Drews v. Williams

23 So. 897, 50 La. Ann. 579, 1898 La. LEXIS 512
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 16, 1898
DocketNo. 12,777
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 So. 897 (Drews v. Williams) 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
Drews v. Williams, 23 So. 897, 50 La. Ann. 579, 1898 La. LEXIS 512 (La. 1898).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

Plaintiffs sued the defendant to recover damages growing out of an injunction which was dissolved on the ground that it had been illegally granted on defendant’s application.

The defendant Williams, in March, 1893, brought suit against the plaintiff, Gus Drews, in the District Oourt for the parish of St. Mary, claiming swamp lands described in his petition. Drews reconvened and obtained a recognition of his title as owner of the land.

About the time that Williams brought suit in St. Mary parish for these lands, he obtained an injunction from the District Oourt of Assumption, enjoining Gus Drews and his employees from trespassing upon the lands of which he claimed ownership. These lands were situated in Assumption. Gus Drews was a resident of the parish of St. Mary, where he was sued. Williams allowed the injunction to remain in force some time after it had been decided that he was not the owner of the lands.

Drews, in May, 1896, some time after he had obtained a judgment in the parish of St. Mary, recognizing his title, proceeded contradictorily with defendant Williams, and obtained a judgment dissolving the. injunction and dismissing the suit brought in the parish of Assumption.

The suit now before us for decision was brought by the commercial firm of Drews & Son, of which William Drews and Gus Drews are [581]*581the members, against Williams, by whom Gus Drews, the owner of the lands, had been enjoined as before stated. It appears that William Drews owned a saw-mill, and that Gus Drews supplied the mill with saw-logs. The operations in the swamps (of which Gus Drews was the owner) and at the mill was carried on for the common benefit of the partners. They were under an ' agreement between father and son; partners in so far as related to the trees on the land.

For the purpose of supplying the mill (in accordance with their contract of partnership) with saw-logs, Gus Drews had made provision to cut down and remove a number of trees from the swamps to the mill of one of the partners (William Drews), operated as before stated.

He was enjoined, we have just stated, from cutting down and removing the tiees, and to that extent the partnership was deprived of whatever profit might have- been made if Gus Drews, one of the partners, had not been enjoined.

In his defence to the demand for damges growing out of the injunction suit the defendant, Williams, pleaded the exception of no cause of action, and in the alternative he pleaded a general denial.

The defendant also pleaded the prescription of one year.

In support of his exception of no cause of action counsel urged that the defendant in the injunction suit was Gus Drews, and that plaintiff, William Drews & Son, a partnership, is a body distinct from the members of the firm; that Gus Drews alone had been enjoined, and that it was incumbent upon him, and not the partnership of William Drews & Son, of which Gus Drews was a member, to comply with the injunction.

In support of the second ground of defence (the plea of prescription) he contended that the prescription began to run from the time that the defendant was prevented from cutting and removing his logs, or, if not from that time, from December'2, 1895, the date the injunction was dissolved by the effect of the judgment rendered in favor of Drews against Williams, recognizing the former as the owner of the land from which he had sought to remove trees when enjoined as before stated.

Passing to a statement of the facts on the merits of the ease it appears that a number of cypress trees that Drews & Son intended to cut and float on the land of Gus Drews had been deadened.

[582]*582The plaintiff alleges, substantially, that there was a float in 1893; and that they would, had they not been prevented by the injunction, have that year floated a large number of trees; that the cost of floating is one dollar and twenty-five cents a thousand, and even less, while the cost of “ pull-boating,” a means of getting saw-logs, when there is no float, is four dollars a thousand. The evidence is •conflicting; the witnesses disagree in their statements — to float -timber in four and five feet of water costs, all say, about one dollar And twenty-five cents. In shallow water it costs much more. Some testify -that it costs even as much as three dollars a thousand. On the other hand the “ pull-boating ” work may vary materially. ■•Some witnesses say it costs as much as four dollars and fifty cents a ¡thousand, and others less than three dollars a thousand.

Jt appears that during the time that the injunction was being litigated, these trees, because of the rotting of the sap, caused by the “deadening,” had lost value, which plaintiff claimed amounted •to six hundred dollars. The evidence disclosed that about four hundred trees were “deadened” in January, February and. March of the year 1893. That timber “ deadened ” when the sap is up in winter will resist sap rotting better than when the sap is down in the spring and summer, that is, when it is below the circular incision made to kill the tree.

In the former case the evidence is conflicting; one and two year* was the time fixed within which the tree will not begin to sap rot; in the latter case three and four years. The amount deducted for sap rot varies; the largest deducted being, it is said, one quarter, And even a third of the value of the trees. In addition plaintiffs aver that before the injunction was issued plaintiffs made “ trails,” pathways and other preparations for the expected removal of the timber. That the injunction had caused this work to be useless, constituting, plaintiff contends, a six hundred dollar item of damages. Another item claimed, in amount five hundred dollars, was for camps established in the swamps where it was proposed to work, and a “ pull-boat ” taken to the place, the use of which was prevented by the injunction. Other items of damages were claimed, amounting in all to six thousand six hundred and seventy-five dollars.

The judgment of the District Court overruled the exceptions; rejected all of plaintiff’s demands, save the items constituting damage* to the amount of six hundred dollars.

From this judgment the defendant appealed

[583]*583PLEA OP NO CAUSE OP ACTION.

The exception of no cause of action covers the position set forth by the defendant that plaintiff here is a different person in law from Gus Drews, defendant in the injunction, and that the partnership had no right of action for damages, if any grew out of the suit enjoining Gus Drews, and which did not enjoin the partnership.

It is true as asserted by the defendant that in his suit, in which he in Assumption parish enjoined Gus Drews from removing trees, he did not in name enjoin the. partnership. None the less, in our judgment, his injunction must have been depended upon to prevent the defendant in the injunction suit and his firm from cutting down and removing the timber from the lands he claimed as his, and upon which he asserted, in his suits against Gus Drews, that he Drews was trespassing.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 897, 50 La. Ann. 579, 1898 La. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drews-v-williams-la-1898.