City of New Orleans v. New Orleans Jockey Club

55 So. 711, 129 La. 64, 1904 La. LEXIS 720
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 5, 1904
DocketNo. 15,432
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 55 So. 711 (City of New Orleans v. New Orleans Jockey Club) 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
City of New Orleans v. New Orleans Jockey Club, 55 So. 711, 129 La. 64, 1904 La. LEXIS 720 (La. 1904).

Opinion

On Motion to Dismiss.

BREAUX, C. J.

[1] The grounds pleaded by appellee to dismiss the appeal are that the motion for appeal was made at chambers, out of term time, and that the appeal was not prosecuted, as it should have been, by petition and service on the appellee. '

The city of New Orleans in July, 1904, brought suit for the expropriation of lands for a public purpose adjacent to one of its parks and owned by defendant.

On intervention of Geo. W. Friedrichs to become a party, his petition was granted, and he was made a party. He joined in the defense.

An injunction was issued at plaintiff’s instance restraining and preventing defendant from cutting down trees and shrubs on the property. The injunction was bonded, except as to the ornamental trees upon the property, which the court excepted in the order permitting the defendant to bond the injunction. A suspensive appeal from this order permitting the defendant to bond was refused.

On the day set for trial of the cause, the jurors were present, and all were ready for trial. An exception of no cause of action was taken up, and, after hearing of parties, [67]*67it was sustained. Plaintiff’s action was dismissed and the injunction bond canceled.

It is from the judgment of dismissal rendered on the 6th and signed on the 19th day of September, 1904, plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff presented a written notice for an appeal in open court held in vacation to try special cases.

We will say preliminarily, as relates to an important fact bearing upon the issues, that plaintiff’s and appellant’s statement that the exception of no cause of action was tried with the consent of the parties in interest meets with a similar statement on the part of defendant as relates to consent, as will be seen by the following extract from defendant’s brief:

_ “The consent trial of this cause on the exception of no cause of action,” etc.
“The trial was had during the vacation of the civil district court, and was tried at that time in that court by consent.”

It remains that appellee insists that appellant could only prosecute plaintiff’s appeal by petition end citation, and not by motion as in session of court at a regular term. The proceedings were had in vacation, it is true, but every one concerned consented.

Unquestionably, if the judge had authority under the statute to hear and decide the exception of no cause of action, interposed by defendant to plaintiff’s action, he had authority to grant an order of appeal on plaintiff’s and appellant’s motion, on the day the decision was rendered. The law creates a special term, a day in court, for the trial of the cause and for rendering a judgment thereon, which may thereafter be appealed from on motion made during the session.

We find some support for our decision in different legislative acts upon the subject.

[2] In reading the different statutes, we find that statute No. 16 of 1869 is very similar to statute No. 4 of 1896. Under the former, courts were at the origin opened from the first Monday of November to the fourth of July for granting interlocutory orders, and for granting writs of arrest, habeas corpus, injunctions, sequestrations, attachments, mandamus and provisional seizure, and to try motions to quash.

The Act 16 of 1869 was repealed by subsequent laws, but it was re-enacted by Act 4 of 1898.

In 1890, by Act 132, while Act 16 of 1S69 was in force, the Legislature made provision to have court session held in vacation for the trial of the expropriations of lands for public purposes. It added to the authority delegated by Act 16 of 1869. In our opinion this law has never been repealed.

Act No. 4 of 1898 was passed to regulate the terms of the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, and repeal Act No. Ill of 1892, naming this last act, and making special provision for the trial of certain designated issues — provisions similar — which were in the Act of 1869, No. 16.

There is no conflict between Act 132 of 1890, providing for the trial of expropriation suits in vacation, and Act 4 of 1896, any more than there was conflict between the former act and the Act 16 of 1869. Both stood and were in force for years; i. e., Act 16 of 1869 and Act 132 of 1890 were enforced for many years together, without the least suggestion of conflict between them.

[4, 5, 6] In a recent case, cited with confidence by appellee, in which the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company, a corporation created under the laws of Kentucky, and located in this state, was plaintiff, this qourt said, in substance, that Act 124 of 1880 amends and re-enacts section 696, Rev. St., so as to enable foreign corporations specially referred to by name to institute expropriation proceedings for public purpose, and to that extent placing them on the same footing as domestic corporations.

Nothing was included in this act with the [69]*69view of permitting a trial of these expropriation claims in vacation; i. e., claims of foreign corporations for expropriation.

We here quote from the opinion:

In neither of these “laws is there any provision for the hearing of expropriation eases during the vacation of the district courts in the parish of Orleans, or throughout the state, and, it may be remarked, the vacation of the civil courts in the parish of Orleans extended at that time from July 4th to the first Monday in November. In 1890 the General Assembly passed an act No. 132, entitled ‘An act to give district courts throughout the state, authority and power to try cases for expropriation of lands for public purposes during vacation,’ which provides, ‘That whenever any proceeding is instituted in the. district courts throughout the state, under sections 1479, 1480 and 1481 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, for the expropriation of land for public purposes, the suit may be tried during vacation, if the court before which the proceeding is instituted is not in session.’ ”

Continuing on the same subject in the paragraph succeeding, the court held that Act 124 of 1880 applies in term to proceedings instituted under sections 1479, 1480, and 1481 of the Revised Statutes, “whilst the only authority by which a telephone company, or by which any corporation created under the law of another state, could bring such a suit, is that conferred by section 696 as amended and re-enacted by Act 124 of 1880.”

Act 132 of 1890 deals exclusively with home corporations, and does not, in any way, refer to foreign corporations.

The authority of foreign corporations to sue in expropriation proceedings is derived exclusively from Act 124 of 1880. They can bring no suit for expropriation, save under that act, whilst Aet 132 of 1890 relates exclusively to proceedings instituted under sections 1479, 1480, and 1481 of-the Revised Statutes of 1870. 'Foreign corporations have no authority under that act. They cannot sue under it, as it does not relate to them. It is evident that they are not included in the terms which authorize home corporations to bring such an action in vacation. Their authority to sue — i. e., authority of foreign corporations to sue — is limited to the act of 1880.

The court said in regard to this act in the decision, from which we quote:

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Bluebook (online)
55 So. 711, 129 La. 64, 1904 La. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-orleans-v-new-orleans-jockey-club-la-1904.