Foster & Glassell Co. v. Harrison

138 So. 99, 173 La. 550, 1931 La. LEXIS 1905
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1931
DocketNo. 31315.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 138 So. 99 (Foster & Glassell Co. v. Harrison) 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
Foster & Glassell Co. v. Harrison, 138 So. 99, 173 La. 550, 1931 La. LEXIS 1905 (La. 1931).

Opinions

On Motion to Dismiss Appeal

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff brought suit against defendants for $5,000, plus interest and attorneys’ fees, less a credit of $725.47, paid on February 28, 1927. It prayed for judgment in solido against defendants for said amount, and that the judgment be made executory and enforceable against certain property. Upon final- trial, there was judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendants for the sum of $1,748.05, one-half of which, or $874.02, was decreed to be due by Mrs. Angie E. Harrison, and the balance by the other defendants. Further than this, plaintiff’s demands were rejected, and it appealed. Defendants also appealed, but failed to perfect their appeal by executing the required bond.

After the transcript of appeal was -lodged in this court by plaintiff, it proceeded to execute its judgment against Mrs. Angie E. Harrison by having her property seized under a writ of fieri facias.

Whereupon, the defendant Mrs. Harrison filed a motion in this court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that plaintiff had acquiesced in the judgment by voluntarily executing it.

It is unnecessary to here state all the issues raised by plaintiff in its suit against defendants. It suffices to state, for the purposes of the issue raised by this motion to dismiss, that plaintiff did not obtain judgment for the full amount claimed, and that its demand to have the judgment made executory against certain property was rejected. In other words, plaintiff’s demands were rejected in part, and it proceeded -to execute the judgment, in so far as the same was favorable to it.

Article 567 of the Code of Practice provides that:

“The party against whom judgment has been rendered cannot appeal. 1. If such judgment have been confessed by him, or if he have acquiesced in the same, by executing it voluntarily.”

It will be noted that the above-quoted article of the Code provides that the “party against whom judgment has been rendered” cannot appeal if he have “acquiesced in the same, by executing it voluntarily.” (Italics ours.)

In a number of the earlier eases, this.article was construed to mean that, if a plaintiff failed to obtain judgment for the fuE amount sued for, but for an amount less than his demand, he could not maintain an appeal from the judgment in so far as it was unfavorable to him, if he executed it in so far as it was in his favor. It seems to have been considered that a judgment rejecting part of a plaintiff’s demands is to that extent a judgment against him, and that the article of the Code cited applies.

In the ease of Campbell v. Orillion, 3 La. Ann. 115, the court’s ruling is concisely stated in the syllabus, which reads as follows:

“Where a plaintiff who had appealed from a judgment rendered in his favor but for a less amount than he claimed, executing a bond with surety for the costs only, subsequently causes a fi. fa. to be issued* against the, defendant, it will be considered a voluntary exe *553 cution of the judgment and an abandonment of the appeal. C. P. 567.”

In the case of Succession of J. Y. De Egana, 18 La. Ann. 59, the court said:

“It cannot be controverted that, under the laws and jurisprudence of this State, the party who voluntarily executes, either partially or in toto, a judgment rendered for or against him, or who voluntarily acquiesces in or ratifies, either partially or in toto, the execution of that judgment, is not permitted to appeal from it,” citing Code of Practice, art. 567, Williams v. Duel, 14 La: 523; State v. Judge, 4 Rob. 85; Campbell v. Orillion, 3 La. Ann. 115, supra; Fluhart v. Golding, 7 La. Ann. 233; and Landry v. Connely, 4 Rob. 127:

' In the case of Flowers v. Hughes, 46 La. Ann. 436, 15 So. 14, 15, the court, in the course of its opinion, said:

“It is often the experience that the plaintiff asserting a money demand recovers less than he claims. But, of course, no one sup: poses he could collect the judgment and still maintain his appeal because he claimed a greater amount than that decreed to him.”

The leading case which supports the proposition, that a plaintiff who obtains judgment for less than he demands cannot appeal if he executes the judgment in so far as it is in his favor, is that of Campbell v. Orillion, 3 La. Ann. 115, cited supra. That case is clearly in point. In the other cases cited above, there were other issues involved, and it may be that they could be differentiated from the Campbell Case. But it is clear enough that the court intended to adhere to the rule laid down&in the Campbell Case, and, if there were no other adjudications on the precise point at issue, we should unhesitatingly hold that the appeal in the case at bar should be dismissed.

But there is hopeless and irreconcilable conflict between those cases and several later ones involving the identical question.

In the case of Kittredge et al. v. Grau et al., 158 La. 154, 103 So. 723, 724, decided on motion to dismiss the appeal, June 22, 1922, plaintiffs sued to be decreed the owners of certain shares of stock claimed by defendant, and, in the alternative, prayed for a judgment for the value of the stock. Judgment was rendered in plaintiffs’ favor for $2,860.-50, which was less than the amount demanded, and they appealed. Thereafter, plaintiffs, through their attorneys, recorded the judgment. It seems to have been conceded that the recording of the judgment was a voluntary execution of it. Defendant’ then moved to dismiss the appeal upon the theory that “the recording of the judgment, being, to that extent, an execution of the judgment, was an acquiescence in the decree, or an acknowledgment of its correctness, on the plaintiffs’ part.”

In commenting, the court said that the motion to dismiss was founded upon article 567 of the Code of Practice, and:

“The pláintiffs in this case appealed from the judgment only in so far as it had rejected their demand. The judgment in their favor, for $2,860.50, or the judgment to that extent, is the judgment that they partially executed by having it recorded in the mortgage office. * * * The rule stated in article 567 of the Code of Practice is founded, expressly, upon the theory of acquiescence, or voluntary compliance with the judgment. The recording of the judgment in plaintiffs’ favor was not an acquiescence in the judgment that rejected a part of their demand.”

The motion to dismiss the appeal was overruled. This ruling was clearly against that in the Campbell Case, supra, and the others cited in connection therewith.

*555 In the ease of Augustin v. Farnsworth et al., 155 La. 1053, 99 So. 868, 869, plaintiff sued defendants to recover one-half the original cost of constructing a party wall, $2,-46S.25. He obtained judgment for $1,539.51, less than the amount demanded, and appealed. In this case, as in that of Kittredge v. Grau, supra, plaintiff caused a copy of the judgment, to be recorded in the mortgage records. After plaintiff’s appeal was perfected, defendant moved to dismiss it on the ground of acquiescence, invoking the law as set out in Code of Practice, article 567.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 99, 173 La. 550, 1931 La. LEXIS 1905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-glassell-co-v-harrison-la-1931.