Hillebrandt v. Home Indemnity Co.

148 So. 254, 177 La. 349, 1933 La. LEXIS 1693
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 1933
DocketNo. 32306.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 148 So. 254 (Hillebrandt v. Home Indemnity Co.) 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
Hillebrandt v. Home Indemnity Co., 148 So. 254, 177 La. 349, 1933 La. LEXIS 1693 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

The plaintiff, Lewis Hillebrandt, was severely injured while in the employ of Thomas N. Carnahan, and, as a consequence thereof, brought suit in the Fourteenth district court for the parish of Calcasieu against his ■employer and his employer’s surety, the Southern Surety Company of New York. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the suit against both defendants for $2,000 as compensation due him under the Workmen’s Compensation Law (Act No. 20 of 1914 as amended).

Subsequent to the institution of the suit and before judgment was rendered, the South *351 ern Surety Company of New York went into receivership, and J. M. Donahue, of New Orleans, was appointed its receiver in the state of Louisiana. Donahue was made a party to the suit, and it was provided in the judgment that it should not be executory as against him except in the due course of his administration as receiver.

Predicated on the judgment rendered in his favor against the receiver of the Southern Surety Company of New York, Lewis Hillebrandt, alleging unavailing amicable demand, brought this suit in the Fourteenth district court for the parish of Calcasieu against the Home Indemnity Company, the surety on the qualifying bond of the Southern Surety Company of New York. The Home Indemnity Company excepted to the jurisdiction ratione person® of the district court. The exception was duly tried and overruled by the district judge, and the ease is. now before us under a writ of certiorari.

The facts developed on the trial of the exception show that some time prior to February 19, 1931, the Southern Surety Company of New York, in order to do business in the state of Louisiana, had deposited with the state treasurer acceptable securities to the value of $50,000. On February 19, 1931, however, the surety company availed itself of the privilege granted by Act No. 58 of 1921 (Ex. Sess.), as amended by Act No. 310 of 1926, and filed with the secretary of state a bond for $50,000, with the Home Indemnity Company as surety thereon.

The workmen’s compensation policy held by Thomas N. Carnahan in the Southern Surety Company of New York was issued on July 30, 1930, covering the period from that date to July 31, 1931. Lewis Hillehrandt, the employee of Carnahan, was injured on April 30, 1931, and the judgment for compensation was rendered in his favor on June 17, 1932, and signed on June 20, 1932.

The $50,000 of securities deposited by the Southern Surety Company of New York were not actually withdrawn from the custody of the state treasurer until after the occurrence of the accident in which Hillehrandt was injured. The securities were delivered by the state treasurer to Donahue, the local receiver of the Southern Surety Company of New York, under instructions issued to him on May 2, 1932, upon an order of the judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.

The Home Indemnity Company is a foreign corporation qualified to do business in this state, with Rryan-Bell Company, Inc., of New Orleans, expressly designated as its general agent.

Defendant contends that under the provisions of article 162 of the Code of Practice, requiring suits to be brought against a defendant in a court of his domicile, plaintiff’s suit should be brought in the parish of Orleans, where Bryan-Bell Company, Inc., defendant’s agent for the service of process, is domiciliated.

Plaintiff contends, on the other hand, that the Home Indemnity Company, the Southern Surety Company of New York, and Thomas N. Carnahan are solidarity liable to him, and, therefore, under the sixth paragraph of article 165 of the Code of Practice, is suable at the domicile of Carnahan, which is the parish of Calcasieu. Plaintiff also con *353 tends that the district court of Calcasieu parish is vested with jurisdiction of the case under article 3042 of the Civil Code, providing that suits against certain sureties may be instituted in the court having original jurisdiction of the subject-matter.

Under the view we take of this case, it is not important to determine whether the defendant Home Indemnity Company is jointly or solidarily liable with Carnahan and the Southern Surety Company to the plaintiff. Conceding that such liability exists, the question nevertheless arises: Should not defendant be separately sued at his own domicile rather than at tlje domicile of one of his co-obligors? As we conclude he should be, no other duty rests upon us than to set foyth the reasons for our conclusion and to dismiss plaintiff’s suit.

Ai’ticle 162 of the Code of Practice announces -the general rule that, subject to the exceptions expressly provided by law, a person must be sued at his own domicile.

The exceptions to the general rule are set forth in article 165 of the Code of Practice and other statutes expressly providing for the bringing of suits in particular cases elsewhere than at the domicile of the defendant.

The sixth paragraph of article 165 of the Code of Practice reads as follows, viz.: “When the defendants are joint or solidary obligors, they may be cited at the domicile of any one of’them.”

Prior to the adoption of the Code of Practice of 1870, the only exception recognized by the courts was that joint obligors might be sued at the domicile of any one of them. This was because article 2080 of the Civil Code of 1825 required that all joint obligors should be made defendants in a suit against any one of them. And, therefore, it was held that a person who signed a joint obligation must be held to have thereby waived the right to be sued at his domicile as to that particular obligation. Toby & Co. v. Hart, 8 La. 523; Jelks v. Smith, 5 La. Ann. 674.

The exception thus established by the jurisprudence was incorporated into the Code of Practice of 1870. It was not until 1914 that the Legislature, by Act No. 71 of that year, added the words “or solidary” to the codal provision, so that the sixth exception to the general rule as set forth in the codal article was made to read as we have herein-above quoted it. See King v. Wm. J. Burns International Detective Agency, 151 La. 211, 91 So. 681.

Act No. 103 of 1870 (Ex. Sess.) § 2, printed in Acts of 1871, p. 18, provides that it shall be unnecessary to make all joint obligors parties to the suit, but that each may be sued and judgment obtained separately for their respective proportions of the joint debt or obligation. This statute has removed the necessity arising under article 2085 (formerly article 2080) of the Civil Code of making joint obligors parties to a suit against one of them.

And solidary obligors may also be sued severally as well as jointly at the will of the obligee. Civ. Code, arts. 2091, 2094 and 2095; Breedlove v. Nicolet, 7 Pet. (32 U. S.) 413, 8 L. Ed. 731.

But while joint or solidary obligors may be sued and judgment obtained against them separately, we know of no law which authorizes the institution of a separate suit against one of such obligors at the domicile of any *355 of his co-obligors. Certainly, the sixth paragraph of article 165 of the Code of Practice contains no such authorization. What the codal article does provide is that joint or solidary defendants may be sued at the domicile of any one of them.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 254, 177 La. 349, 1933 La. LEXIS 1693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillebrandt-v-home-indemnity-co-la-1933.