtained against him by J. M. Robinson, one of the judgment debtors, culminating in a decree in his favor in 1942, effected a revival'of the 1932 judgment and, as a final alternative, it was pleaded that, should all of these circumstances be held not to save' the original judgment from prescription,'plaintiffs nevertheless are entitled to have, judgment against the defendants on the original debt by reason of the judicial acknowledgments of that debt following rendition of the 1932 judgment.

*1007 The trial judge found that the allegations made by plaintiffs were not competent to toll prescription, being of the opinion that the method provided for by Article 3547 of the LSA-Civil Code for revival of a judgment was exclusive and that the other provisions of the Code, relative to interruption of the liberative prescription, were inapplicable to the prescription of monied judgments. The judge based his ruling on the decisions in Bailey v. Louisiana & N. W. R. Co., 159 La. 576, 105 So. 626; Fritz Jahncke, Inc., v. Fidelity Deposit Co. of Maryland, 172 La. 704, 135 So. 32; White v. Davis, 174 La. 390, 141 So. 6; Park v. Markley, La.App., 17 So.2d 459; Blanchard v. Smith, La.App., 45 So.2d 527 and Evans v. Hamner, 209 La. 442, 24 So.2d 814.

On this appeal, counsel for plaintiff concede that the holding of the trial judge is sustained by the decisions in Bailey v. Louisiana & N. W. R. Co., White v. Davis and Fritz Jahncke v. Fidelity Deposit Co., supra, and also by dictum in certain other cases, including Converse v. Victor & Prevost, 208 La. 47, 22 So.2d 737, 160 A.L.R. 674. But they assert that this jurisprudence is founded upon an erroneous conception of the law announced in 1925 in the Bailey case which, in effect, overruled prior decisions to the contrary and that the doctrine of the Bailey case should be rejected and the former jurisprudence, which counsel say endured for 47 years, reinstated.

The pertinent part of Article 3547 of the LSA-Civil Code declares:

“All judgments for money, * * shall be prescribed by the lapse of ten years from the rendition of such judgments, * * *. Provided, however, that any party interested in any judgment may have the same revived at any time before it is prescribed, by having a citation issued according to law, to the defendant or his representative, from the court which rendered the judgment, unless defendant or his representative show good cause why the judgment should not be revived, * *.
“Any judgment revived, as above provided, shall continue in full force for ten years from the date of the order of court reviving the same, and any judgment may be revived as often as the party or parties interested may desire.”

The foregoing article was originally enacted as Act 274 of 1853. Prior thereto, debts that were reduced to judgment were not subject to the laws of prescription. Under the first decisions, in which the court was called upon to interpret Article 3547, it was held that an action to revive the judgment was the only way by which the accrual of prescription could be prevented. See Bartley, Johnson & Co. v. Succession of Bosworth, 21 La.Ann. 126; Wade v. Caspari, 24 La.Ann. 211; Succession of Hardy, 25 La.Ann. 489; Samory v. Montgomery, 27 La.Ann. 50 and Smith v. Palfrey, 28 La. Ann. 615.

*1009 This jurisprudence remained constant from 1869 until the decision in 1878 in Succession of Patrick, 30 La.Ann. 1071, where, ■after considering Article 3547 in connection with Article 2278 of the LSA-Civil Code, it was resolved that prescription on judgment debts was subject to the same rules respecting the interruption of the current of prescription that were applicable to other debts not reduced to judgment. The decision in Succession of Patrick, for all practical purposes, effected a renunciation of the prior pronouncements and the rationale ■of that case was either applied or cited with approval in Calhoun v. Levy, 33 La.Ann. 1296; Levy v. Calhoun, 34 La.Ann. 413; Succession of Saunders, 37 La.Ann. 769; Lalane v. Payne, 42 La.Ann. 152, 7 So. 481 and Norres v. Hayes, 42 La.Ann. 857, 8 So. 606.

Thus, it is seen that this change in the jurisprudence lasted until 1925 when, in Bailey v. Louisiana & N. W. R. Co., the ■court again reversed its position and reinstated the construction given to Article 3547 of the Code by the earlier cases. In reaching this decision, the court reasoned that since a judgment for money does not •create a debt but only recognizes the obligation and makes it executory, there was no basis for believing that the drafters of the Code intended that the rules, relative to the interruption or suspension of the liberative prescription from debt, were to be applied to the prescription of such judgments.

As we have stated, industrious counsel for plaintiffs attack the decision in the Bailey case, charging that it cannot withstand assidious scrutiny in view of Article 2278 of the Civil Code. That Article is found under Chapter 6 of Title IV of the Code, dealing with conventional obligations. Chapter 6 bears the heading “Of the Proof of Obligations and of that of Payment”. The pertinent part of Article 2278 provides as follows:

“Parol evidence shall not be received :
“1. To prove any acknowledgment or promise to pay any judgment, sentence or decree of any court of competent jurisdiction, * * * for the
purpose or in order to take such judgment, sentence or decree out of prescription, or to revive the same, after prescription has run or been completed.
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Bluebook (online)
74 So. 2d 193, 225 La. 1003, 1954 La. LEXIS 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassiere-v-cuban-coffee-mills-inc-la-1954.