In re Great Southern Lumber Co.

62 So. 117, 132 La. 989, 1912 La. LEXIS 1015
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 21, 1912
DocketNo. 18,965
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 So. 117 (In re Great Southern Lumber 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
In re Great Southern Lumber Co., 62 So. 117, 132 La. 989, 1912 La. LEXIS 1015 (La. 1912).

Opinion

MONROE, J.

In May and July, 1906, the Great Southern Lumber Company entered into certain contracts with Stevenson & Adams for the construction of a number of buildings in the parish of Washington, which contracts were recorded, and, having been executed, the last payment thereunder was made in September, 1907. In March, 1907, two other contracts were made between the same parties, contract A, for the erection of 52 dwellings, and contract B, for the erection of a hotel and other buildings, which were not recorded, and upon which, in December, 1907, the contractors defaulted. The company, (meaning plaintiff) thereupon, after notice to the surety of the contractors to complete the work, had it completed under contracts with Plint, Irving & Stoner Company, and Knoxville Plumbing Company (under which last-mentioned name John P. Moss conducted his business), at a cost which left a balance due, under the contracts with Stevenson & Adams, of $24.607.95, and the company deposited that amount in court and called the creditors of said original contractors to interplead with regard to its distribution. After hearing, the judge a quo found that the amount so deposited correctly represented the balance due and (on May 9, 1911) adjudged that payments therefrom should be made as follows:

1. Costs of this proceeding..................
2. Gassie & Beary, stenographers...........$ 60 00
3. J. Vol Brock and W. J. Dobson, auditors 1,000 00
4 Gordon G. Goodbee, attorney for absent creditors ................................. 200 00
5. Travelers’ Insurance Company (with interest and costs)...................... 1,168 68
6. A. F. Leonhardt & Co. (with interest and costs) ............................... 1,126 07
7. Balance to be distributed among the following named creditors in proportion the amounts of their respective judgments, to wit:
A. J. Nelson Manufacturing Company.. 6,951 00
Ivy G. Kittridge.......................... 310 80
Flint, Irving & Stoner Company........ 13,098 93
Interstate Electric Company............ 1,316 83
H. W. McLean............................ 169 83
B. P. Burke...........................'.... 148 85
Salmen Brick & Lumber Company, Limited .................................. 2,777 40
A. Baldwin & Co., Limited............... 4,985 61

The plea of the prescription of one year, against the claims of laborers, was sustained, save where acknowledged accounts had been filed, in which cases, it was overruled; but those claims and all others, save as above stated, were rejected, as claims against the plaintiff company, with reservation, as to the laborers, of such rights as they may have against Stevenson & Adams. Prom the judgment -so rendered, the following named parties appealed, or attempted to appeal, viz.: By joint motion, May 9, 1911, A. J. Adams and 23 other laborers. By joint peti[994]*994tion, May 20, 1911, J. J. Pounds and 35 other laborers. By' two joint petitions, May 20, 1911, True Tagg Paint Company; Campbell Glass & Paint Company; Evans Manufacturing Company; Knoxville Plumbing Company ; John P. Moss; and De Wing & Sons.

On Motions to Dismiss Joint Appeals of J. J. Pounds et al.

I. Flint, Irving & Stoner Company move to dismiss the joint appeal of J. J. Pounds • and others, on the ground “that no proper citation has issued, to mover herein.” And A. Baldwin & Co., Limited, H. W. McLean, A. J. Nelson Manufacturing Company, Travelers’ Insurance Company, Ivy G. Kittridge, Salrnen Brick & Lumber Company, New Orleans National Bank, and Interstate Electric Company present a similar motion, based on the ground stated, and the further grounds:

“That there was no ' * * * prayer for citation of a large number of indispensable parties to the appeal, particularly the Great Southern Lumber Company, plaintiff and appellee; Stevenson & Adams, defendants and appellees; A. T. Stevenson and F. B. Adams; J. P. Moss; the Knoxville Plumbing Company; the Campbell Glass & Paint Company; I-ly. Sanders Company; Alfred Hiller & Co.; Wabash Screen Door Company; F. Codman Ford; the Commercial Germania Bank & Trust Company; receivers of L’Hote Manufacturing Company; White-ca-stle Lumber & Shingle Company; Cosmopolitan Engineering Company; United States Gypsum Company; New Orleans National Bank; De Wing & Sons; True Tagg Paint Company; Evans Manufacturing Company; et al.”

[1]1. The petition of J. J. Pounds and others prays for service and citation on Travelers’ Insurance Company, A. J. Nelson Manufacturing Company, A. F. Leonhardt & Co., Flint, Irving & Stoner Company, Ivy G. Kittridge, Interstate Electric Company, H. E. McLean, B. F. Burke, Salrnen Brick & Lumber Company, Limited; but there is no such prayer as to any other party to the litigation, nor was any other party served with 'copies of the petition, order of appeal, or citation. There appears, however, to have been a written, acceptance of service of petition and order of appeal and waiver of citation, by counsel, on -behalf of A. F. Leonhardt & Co., and an acceptance of service of petition and order of appeal similarly signed on behalf of the other parties above named, which acceptances and waivers -carry with them, in the one case as well as the other, waivers of citation. Hill v. Bowden, 3 La. Ann. 258.

[2] 2. The petition contains no prayer for service of petition or citation, nor was there any, on Great Southern Lumber Company, J. P. Moss, Knoxville Plumbing Company, Campbell Glass & Paint Compány, De Wing & Sons, Evans Manufacturing Company, or A. J. Adams and others; but the parties so named have waived such service and citation by appearing in this court, through counsel, and arguing the case upon its merits, without moving to dismiss the appeal.- Hen. Dig. vol. 1, p. 71.

[3] 3. The petition contains no prayer for service of petition or citation, nor was there such service or citation upon, nor waiver of the same by, Alfred Hiller & Co., Wabash Screen Door Company, F. Codman Ford, Commercial Bank & Trust Company, receivers, Whitecastle Shingle & Lumber Company, Cosmopolitan Engineering Company, United States Gypsum Company, New Orleans National Bank, Denham & Moore, or A. J. Den-ham, or A. P. Moore (the members of that ordinary partnership), and a few others; but the demands of the parties thus referred to were rejected by the trial judge, they took no appeals, are entitled to no relief in this court, and nothing is asked against them beyond the affirmance of the judgment appealed from. They have therefore no interest in what may be decided here, and there was no reason for citing them to appear.

[4] 4. There was no prayer for, or, service or citation upon Stevenson & Adams, or A. T. Stevenson, or F. B. Adams, members of [996]*996that ordinary partnership; or upon Gassie or Beary, stenographers; J. Yol Brock or W. J. Dobson, auditors; or Gordon G. Good-bee, attorney for absent creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 117, 132 La. 989, 1912 La. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-great-southern-lumber-co-la-1912.