Forman v. Sewerage & Water Board

43 So. 908, 119 La. 49, 1907 La. LEXIS 434
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1907
DocketNo. 16,529
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 43 So. 908 (Forman v. Sewerage & Water Board) 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
Forman v. Sewerage & Water Board, 43 So. 908, 119 La. 49, 1907 La. LEXIS 434 (La. 1907).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

The plaintiff, Benjamin Rice Forman, an attorney at law of the city of New Orleans, claims of the sewerage and water board, of the same city, $25,000, for legal services alleged to have been rendered by him to that board in the suit of State of Louisiana v. New Orleans Waterworks Company.

The case has been tried on an exception of no cause of action accompanied by an agreement that, in case the exception was overruled, the court should proceed to decide the case as on a plea of general denial. For the-latter purpose an admission of facts was made. The lower court sustained the exception of no cause of action.

The plaintiff does not claim that he was-.employed by the defendant board, but that the Legislature has imposed upon the defendant board the obligation to compensate-him for his services by the following act:

“An act to provide for the compensation of Benjamin Rice Forman for his professional services in the case of the State of Louisiana v. the New Orleans Waterworks Company, and to make it the duty of the sewerage and: water board of New Orleans to pay such compensation as may be agreed on, or fixed by arbitration, or by final judgment of court.
“Whereas, notice of intention to apply for passage of this act, stating the substance of the contemplated law, has been published in New Orleans for thirty days prior to its introduction into the General Assembly, once a week for thirty days in French and English,, in daily newspapers published in New Orleans,, evidence of which has been exhibited to the-General^ Assembly; and, whereas, after an investigation, the General Assembly, by concurrent resolution No. 150, approved July 14, 1898,. reported the evidence as to the New Orleans Waterworks Company to the Attorney General for such action as he should deem proper, and the city council of New Orleans, in December, 1898, passed a resolution requesting the Attorney .General to bring a suit to forfeit the charter and franchises of the New Orleans Waterworks Company: whereas, the multiplicity of his official duties to the state prevented him-from personally preparing and trying said suit, and he engaged the professional services of Mr. Benjamin Rice Forman, an attorney-at-law, who wrote the petition and gathered together the evidence, and all of whose time was taken in the trial of the case of the State of Louisiana v. the New Orleans Waterworks Company, from the 9th of November, 1899, to the 25th of April, 1900, and when, in October, 1900, the district judge rendered a judgment against the state, Honorable Walter Guión, Attorney General, not being familiar with the record and the-evidence, engaged Mr. Forman to prosecute an appeal to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, which he did, and superintended the preparation of the enormous transcript and wrote the brief, and made the principal argument in the-Supreme Court of Louisiana, resulting in a final decree for the state of Louisiana, forfeiting the charter and franchises of the New Orleans Waterworks Company, and when a> [51]*51■writ of error was allowed, taking the case to the Supreme Court of the United States; Mr. Forman made two trips to Washington, D. C., .and made the motion to dismiss or affirm, and ■wrote the brief in support of that motion, which has been successful, and the sewerage and water board will largely profit thereby, and =save an enormous sum which it would otherwise have been obliged to pay for the purchase •of said franchise, including the monopoly of the water supply of New Orleans, which had twenty-seven years to run; and no provision has been made to pay Mr. Forman for his services.
,“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Louisiana, that the sewerage and water board of New Orleans is hereby authorized to pay Benjamin Rice Forman a just compensation for his services rendered in the case ■of the State of Louisiana v. the New Orleans Waterworks Company, in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, and in the Supreme Court of Louisiana, and in the Supreme Court •of the United States, the amount to be fixed by consent of both parties, and, if they can not agree, then by arbitration, should they agree to arbitrate, or by amicable compounders; or -should they not agree to arbitration then the said Forman is hereby authorized to sue said board in the civil district court for the parish •of Orleans, subject to appeal. Provided, that nothing in this act shall be construed to mean •that a right or cause of action is created in ■favor of said Forman against said board; the -intention being to give him the right to enforce any cause of action that he may have, either in law or equity.”

The defendant contends that by the proviso •to said act, namely:

“Provided that nothing in this act shall be ■construed to mean that a right or cause of action is created in favor of said Forman against •said board; the intention being to give him the right to enforce any cause of action that he -may have, either in law or equity”

—the Legislature has indicated in unmistak.able terms that there was no intention on its part to create a right of action in favor •of plaintiff.

And defendant contends, in the second .place, that the funds in its hands are beyond legislative control, the same being dedicated by constitutional provision to the ■ constructing of a sewerage and water system in the city of New Orleans, and that, if said act purported to divert said funds to .any other purpose, such, for instance, as to paying the said claim of plaintiff, it would be unconstitutional and void.

We agree with defendant that by the proviso to the act the Legislature has unmistakably said that its intention was not to create a right of action, but only to grant permission to enforce any that might exist already.

Plaintiff’s learned counsel argues with great force that plaintiff had already this right to enforce any right of action he might have, and hence did not need an act of the Legislature to grant it to him, and that therefore to give to said act no greater scope than this would be to render it nugatory. There is great force in the argument, but it breaks itself against the perfectly plain language of the proviso, which leaves no room for interpretation, or even for discussion. True, the title of the act provides that the purpose is to “make it the duty” of the defendant board to pay plaintiff; but the title of an act is no part of the act, and, in interpreting the act, is resorted to only in case of doubt. State v. Cazeaux, 8 La. Ann. 109; Cohen v. Barrett, 5 Cal. 195; People v. Abott, 16 Cal. 358. And no one can read the proviso and be in doubt.

In the oral argument, though not in the brief, the learned counsel for plaintiff argued that a right of action had arisen against the defendant board by equity; the services of plaintiff having inured to the benefit of the defendant board. The defendant board profited, said counsel, by the services of plaintiff to an amount of fully $2,000,000 or $8,-000,000. Without them, it would have had to buy or expropriate the New Orleans Waterworks Company’s monopoly franchise, and the expense would have been fully that much.

There can be no doubt that the services of plaintiff were immensely valuable, and inured enormously to the benefit of the defendant board and of the people of the city of New Orleans, and incidentally of the whole state. There can be no doubt, also, that the [53]*53task which

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Bluebook (online)
43 So. 908, 119 La. 49, 1907 La. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forman-v-sewerage-water-board-la-1907.