Engeran v. Consolidated Companies

147 So. 743, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1768
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1933
DocketNo. 1102.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 147 So. 743 (Engeran v. Consolidated Companies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engeran v. Consolidated Companies, 147 So. 743, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1768 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

In December, 1930, suit was brought by the defendant, Consolidated Companies, against. Engeran Bros, et al., in Terrebonne parish; plaintiff, Joseph Engeran, being named as a defendant therein, then a resident of the parish of St. Mary.

Judgment was rendered by default in favor of the Consolidated Companies against Engeran Bros, et al., and individually against Joseph Engeran, plaintiff herein, who is suing in this litigation to have the judgment so rendered against him annulled and set aside-

The judgment was annulled and avoided by the district judge, from which defendant, the Consolidated Companies, prosecutes this appeal.

Code Practice, art. 607, provides for the annulment of such a judgment when it appears that it has been obtained through fraud or other ill practices, by bribing the judge or the witnesses, or by producing forged documents, etc. The causes enumerated in the article are merely illustrative, as it is well settled that the remedy for the annulment is not restrictive under the provisions of that article. Norris v. Fristoe, 3 La. Ann. 646; Chinn v. First Municipality of City of New Orleans, 1 Rob. 523; Succession of Gilmore, 157 La. 130, 102 So. 94.

*744 In passing on this question in the case of Norris v. Fristoe, Adm’r, 3 La. Ann. 646, the court said that the complainant must show that it would he against good conscience to execute the judgment, and that the plaintiff could not hare availed himself of the matter in the former litigation or was prevented by fraud or accident from so doing.

In the case of City of New Orleans v. Le Bourgeois et al., 50 La. Ann. 591, 23 So. 542, the court expressed itself, as follows: “Our courts have not hesitated to afford relief against judgments irrespective of any issue of inattention or neglect, when the circumstances under which the judgment is rendered show the deprivation of the legal rights of the litigant who seeks relief, and when the enforcement of the judgment would be uncon-seientious and inequitable” — citing Norris v. Fristoe, 3 La. Ann. 646; Chinn v. First Municipality of City of New Orleans, 1 Rob. 523; Swain v. Sampson, 6 La. Ann. 799.

In one of the latest opinions on the subject, Succession of Gilmore, 157 La. 130, 102 So. 94, 95, the court took occasion to say this, “Our courts will follow the general principles of equity jurisprudence applied by the equity courts of the other states of this country in actions of this character,” thus giving its approval to the doctrine announced in the case of Chinn v. First Municipality of City of New Orleans, 1 Rob. 523, one of our earliest decisions on this question.

The proof shows that P. J. Engeran, in May, 1920, sold a lot of ground with the entire business, styled Pelican Oyster & Fish Company, to Joseph Engeran, plaintiff herein, and Francis Parr, situated in the city of Houma; that in the month of March, 1924, Francis Parr, copurchaser with plaintiff, sold all of his interest in that business and property to plaintiff, who, in August, 1924, a few months after he had become the owner of the entire business and property, sold all that he had acquired to P. J. Engeran. These sales were by authentic act passed before Calvin Wurzlow, notary public, and were all duly recorded in Terrebonne parish.

As far as it is disclosed by the public records, it clearly appears that plaintiff, Joseph Engeran, in August, 1924, in the last transfer between the parties, sold by authentic act to P. J. Engeran, the original vendor, the entire business and property he had acquired through P. J. Engeran and Francis Parr, his eopúrchaser, and there is not in the records the slightest indication that plaintiff had any interest in the business or property transferred by him to P. J. Engeran.

The testimony of P. J. Engeran and Joseph Engeran, plaintiff, is in accord with the record, as they both say that plaintiff was not a partner in the business of the Engeran Bros., which was exclusively that of P. J. Engeran, who had styled his business as En-geran Bros., merely intending a trade-name.

The proof is that plaintiff was living in the parish of St. Mary, and there is nothing to indicate that he was connected, actively or passively, with the business of Engeran Bros., which was operating in the city of Houma, under that trade-name, but belonged solely to P. J. Engeran. The debt for which the Consolidated Companies recovered judgment by default was incurred by the Engeran Bros, owned solely by P. J. Engeran, of which plaintiff was not a partner and in which he had no business interest. He was living in the parish of St. Mary, was not obligated for the debt as partner or otherwise, and was not legally liable therefor.

When the suit was brought against him by the Consolidated Companies, he employed Mr. Calvin Wurzlow of the Houma bar to defend him.

Mr. Wurzlow testifies that he met Mr. Harris Gagne, also of the Houma bar, said he had noticed he had filed suit against Engeran Bros., for the Consolidated Companies in which Joseph Engeran was included as a defendant, and told him that he was not a member of that firm; that Mr. Gagne admitted he was right and that he would dismiss Mr. Wurzlow’s client from the proceedings. He further testifies that, after Mr. Gagne agreed to take Joseph Engeran out of that suit, he immediately went to his office and wrote Joseph Engeran to that effect. In support of the statement that he had immediately written to Joseph Engeran, he refers to the suit which was filed December 8th, and the letter to Joseph Engeran, dated December 13th. In his letter to Joseph Engeran of that date. Mr. Wurzlow said he had talked the matter over with Mr. Gagne, who said he had made a mistake, regretted it, and would take Joseph Engeran’s name out of the case.

In a P. S. to the letter, he says: “I will see that your name is stricken out of the petition, Monday.”

Mr. Gagne admits he had a conversation with Mr. Wurzlow in front of the courthouse on the subject in question, but says, in reference thereto, that Mr. Wurzlow said to him. quoting: “Harris, Ernest will not take a judgment against Engeran if you will not take judgment against Engeran.” Ernest, to whom Mr. Gagne refers, is a Mr. Dupont, representative of the Interstate Wholesale Grocer Company, for which Mr. Wurzlow had brought suit against Engeran Bros., and not Joseph Engeran.

Asked if he had agreed with Mr. Wurzlow not to take a judgment against Joseph Enger-an, his answer is that he did not, and that his agreement was not to take judgment against Engeran Bros, because Mr. Wurzlow had said Mr. Dupont would not take a judgment against them.

*745 A few days after he entered into the agreement, Mr. Gagne testifies he met Mr. Wurzlow1 in. the clerk’s office, who then told him that Mr. Dupont had insisted on confirming his default against Engeran Bros., and that he expressed his surprise that the agreement had not been carried out. He says he took his medicine and on the same date confirmed his default, which, as hereinabove shown, has brought about this litigation.

It is shown that Mr. Wurzlow the same morning also confirmed his default for the Interstate Wholesale Grocery Company, and that he was in court when the default was confirmed by Mr. Gagne against the Engeran Bros., including plaintiff herein, individually.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 743, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engeran-v-consolidated-companies-lactapp-1933.