FIDELITY AND CASUALTY COMPANY OF NY v. Clemmons
This text of 198 So. 2d 695 (FIDELITY AND CASUALTY COMPANY OF NY v. Clemmons) 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.
Opinion
The FIDELITY AND CASUALTY COMPANY OF NEW YORK
v.
Bryan CLEMMONS, Sheriff, Josh Miles and Josie Evans Miles.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*696 Boris F. Navratil, of Breazeale, Sachse & Wilson, Baton Rouge, for appellant.
F. Louis Gonzales, McCollister, Belcher, McCleary & Fazio, Baton Rouge, for appellees.
Before LANDRY, ELLIS and BAILES, JJ.
LANDRY, Judge.
Contending this court erred in its decision rendered in Miles v. Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York, 185 So.2d 613, plaintiff herein, The Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York (Fidelity), defendant in the former action, prosecutes this appeal from the judgment of the trial court rejecting its collateral attempt to nullify our former decree which cast appellant in judgment.
We find that the trial court properly dismissed appellant's action of nullity and affirm its judgment so ruling.
The decision herein assailed was rendered April 4, 1966, amending the judgment of the trial court. Rehearing was denied May 9, 1966. Appellant's application to the Supreme Court for writs was refused June 22, 1966. Subsequently, this present action was instituted to annul the decree on the grounds the judgment was erroneous both factually and legally.
In the former case, the issue was whether a realtor's bond in the sum of $10,000.00 (furnished pursuant to the provisions of LSA-R.S. 37:1447) was available in said sum to each claimant thereunder or whether the face amount of the bond was the aggregate of the surety's liability to all parties entitled to recover thereon. We concluded the trial court erred in holding each claimant entitled to recover from the surety the full amount of the bond, and revised its judgment by decreeing the totality of the surety's liability to be the amount of the bond only. With this portion of our former decree, appellant is in complete accord. We proceeded to find, however, that since appellant had notice of the Miles' judgment against the principal, Roshto, but nevertheless elected to pay other claimants thus leaving virtually nothing to discharge the Miles' claim, Fidelity became liable to the Miles because it failed to provoke a concursus proceeding pursuant to which it could have protected itself from claims exceeding its liability of $10,000.00 to all claimants.
It is with this latter portion of our judgment that appellant vehemently disagrees. Basically, appellant contends we committed error of fact in that our prior decree inadvertently *697 concluded the Miles were the only claimants having judgment against the principal, Roshto, and that it was on this basis we found the Miles were entitled to payment. In this regard, counsel is mistaken.
In our former decision we stated:
"Clearly, in this instance, the defendant had available to it a most simple remedy, that of the institution of a concursus proceeding (R.S. 13:4811 et seq.) in which all of the claimants under the terms of the bond could have been impleaded, and the full amount of the bond deposited at the time of the filing of the suit. This would have permitted a just and proper distribution of the proceeds of the bond to all of the claimants thereunder by a District Court and would not have resulted in the inequitable situation which now exists in the form of the plaintiffs, alone among the claimants against the bond who have obtained judgment, having not been paid. The defendants, having elected to pay other claimants directly, after having received notice of the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, did so at their peril, and we now hold that the plaintiffs herein are entitled to obtain judgment against the defendant for their porportionate share of the $10,000.00 bond, that is, in the full sum of $2,838.53, plus legal interest on said amount from June 16, 1961, the date of judicial demand in the plaintiffs' suit against Roshto, and for all cost of that proceeding, amounting to $57.25. as well as for all costs of the instant suit and this appeal."
By the foregoing language, we did not hold the Miles were the only claimants who had reduced their claims to judgment against the principal but rather that, of all the judgment creditors, the Miles were the only ones not paid.
The most serious argument advanced by appellant herein is that in finding the surety could have protected itself against claims in excess of its statutory liability by invoking concursus proceedings impleading all claimants, we rendered judgment contrary to existing law as set forth in LSA-C.C.P. Article 4652, and the jurisprudence interpretative thereof, which holds concursus proceedings may not be invoked against a judgment creditor. On this basis appellant argues our former decision is not res judicata because it was based on a premise not argued in the trial court, therefore, issue was never joined between the parties on this point. Appellant further contends that since our former judgment is based on an erroneous legal principle, it is subject to an action of nullity because of a substantive deficiency within the intendment of LSA-C.C.P. Articles 2001-2006, inclusive.
It is significant to note that in its application for rehearing made before this court in the former case and also in its application to the Supreme Court for writs of review, the same arguments herein made were also advanced by appellant.
The exclusive grounds available for annulment of a final judgment, whether for error of form or substance, are clearly and succinctly set forth in LSA-C.C.P. Articles 2001-2006, inclusive.
LSA-C.C.P. Article 2001 provides that the nullity of a judgment may be demanded for vices of either form or substance as set forth in Articles 2002 through 2006.
Article 2002, LSA-C.C.P. enumerates three specific instances wherein judgments may be annulled for vices of form, neither of which are germane to the instant case.
The provisions of Article 2003 LSA-C.C. P. are likewise inapplicable herein considering they deal primarily with loss of the right of action to annul a judgment by acquiescence therein.
Nullity predicated on vices of substances are covered in LSA-C.C.P. Article 2004 which states quite simply that judgments may be annulled for either fraud or ill practice.
*698 Pursuant to LSA-C.C.P. Article 2005, a judgment affirmed, reversed, amended or otherwise rendered by an appellate court may be annulled only when the ground for nullity did not appear in the record of appeal or was not considered by the appellate court. (Emphasis supplied.)
Relying upon the authority of Florat v. Handy, 35 La.Ann. 816, and other authorities hereinafter discussed, appellant urged the nullity of the judgment involved and alternatively maintained it was entitled to an injunction prohibiting its execution. The trial court initially granted a temporary restraining order which was dissolved upon trial of appellant's motion for preliminary injunction. The lower court also awarded appellees attorney's fees in the sum of $500.00 for dissolving the temporary restraining order.
We find no merit in appellant's contention our previous judgment is not res judicata as to the question herein presented because issue was not joined as to said point at trial level.
According to the great weight of authority, a judgment null and void may not constitute the basis for a plea of res judicata, but a decree does not lose its effectiveness as the basis of such a plea merely because it is irregular or erroneous.
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198 So. 2d 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-and-casualty-company-of-ny-v-clemmons-lactapp-1967.