Central Lumber Co. v. Jones

175 So. 849, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 314
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1937
DocketNo. 5498.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 175 So. 849 (Central Lumber Co. v. Jones) 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
Central Lumber Co. v. Jones, 175 So. 849, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 314 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

This is a suit on an open account for the balance due for lumber alleged to have been purchased by defendant.

The district judge of the Tenth judicial district of Louisiana being defendant in the case, he was requested by motion of plaintiff's counsel to recuse himself and to appoint a lawyer of the .district, with the qualifications required by law for a district judge, to try the case. The defendant, who is the district judge, refused to appoint a lawyer of the district, but did appoint a judge of an adjoining district. Plaintiff applied to the Supreme Court (182 La. 1, 161 So. 1) of this state for writs, which were granted; and on trial of said writs that court ordered the district judge to recall the order appointing a judge of an adjoining district and to appoint an attorney of the Tenth district, with the qualifications of a district judge, to try the case. Act 109 of 1932; Act 185 of 1898; Wells v. Blackman, 118 La. 287, 42 So. 939.

Under this judgment on the writ, the defendant and district judge appointed an attorney, John G. Gibbs, as judge ad hoc to try the case.

The original petition in this suit was filed December 26, 1934. The decision on the writ by the Supreme • Court was rendered April 1, 1935, and rehearing refused on April 29, 1935. The appointment of the judge ad hoc was made on May 6, 1935. On May 15, following, plaintiff filed a motion to recuse the judge ad hoc for the reason that he had, prior to his appointment, consulted with the defendant with reference to the issues involved in this cause with a view of being employed as counsel to help him; that the special judge prior to his appointment had stated to counsel for plaintiff that he c-ould not be appointed for the reason he was representing the defendant as attorney. Plaintiff further alleged the special judge or judge ad hoc was disqualified from passing on the motion to recuse him and should appoint an attorney of the district with the necessary qualifications to pass upon the motion. Defendant excepted to the motion for the' reason that plaintiff had no cause or right of action under the law to require the special judge to re-cuse himself. The motion to recuse was tried by the special judge and denied. Defendant then filed a plea of vagueness and prayed for an itemized account which, under order of court, was furnished and filed. Defendant then, on April 17, 1937, filed an exception of no cause and no right of- action for the reasons:

“(a) that plaintiffs having averred that they were a domestic corporation, fail to allege and show that they have authority to do business in the State of Louisiana, a requisite to having authority to stand in judgment in this cause.
“(b) that plaintiffs having based their action herein on an open account, their petition fails to allege that the account sued on is due and unpaid.”

*850 This exception was tried and sustained by the special judge or judge ad hoc in the following written opinion:

“In the preamble of the plaintiff’s petition it is set forth that the plaintiff is a corporation domiciled in the city of Nat-chitoches doing business under the laws of the state of Louisiana.
“This preamble may or may not be a part of the body of the petition.
“One of the questions raised by the exception is that the plaintiff did not allege that they had the right or authority from the state of Louisiana to stand in judgment in this case.
“The exceptions filed is of no cause and no right of action.
“Thereafter the position taken bjr the defendant that the petition does not show that the account is due and unpaid. The plaintiff may have a right of action and may have a cause of action, but in the absence of the allegation in the petition of authority from the state of Louisiana to transact business for which the corporation was organized, whether it is a foreign corporation or a corporation under the laws of this state. It seems that that would be a necessary allegation.
“The exception of no cause of action is sustained, as to the exception no right of action I do not find that there is any necessity of passing on same.”

This judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit was signed on March 17, 1937; the suit was filed December 26, 1934. The minutes of the court disclose that counsel for plaintiff had used every effort to have this cause put at issue and tried before a fair and impartial judge. The result "of his efforts is that after two years, two months, and twenty-two days, his cause of action on an open account was dismissed on an exception of no cause of action, and other preliminary exceptions are still held in abeyance to be yet passed upon when we have reversed the case on the exception of no cause of action and remanded it to the lower court. The record clearly discloses a concerted effort on the part of defendant to prevent this cause from coming to trial on its merits. His efforts have met with much favor. Courts of law are for the' purpose of expediting justice and should never be a party to delaying justice. The merits of the case may be entirely with the defendant, but, whether with him or against him, the trial of the case should be expedited.

The testimony adduced on the re-cusation of the judge ad hoc is strong, and, when coupled with the manner in which the case has been handled, is stronger. However, we are without jurisdiction of the question of the recusation of the special judge, the Supreme Court having exclusive supervisory jurisdiction in that case. We will, therefore, refrain from commenting on the question. The only question we have jurisdiction over is the exception of no cause of action passed on by the special judge below.

In another case from the same court, in which the defendant herein was the judge and the special judge herein was counsel for the defendant, the same identical exception was raised and we have this day handed down an opinion in that case, entitled Natchitoches Finance Co. v. Ben Smith et al., 175 So. 915, No. 5506 on the docket of this court. In that case we said:

“Act 10 of 1935 levies a franchise tax of $2.00 for each one thousand dollars of the amount of the capital stock, surplus and undivided profits, determined as pro-' vided therein, of each domestic corporation and of all foreign corporations, comprehended within its provisions, with named exceptions. It prescribes the political machinery for the collection of the tax and definitely lays down requirements to be met by the corporations thereby affected. Enforcement of payment of the amount due by any corporation by seizure and sale of its property is authorized, and the steps antecedent to such action are set out. But we find nothing in the act that even intimates that failure to timely pay said tax in whole or part inhibits the defaulting corporation from suing in the courts of the state. If the Legislature had intended such drastic punishment for an offending tax debtor, most certainly such intent would have been incorporated in the act in no uncertain terms; and, of course, if the right to sue is unaffected by arrearage in taxes, surely it is unnecessary to the disclosure of a cause or right of action in a suit to affirmatively aver that the petitioner has paid franchise taxes due by it.

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 849, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-lumber-co-v-jones-lactapp-1937.