Hankins v. Police Jury

95 So. 102, 152 La. 1000, 1922 La. LEXIS 2481
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 29, 1922
DocketNo. 25387
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 So. 102 (Hankins v. Police Jury) 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
Hankins v. Police Jury, 95 So. 102, 152 La. 1000, 1922 La. LEXIS 2481 (La. 1922).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

The police jury of the parish of Natchitoches, in response to advertisements calling therefor, received three bids for the performance of certain work in road district No. 26 of ward No. 2 of said parish. Upon the report of the parish surveyor, the bid of A. D. Lee, one of the defendants, was accepted as being the lowest.

Before the formal contract could be signed and bond furnished, thereunder, plaintiffs, who were unsuccessful bidders, instituted the present suit against the police jury and said Lee, alleging, substantially, that their bid was in reality the lowest; that Lee was a person interposed, the real parties in interest being a member of the police jury from said ward No. 2 and the chairman of the board of supervisors of road commission of said district No. 26, made by law the agent of the police jury, both of whom are prohibited by law, civil and criminal, froin being interested directly or indirectly in contracts with this parish or with subdivisions of the parish.

The prayer of the petition was for service and citation and service upon the defendants [1003]*1003to show cause why an injunction should not issue restraining and prohibiting the police jury from accepting' the bid of A. D. Lee and from consummating the contract thereunder; that on the trial of this suit and rule the bid of said Lee be decreed illegal, unlawful, unfair, and contrary to law, and their bid be declared to be the lowest, and they be awarded the contract. In the alternative, plaintiffs prayed that the police jury be ordered to readvertise and reoffer the work. ; s . ; ! d 1

Defendant Lee, appearing through counsel, answered, denying the material allegations of the petition, and specifically denying that he was a party interposed averring that his bid was the lowest of the three bids submitted, and that the acceptance of his offer by the police jury constituted a contract between them. Defendant incorporated in his answer exceptions of no cause of action; an exception of vagueness directed at the failure of the petition to^ set forth the names of the parties for whom Lee was alleged to have been acting; and an exception to the rule to show cause for an injunction to issue without bond.

The police jury, through its president, appeared in court and adopted as its own the pleas and answers of its codefendant, with special averments of the good faith, integrity, and honesty of the members, and that the contract was hwarded to Lee because he was the lowest bidder.

These pleas and answers were filed by the defendants when the cause was called for hearing on the order to show cause. On this hearing the defendants tendered — '

“the entire issue for the court to determine the question as to whether the injunction should issue or should not issue upon plaintiffs’ petition, with his documents attached, and this answer, with the documents attached; that no further parol testimony is admissible, the question not being one on the merits of the case, but as to whether the legal require- , ments for the issuance of the injunction were presented by the plaintiff, when the answer to the rule is considered.”

; The court does not appear to have passed: s upon the exceptions save the one of vague- . ness, which was maintained with leave to ; amend, which was done instanter, plaintiffs ! naming as the real parties in interest in the contract the member of the police jury and chairman of the board of supervisors or road 1 commission of district No. 26 as hereinbefore referred to.

However, as defendants are not urging these exceptions here, except the one directed against the issuance of the injunction without bond, it is unnecessary for us to consider any of these pleas other than the exception which is stressed before us.

At the inception of the hearing, plaintiff's called the president of the police jury to the stand for the purpose of cross-examination under the act. Counsel for, defendant thereupon renewed his objections to the admissibility of parol evidence upon the ground that the only question to be considered was whether plaintiff was entitled to an injunction or not; that the result of hearing the testimony would be to try the case on the merits; that the testimony sought to be introduced was inseparable from the testimony to be given on the merits; and that there had been no citation to try the case on the merits.

The court overruled the objections for the reasons, as stated by the judge, to be assigned in writing. These reasons are not in the record, and it does not appear that the contemplated written opinion was ever given.

, The trial was then proceeded with, witnesses were heard for the plaintiffs and for the defendants, and judgment was finally rendered, declaring the bid of A. D. Lee to be null and void, enjoining him and the police jury from entering into any contract to carry out the terms thereof, and the police jjiry from accepting bond from Lee, and, further, directing the police jury to accept the bid of plaintiffs and to award the contract to them and to accept their bond therefor.

[1005]*1005Prom this judgment defendants have appealed.

Defendants urge that the judgment is arbitrary and oppressive because: (1) It is a final judgment without legal citation; (2) it perpetuates an injunction which never issued or' ordered to issue; (3) it perpetuates an injunction without bond having been given in a case where the law requires a bond to be given; and (4) it usurps the authority of the police jury in coercing their discretion.

Without excepting in limine to the want of citation, defendants joined issue on the merits. An answer to a rule nisi is in effect an answer .to the merits. Heyniger Co. v. Hoffnung, 29 La. Ann. 57. Defendants in their answers engaged all the points raised by plaintiffs’ petition. This constituted a waiver of citation. The oral objection made at the trial was ineffectual to raise the question of want of citation, which should have been raised specifically b'y pleading and before answer filed. The attempt of counsel to limit the scope of his pleadings by statements in open court on the trial of the case was ineffective to control the allegations and consequences thereof, as the pleadings, when once filed, were before the court in their entirety and for all the purposes therein set forth.

An analysis of plaintiffs’ petition shows that their principal demand was for the annulment of the acceptance of the bid of Lee, and that the injunction asked for was a mere incident of that demand.

The injunction sought was not a preliminary one issuing upon the face of the papers pri- or to the trial upon the merits, but was permanent in its nature, to issue only after hearing. Whatever may have been the defect in the form of plaintiffs’ pleadings it was cured by the appearance and answer of defendants.

The injunction in this case results from a judgment upon the merits. It' is not necessary that it should have • issued preliminarily or that it should have been.ordered to issue preliminarily, or that a „ bond should have been given. It would have been a useless formality to require a bond where the injunction was decreed' by the court in its judgment. If a preliminary judgment had been issued upon bond, the judgment perpetuating the injunction would have had the effect of releasing the surety. Besides, the injunction is ineffective because it has bee"n suspended by the motion and order of appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
95 So. 102, 152 La. 1000, 1922 La. LEXIS 2481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hankins-v-police-jury-la-1922.