Dougart v. Desangle

10 Rob. 430
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Rob. 430 (Dougart v. Desangle) 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
Dougart v. Desangle, 10 Rob. 430 (La. 1845).

Opinion

Simon, J.

The defendant is appellant from a judgment which condemns him to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $524, which is the balance due for the rent of a house for two years, at the rate of $25 per month, credit being given in the plaintiff’s petition and affidavit, for three months’ rent, paid previously to the institutioif'of the 'suit.

The present action was instituted on the 22d of January, 1844, under the allegations of the petition, that Louis df Co. are justly indebted to the petitioner in the sum of $524, as specified and set forth in the affidavit annexed; and it is stated in the said affidavit, that “ Loison <§• Co. rented from him, the plaintiff, a house for two years, commencing on the 1st day of November, [431]*4311843, and to run for two years, at twenty-five dollars per month ; that three months’ rent have been paid,, and the balance of the sum for said lease will be and is five hundred and twenty-four dollars, said rent payable monthly; your affiant has good reasons to believe, and does believe that the furniture and property on which he has a lien and privilege, will be removed out of the premises, and that he will and may be thereby deprived of his lien.” He prays that they may be condemned to pay, &c.

A provisional seizure had been previously issued on the 20th of January as against Loison Co., by virtue of which the city marshal had, on the same day, seized various articles of furniture and other things; and, on the 4th of March ensuing, the defendant fifed his answer,- in which he sets up, that “ he never has been a member of any hind of copartnership of Loison <§• Co., if any such partnership ever existed; and he further says, that he is not indebted in any way or manner to said plaintiff; that no contract of lease of any hind has ever been entered into between him and the plaintiff.” On the reading of this answer, the plaintiff’s counsel moved to have leave to amend his petition, by inserting the name of Louis Desangle in place of Loison & Co., on the ground that said Desangle had come into court and filed his answer to the citation. This was objected-to by Desangle’s counsel, on the ground that no suit had been legally instituted against his client; but the lower judge, having sustained the plaintiff’s motion, and ordered the parties to proceed to trial immediately, the defendant’s counsel took a bill of exceptions.

We think, notwithstanding the appellant’s answer, which is virtually nothing more than a plea that the defendant, upon whom a citation had been served, was not, and could not be considered as the proper party to the suit, that the present action, instituted against Loison Co., could not be maintained below against Louis Desangle alone, and that the judge a quo should have dismissed it. If the plea had been that of a mere misnomer, there is no doubt that the plaintiff would have been entitled to amend his petition by inserting the right name, after its having been disclosed by the defendant; but it was a denial of his being a member of the partnership of Loison <§• Co., and of his ever having entered into any contract of lease with the [432]*432plaintiff. The suit brought against a parnership, not alleged to be commercial, necessarily implied that there were several de» fendants against whom the original proceedings were instituted, and Louis Desangle, if one of them, had clearly a right of appearing before the inferior court, and requiring His - co-partners to be made parties to the suit. Instead of doing so, however, he denied his being one of the partners of the firm of Loison & Co., and, without any proof that he was properly sued as such, the trial was gone into immediately against him alone, and, in the absence of the other parties, who, from the prayer of the petitioner, had been sued as being jointly obligated with him. This was irregular and illegal;' as the record informs us that, although the original proceedings were commenced against the three members of a partnership called in the petition Loison Co., only one of them was brought before the court by citation, the two others not having been cited.

It appears that a writ of provisional seizure having been issued against Loison Co., two days before the filing of the plaintiff’s petition, the same was levied upon certain goods and articles of furniture, &c., belonging to Lasuse <§• Co.; whereupon, the members of this partnership, composed of Lasuse, Dominique Clávele, and Louis Desangle, gave their bond to the marshall, in the sum of $'300, with Henry Hart as security, for the forthcoming of the articles seized, in case the above named principals were cast in the suit now pending in the City Court of the city of Lafayette, entitled Baple. Dougart v. Lasuse & Co., which bond was signed respectively by the three defendants. Only one of them was subsequently cited to appear, although the suit, in its inception, was intended to be against the three, and although the petition prays that they may be condemned, &c.; and it is perfectly clear that it could not be maintained against the appellant alone, as it is a well settled rule that, “ in every suit on a joint contract, all the obligors must' be made defendants, and that no judgment can be obtained against any, unless it be proved that all joined in the obligation, or are by law presumed to have done so.” Civil Code, art. 2080. 3 La. 437. In the 5 La. 122, this court held that, as the general rule is, that all the co-debtors must be sued, it is sufficient for the defendants to show that ajl named in the [433]*433petition) are not made parties ; and in tbe case of Loussade v. Hartman et al., 16 La. 117, in which the four obligors were also named in the petition, it was decided that the judgment was erroneous, because, being a joint one, it was against two of the defendants only. Here, as we have already remarked, the first proceedings were instituted against three defendants, under the name of Loison & Co., though the real name of the partnership was Lasuse & Co. This informality was cured, it is true, by the defendants’ giving their bond in their true names; but the plaintiff could not subsequently proceed against any one of them alone. It was his duty to make them all parties to the suit, and, having failed to do so, his action must be dismissed.

It has been Contended, however, by the appellee’s counsel, that a provisional seizure having been issued, the appellant claimed the property, and was, therefore, bound to defend the suit in the name by which he claimed it; and that if there were any irregularity, there is an express provision of law that says, “ that no judgment or decree shall be reversed for any defect or want Of form, but the Supreme Court shall proceed and give judgment according as the rights of the case and matter of law shall appear unto them, without regarding any imperfections, or want of form in the process, or course of proceeding whatsoever.” B. and C’s. Digest, p. 177, No. 3. That this law of 1813 is yet in force, is very questionable, as having been superseded by the Code of Practice and its amendments, which contain all the rules of proceeding by which we are governed, it has perhaps been been repealed by the law of 1828, B. and C’s. Digest, p. 155, No. 17. _ But here, the non-joinder of parties is not a mere informality, or want of form.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Rob. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dougart-v-desangle-la-1845.