Gallo v. Sorci

221 So. 2d 570
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 7, 1969
Docket3389, 3390
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 221 So. 2d 570 (Gallo v. Sorci) 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
Gallo v. Sorci, 221 So. 2d 570 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

221 So.2d 570 (1969)

Charles F. GALLO
v.
Leon SORCI, d/b/a L. P. Sorci Sand Company.
Batolo GALLO
v.
Leon SORCI, d/b/a L. P. Sorci Sand Company.

Nos. 3389, 3390.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

April 7, 1969.
Rehearing Denied May 5, 1969.

*571 Jerald N. Andry and Gilbert V. Andry, III, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Cabibi & Cabibi, Charles E. Cabibi, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.

Before SAMUEL, HALL and BANETTE, JJ.

BARNETTE, Judge.

These two consolidated cases are identical in all respects except as to the respective amounts of recovery sought. The plaintiffs seek recovery of damages for trespass.

The plaintiffs own adjoining long narrow tracts of land running back from the Mississippi River in St. Bernard Parish including batture and riparian rights. The plaintiff Charles F. Gallo (proceeding No. 3389) owns a tract 50 feet wide, which, for the purpose of this opinion, we will refer to as lot 5. The plaintiff Batolo Gallo (proceeding No. 3390) owns a tract 78 feet wide, which we will refer to as lot 6. By separate suits filed on the same day and numbered consecutively in the district court, the plaintiffs allege trespass and seek recovery of damages or recompense for sand alleged to have been taken from their respective lots by the defendant, Leon Sorci, without their knowledge or consent.

After trial below, judgment was rendered for plaintiffs against the defendant, Leon Sorci, doing business as Sorci Sand Company, in the amounts of $612.95 for Charles F. Gallo and $377.20 for Batolo Gallo. The Charles Gallo judgment included an item of $150 for an expert witness fee assessed as cost. From these two separate judgments *572 the defendant has appealed suspensively.

Plaintiffs' suits were filed on December 26, 1962. Defendant's answers were filed on August 11, 1967, and trial was had on December 14, 1967. There is nothing in the record to explain the long delay between the filing of petitions and the answers. The lapse of six years from the approximate dates of the trespasses complained of until trial of the case must certainly have affected the accuracy of the testimony of the witnesses in their attempts to recall events long past. This factor should be considered in weighing the probative value of their testimony, particularly as to dates.

The plaintiffs each alleged in their respective petitions:

"III.

That at dates and times unknown to your petitioner the defendant, Leon Sorci, and/or his agents, and/or his employees, without the knowledge and/or consent of your petitioner herein did commit trespasses upon the property above described and did remove therefrom wantonly and also maliciously, sand from the batture; said sand composing the natural formations of said batture.

IV.

That the batture property of your petitioner is not easily accessible, that it is not able to be viewed except by ascending the protective levee; that your petitioner first learned of the trespasses to his property and the taking of sand from his property, by the defendant, in the latter part of April, 1962; that he could not verify this information until the high waters of the Mississippi River had receded to a level below the batture in late August, 1962."

Much of the testimony on trial related to the factual question as to whether the alleged trespasses were committed within a year of the filing of suit. Both counsel briefed and argued in both courts questions of law and fact which relate to prescription; but we have carefully searched both records and fail to find that an exception or special plea of prescription was filed by the defendant. The word "prescription" or "prescribed" is not to be found in either the petitions or the answers. The only reference to it in any of the pleadings is such as may be inferred from the two above articles in plaintiffs' petitions. Defendant's answer in each case was a simple general denial. The peremptory exception of prescription is one which must be specially pleaded. It cannot be supplied by the court even though it may appear to be valid. LSA-C.C.P. art. 927; LSA-C.C. arts. 3463, 3464; see case citations, infra.

It is apparent that the plaintiffs were aware of the possibility that their petitions would invite an exception of prescription unless they made some allegation to negate prescription. For this reason, they allege in article IV of their petitions that they had no knowledge of the alleged trespasses until a date within a year of the filing of suit. Since the date of the trespass was alleged to be unknown, and thus not necessarily prescribed, it would have been proper for the defendant in pleading prescription to allege pertinent facts as a basis for his plea. In that event the exception would properly have been referred to the merits, and if the facts were proven, it would then have been incumbent upon the plaintiffs to meet the issue by alleging and proving their lack of knowledge of the trespass until within a year of suit. The plaintiffs' anticipation of such a plea by defendant and their taking the initiative in alleging a fact to negate prescription, did not in our opinion relieve the defendant of the clearly expressed provisions of law that the exception must be specially pleaded.

During the course of trial, testimony which would have been relevant to the issue of prescription was offered without objection. Neither counsel mentioned that prescription had not been pleaded. We have considered whether under LSA-C.C.P. *573 art. 1154 we might therefore treat the pleadings as having been amended to conform to the evidence by the express or implied consent of the parties. It is our opinion, however, that article 1154 relates to fact pleadings and does not authorize the amendment of pleadings to conform to the evidence when the pleading to be supplied is a peremptory exception which the Code of Civil Procedure expressly requires to be specially pleaded.

There is an excellent discussion of the liberal pleading concept of LSA-C.C.P. art. 1154 by the Honorable Albert Tate, Jr., Presiding Judge of the Third Circuit Court of Appeal, in which he cites several cases where the concept was applied.[1] In none of the cases cited do we find authority for extension of the provisions of article 1154 for the waiver by implied consent of the express provisions of article 927 relative to the peremptory exceptions of prescription and res judicata.

Prescription is procedural but may impose upon the pleader the burden of proving affirmatively certain facts which operate as a procedural bar to an otherwise valid cause or right of action. As in any plea of affirmative defense, the reason for the requirement of a special pleading is to place the adverse party on notice so that he will be prepared to meet the issue. Another reason for requiring the exception of prescription to be specially pleaded is that where there exists a moral obligation it is personal to the obligor whether he wishes to avail himself of the legal bar to the action to avoid the obligation.

It might be argued with some persuasion that neither of these reasons for requiring prescription to be specially pleaded by the defendant is present in this case. First, the plaintiffs in anticipation of defendant's exception of prescription pleaded affirmatively a fact in negation of prescription and thus, arguably, put the question at issue.

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Bluebook (online)
221 So. 2d 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallo-v-sorci-lactapp-1969.