Clement v. Gulf Refining Co.

136 So. 581, 173 La. 249, 1931 La. LEXIS 1857
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 17, 1931
DocketNo. 30873.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 So. 581 (Clement v. Gulf Refining Co.) 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
Clement v. Gulf Refining Co., 136 So. 581, 173 La. 249, 1931 La. LEXIS 1857 (La. 1931).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Jules Clement, Sr., and his wife, Marie Doueet Clement, and Lindsey H. Dunn instituted a suit to cancel a mineral lease granted by Jules Clement, Sr., to S. A. Spencer & Co., the authors in title of the Gulf Refining Company, and others, defendants in this suit; said suit having been filed on October 3, 1928.

On October 17th following, before any of the defendants made appearance,-said Clement and his wife filed a motion to withdraw from the suit as plaintiffs, and asked that the suit be dismissed as to them on the ground that it was not well founded in law and in fact. Their coplaintiff, Lindsey H. Dunn, opposed the motion and asked that it be denied and stricken from the record. Dunn’s opposition to the motion was overruled by the trial court and the suit as to Mr. and Mrs. Clement was dismissed., Dunn appealed to this court and the judgment was affirmed. Clement et ¿1. v. Gulf Refining Co. of Louisiana, 169 La. 268,125 So. 73.

*251 After the judgment of this court became final, Lindsey H. Dunn, coplaintift' with the Clements in the original suit to cancel, presented an application to the court setting out that his coplaintiffs had withdrawn from the suit, and alleged that inasmuch as they owned an undivided three-fourths interest in the land on which the lease operated, they “are necessary parties before this court in this action seeking the cancellation of .said oil, gas and mineral lease,” and prayed that they “be served as parties defendant herein with this petition and with a certified copy of the original petition herein and cited to answer herein according to law.” He further prayed that all the original defendants be served with a copy of this application. The court ordered that the petition be allowed, filed, and served as prayed for. This order was granted on December 14, 1929.

Whether the Clements were cited and served, and, if so, whether they made answer, is not disclosed by the record. But on January 5, 1930, they came into court by rule or motion setting out that they had withdrawn as parties plaintiffs from the original suit to cancel, but “that your movers desire to waive the results and benefits, if any, of the judgment allowing them to withdraw from this suit, and desire to be recognized as parties plaintiff herein,” and prayed that said Lindsey H. Dunn and all the original defendants show cause “why movers herein should not be recognized as parties plaintiff in this cause.” The court issued the rule ás prayed for. All the defendants in the suit to cancel excepted to the rule on various grounds, one of which is as follows:

“That the attempt so to proceed by rule is unauthorized and illegal; that the issues tendered in said rule can not be prosecuted by the summary proceeding, and that the said rule should be dismissed at the cost of the movers.”

There was judgment in the lower court in favor of defendants, and plaintiffs in rule appealed.

The question which we are called upon to decide is whether these plaintiffs can, by rule, have themselves reinstated or “recognized” as plaintiffs in the original suit to cancel the lease. Their counsel, ip brief, say that it has been repeatedly held by this court “that the right to proceed by rule or motion implies the pendency of a suit in court and is confined to incidental matters arising in the progress of contestation, except where summary proceeding is expressly allowed by law.” They proceed to argue that a case like this one is an exception to the general rule “that such proceeding is unauthorized and in this matter is authorized under article 755 of the Code of Practice, because it is an incidental proceeding arising in the course of a civil proceeding. The original suit between the same parties has always been pending in court and the question of the withdrawal of Clement and his wife was an incidental matter; so likewise was their motion to be reinstated as co-plaintiffs with Dunn, is an incidental matter arising in the progress of the'same contestation and is not the institution of an original proceeding.”

The error into which counsel have fallen is their failure to recognize the fact that when the Clements, plaintiffs in the present proceeding, withdrew from the original suit and when it was “dismissed” as to them, they were out of court; thereafter there was no suit, no issue pending in'court as between them and the defendants. Their suit was dismissed without reserve at their request and on their own motion. They abandoned their demands against the defendants, and thereafter they. *253 were in the same situation as though the suit had never been brought. The suit, as to them, had ceased to exist.

It is true that their coplaintiff, Dunn, was still in court, and as between him and the defendants there was still a cause pending. But as to these plaintiffs, the Clements, their suit was dead, and they were out of court.

They had no more connection with the suit pending between Dunn and the defendants than if they had never joined therein as parties plaintiff.

In the case of' Gilbert et al. v. Nephler & Boyle, 15 La. 59, it was stated by the organ of the court, “when a suit is discontinued, there is nothing before the court.”

Article 491 of the Code of Practice provides that:

“The plaintiff may, in every stage of the suit previous to judgment being rendered, discontinue the suit on paying the costs.”

And article 492 provides that: ,

“After discontinuing the suit, the plaintiff may bring the action anew.”

This latter article of the Code prescribes the only method by which a plaintiff may revive his cause of action once he has abandoned or discontinued it. He must “bring the action anew”; that is, he must bring a new suit. He must proceed precisely as though he had not been in court before. When he voluntarily discontinues or dismisses his suit, his cause of action may survive, but his suit dies and there can be no resurrection of dead lawsuits under our system. These plaintiffs, in proceeding by rule to have themselves “recognized” as parties plaintiff in their original suit, are attempting to engraft a live issue into a dead suit. Their efforts to do so are as futile as would be an attempt to engraft a live twig onto a dead bough.

The identical question here presented was before the court in the case of Gilbert et al. v. Nephler & Boyle, 15 La. 59, cited supra. In that case, the plaintiffs “obtained leave to discontinue their suit.” .Two and a half years later, they reappeared and took a rule upon the curatrix of the estate “to show cause why the suit should not be reinstated.”

The court said:

“We know of no law sanctioning such a course of proceeding. When a suit is discontinued, there is nothing before the court; but the party discontinuing is at liberty to bring a new action after paying the costs of the first suit. Code of Practice, article 492.”

The holding in this case was approved in the case of Gilbert et al. v. Meriam, 2 La. Ann. 160. The second paragraph of the syllabus of the latter case reads as follows:

“Where an action has been discontinued, it cannot be revived by a rule to show cause, and, if such revival be allowed, any judgment subsequently rendered, will be null.”

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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 581, 173 La. 249, 1931 La. LEXIS 1857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-gulf-refining-co-la-1931.