Frank v. Currie

172 So. 843
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 1937
DocketNo. 16226.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 172 So. 843 (Frank v. Currie) 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
Frank v. Currie, 172 So. 843 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

Plaintiff, Joseph Frank, filed suit in the First city court of New Orleans on an open account against the defendant, Mrs. T. IC. Currie, on July 24, 1933, for recovery of the sum of $71.82. Mrs. Currie was served with citation on July 28, 1933. She did not file an answer to the petition, and a default judgment was taken against her on August 2, 1933.

Long after the judgment became final, on October 31, 1934, Mrs. Currie filed the present proceedings against Frank, claiming that the default judgment of August 2, 1933,, is null and void for the reasons that: (1) Only two days elapsed, exclusive of Sundays and holidays, between the date of service of the citation and the date of the default judgment; that, under the law, she was entitled to three full days, after the date of service of citation, before a default judgment could be taken against her; and (2) that said judgment was obtained through the fraud and ill practice of said Frank, in that the debt sued upon was a community debt for which her husband, T. K. Currie, was responsible, all of which was at all times well known to said Frank.

In due course, Frank excepted to her petition to annul the judgment, on the ground that the same did not disclose a cause of action and he also filed a plea of the prescription of one year.

The exception of no cause of action was maintained by the trial court and Mrs. Currie’s suit accordingly dismissed. From the judgment of dismissal she has prosecuted this appeal.

Due to the importance of the questions of law herein presented, the case, although involving less than $100, has been referred to the court en banc for determination.

*845 We first consider the question as to whether the judgment by default against Mrs. Currie was taken prematurely. Article 1082 of the Code of Practice, relating to procedure before the justices of the peace, which applies to the city courts of New Orleans in cases involving less than $100, provides:

“The defendant thus cited shall only be obliged to appear and answer to the action the third' day after the day of service of the citation, if he reside or happens to be in the city or precincts of New Orleans, or within ten days after such service, in other parts of the State.”

Frank’s petition and citation was served on Mrs. Currie on Friday, July 28, 1933. Therefore, she had three days, after that day, within which to file her answer. July 29th was a Saturday and July 30th was a Sunday. July 31st was a Monday, and August 1st a Tuesday. The judgment was taken on Wednesday, August 2d. Her counsel contend that July 29th, being a Saturday, is a half holiday under the law and is not to be counted in computing the delay within which to file an answer. They assert that likewise Sunday, July 30th, being a dies non, is excluded, and that therefore only two days, Monday, July 31st, and Tuesday, August 1st, intervened between the service of citation and the taking of the default judgment on Wednesday, August 2d; whereas the article of the Code of Practice requires that three days elapse between the date of service of citation and the date the default judgment is entered.

We have recently decided on January 11, 1937, in Christmon v. Hawkins, 171 So. 621, following the Supreme Court decision of Kelly, Weber & Co. v. F. D. Harvey & Co., 178 La. 266, 151 So. 201, that, where a statute allowed an appeal to be taken within ten days, exclusive of Sundays, holidays were included in computing the time within which the appeal could be taken. Coupsel for Mrs. Currie admit that this interpretation of the law is correct where the procedural delay is of sufficient length of time as to necessarily include a Sunday or a holiday, but they argue that, where the delay accorded by statute for performing a legal act is for a shorter period, which may not, as a matter of course, include a Sunday, holiday, or half holiday, then, under those circumstances, Sundays, holidays, and half holidays are not to be counted in reckoning the time permitted for the performance of the act. The cases of State ex rel. State Pharmaceutical Association v. Michel, 52 La.Ann. 936, 27 So. 565, 49 L.R.A. 218, 78 Am.St.Rep. 364; Fellman v. Mercantile Fire & Marine Insurance Company, 116 La. 723, 41 So. 49; and Johnson v. Murphy, 124 La. 143, 49 So. 1007, 1008, are cited as sustaining the proposition.

In Johnson v. Murphy, supra, the question involved was whether Sunday is numbered in calculating the three days’ delay allowed by article 1082 of the Code of Practice to the defendant for answering in the city court, and the court, in holding that Sunday was to be excluded, quoting' with approval from the case of State ex rel. State Pharmaceutical Ass’n v. Michel, supra, said:

“ When the time stipulated is such that it does not necessarily include Sunday, Sunday is excluded from the computation, without express mention of the fact; when the time stipulated must necessarily include Sunday, to exclude that day, there must be an express declaration to that effect.’ State ex .rel. Pharmaceutical Association v. Secretary of State, 52 La.Ann. 936, 27 So. 565, 49 L.R.A. 218, 78 Am.St. Rep. 364.

“And the ruling, so made, has been impliedly affirmed in the cases of Schenck et al. v. Schenck et al., 52 La.Ann. [2102] 2104, 28 So. 302, and State ex rel. Garig et al. v. Judge, 104 La. [472] 478, 29 So. 18. We therefore conclude that, from the three days’ delay allowed by Code Prac. art. 1082, for answering in the city court of New Orleans, Sundays are to be excluded, and hence that the answers of the garnishee, applicant herein, were made within the time required.” (Italics ours.)

Hence, it is settled that, where a statute allows a certain period of time within which to perform a legal act and such given length of time does not necessarily include a Sunday, Sundays are not to be counted even though they are not specifically excluded by the statute.

Finding that Sunday, July 30th, was excluded in computing the time within which Mrs. Currie had to file her answer, the question then arises as to whether Saturday, July 29th (a half holiday under the provisions of Act No. 165 of 1932), was also excluded. In Levy v. Michon Bros., 142 La. 825, 826, 77 So. 644, the Supreme Court had occasion to consider whether, under a rule of the Court of Appeal grant *846 ing three days’ notice to the appellees of the fixing of their case, legal holidays should' be counted. The court, in holding that legal holidays are to be omitted, cited with approval Johnson v. Murphy, supra; and stated:

“When the delay within which a certain thing is to be done is such that it does not necessarily include Sunday, Sunday is excluded from the computation. * * * and throughout our legislation legal holidays are put on the same footing as Sun day, as days of rest." (Italics ours)

The theory of the Supreme Court, in its holding in Johnson v. Murphy, Levy v. Michon Bros., and other cases, reflects a wise interpretation of the intention of the Legislature, for, if Sundays and holidays should be counted in the computation, where the time allowed by statute is short, there are many cases in which all of the intervening days would be dies non.

By Act No.

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172 So. 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-v-currie-lactapp-1937.