Cook & Laurie Contracting Co. v. Denis

52 So. 560, 126 La. 413, 1910 La. LEXIS 667
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 9, 1910
DocketNo. 18,005
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 So. 560 (Cook & Laurie Contracting Co. v. Denis) 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
Cook & Laurie Contracting Co. v. Denis, 52 So. 560, 126 La. 413, 1910 La. LEXIS 667 (La. 1910).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Defendant is appellant from a judgment condemning him to pay certain costs.

Plaintiff claimed costs of suit which accrued in a decided case between it and the defendant.

Plaintiff sued the defendant on a building contract for $2,062.37 commission. It made allegations setting up its claim, and further alleged that under article 7 of the contract in question it was only liable in damages to defendant for delays due to causes within its control, and not for those not within its control, and that the causes of delay were not within its control.

The defendant denied all of plaintiff’s allegations. Further, he assumed the character of plaintiff in reconvention, and alleged that he was induced by plaintiff to enter into the contract upon plaintiff’s representations.

The case, referred to above, was decided in the district court. '

On appeal to this court, this court amended the judgment appealed from by reducing the amount of the judgment, rendered in the district court, in favor of the defendant, from $1,700 to $1,600, and condemned the defendant to pay the costs of the main demand, and the plaintiff to pay the costs of the reconventional demand. With this amendment, the court affirmed the judgment of the district court.

As relates to costs: July 2, 1909, counsel for plaintiff wrote to defendant’s counsel a letter stating that the balance due .by defendant to plaintiff was $687.30, and inviting attention to the judgment of this court condemning the parties to the suit to pay costs as before stated; also containing the statement:

“As no separation was made in the testimony or in the evidence offered, I have disallowed these costs in toto, as it is impossible to separate the costs of your defense and the costs of your reconventional demand.”

Counsel for defendant in reply said that the costs of the main demand consisted only of the initial costs expended in filing the suit; that there were no costs incurred and no evidence taken on the trial of the main demand, which was for $2,962.32.

On the 7th day of July, 1909, plaintiff filed an ex parte motion, and costs were taxed by the court at $151.81.

On that day the court issued a writ of fieri facias against the defendant, Mr. Denis, for the amount taxed.

The day following the defendant filed a pe[415]*415tition and obtained an injunction; stated and averred that tbe contracting company, instead of endeavoring to adjust amicably tbe question of tbe disputed cost's, maliciously and without right obtained a writ of fieri facias, not as originally claimed for $087.30, but for $078.71, with instructions to deduct from that amount petitioner’s stenographic fees of $17.- • 15, leaving an alleged balance of $661.56.

Tbe plaintiff abandoned its ex parte motion to tax costs, tbe motion just above referred to.

Subsequently plaintiff filed another rule to tax costs to which we will refer later.

The amount should 'be as follows, is petitioner’s contention:

Plaintiff’s claim. $2,062 37
5% from December 6, 1906, to July 7, 1909. 267 35
Clerk’s costs, civil district court. S 35
Clerk’s costs of appeal. 51 65
Sheriff . 4 00
Crier. 1 00
Supreme Court deposit. 25 00
Total. $2,419 61
Prom which should be deducted:
Judgment on reeonventional demand $1,600 00 5% from February 6, 1907, to July 7, 1909. 193 15
Clerk’s costs. 8 80
Sheriff . 2 00
Stenographer’s costs. 17 15
$1,821 50
Balance due plaintiff. $59S 11

Defendant in the original suit, plaintiff in injunction, alleged that he had tendered the amount which plaintiff declined to receive ; that the costs had not been fixed by a legal judgment as they were fixed ex parte; that the fixing is null and void.

I-Ie claims $500 damages, and asks that the injunction be made perpetual.

The injunction accordingly issued.

Subsequently an amended petition was filed by plaintiff in injunction, averring that the tender of $600, alleged to have been made, which averment was made in error, that no tender was made owing to failure to locate counsel for defendant in injunction proceedings.

On July 15, 1909, plaintiff filed a rule which was duly served on defendant on the 20th day of July, 1909, in which he prayed that costs be taxed in accordance with the judgment of this court.

Defendant in injunction filed a rule to dissolve the injunction on the ground of untruthfulness and the asserted illegality of the affidavit.

This rule was referred to the merits to be tried with the injunction.

This was on October 26, 1909.

On the 29th following of that month, plaintiff in injunction filed an exception to the rule on the ground that the rule tendered an issue alleged in the injunction suit, in which plaintiff has asked for the dissolution of the injunction, “an issue which had already been determined adversely to it in this cause; that these issues cannot be raised by rule, but can only be raised and determined upon a trial upon its merits of said injunction suit.”

The contention of plaintiff in injunction was that by deciding the issues presented by rule the district court anticipated the issues in the injunction proceedings.

We will state, in answer to plaintiff’s contention just above stated, that the injunction suit, enjoining execution of the judgment, did not have the effect of preventing plaintiff in the original suit from filing a rule to tax costs. There was no pending suit to prevent plaintiff from proceeding by rule to collect costs due by defendant.

The injunction is not before us. Whatever issues it presents, if any, are not to be considered on this appeal.

The defendant alleged that there was lis pendens between the demand to the injunction and that on the rule.

The question has recently been decided in Saint v. Martel (17,981) 52 South. 474,1 in [417]*417which this court held that the plea of lis pendens does not lie when the suits are pending before the same court. It is only when the suit pleaded as lis pendens lies in another court.

The purpose of the law evidently is to prevent one from suing in two courts, and thus vex the one sued, by separate demands in different courts, and by seeking to obtain separate judgments in two different courts.

This is not the case here. The proceedings are all before the same court and do not come within the article of Code Prae. art. 335, prohibiting suits from being brought “in different courts of competent jurisdiction.”

It does seem very clear that, this court having condemned the defendant to pay the costs of the main demand, the plaintiff has a right to whatever costs may be due, and, when a rule is subsequently filed asking that costs be taxed, they ought to be taxed.

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Related

Weems v. Moise
3 La. App. 224 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1925)
In re Land Development Co. of Louisiana
4 Pelt. 336 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1921)
Doullut v. Rush
77 So. 110 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 So. 560, 126 La. 413, 1910 La. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-laurie-contracting-co-v-denis-la-1910.