J. D. Adams Co. v. Dauterive

193 So. 506
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 1940
DocketNo. 6117.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 So. 506 (J. D. Adams Co. v. Dauterive) 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
J. D. Adams Co. v. Dauterive, 193 So. 506 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

The petition of plaintiff, J. D, Adams Company, in this suit which is predicated on an open account, contains three paragraphs, the prayer, and an affidavit.

The first paragraph recites that the defendant, Sidney J. Dauterive, is a resident of Rapides Parish, Louisiana.

The allegations of the second paragraph are: “That said defendant is justly and truly indebted unto your petitioner in the full sum of- One Hundred and Four and 21/100 ($104.21) Dollars, with legal interest thereon from September 21, 1935 until paid, for parts furnished, labor performed and other necessary expenses incurred in ■connection with the repairs to a 22/36 tractor, McCormick Deering, Serial No. T.G. 139054 M, as will be more fully shown on an itemized account thereof annexed hereto and made a part hereof.”

In the third paragraph it is alleged “that said account is past due and wholly unpaid, notwithstanding amicable demand.”

The prayer is for service on the defendant according to law, and “that there be judgment in favor of your petitioner, J. D. Adams Company, and against the defendant, Sidney J. Dauterive, for One Hundred and Four and 21/100 ($104.21) Dollars, with legal interest thereon from September 21, 1935, until paid, for all costs of this suit, and for general relief.”

An itemized statement is annexed to the petition as declared in paragraph two.

In due course, the following answer was filed:

“Now into Court, through undersigned counsel, comes Sidney J. Dauterive, defendant herein, and in answer to plaintiff’s petition, with respect shows:
“Your respondent admits the allegations of paragraph (1) of plaintiff’s petition.
“Your respondent denies all allegations of fact contained in paragraph (2) of plaintiff’s petition; as to the conclusions of law therein set forth, your respondent shows tKat he is not called upon to admit or deny the same.
“Your respondent denies all allegations of fact contained in paragraph (3) of plaintiff’s petition.
“Wherefore your respondent prays that the demands of plaintiff be rejected and disallowed, all at its costs. Prays for all orders and decrees necessary and for full and general relief.”

On the trial of the case, the plaintiff offered in evidence the depositions of three non-resident witnesses, with attached documents, and certain correspondence; and it rested.

The defendant was then sworn as a witness in his own behalf. Before the propounding of any questions to him, however, the following objection was urged: “Counsel for plaintiff, Mr. Hawthorn, objects to any testimony in which the defendant seeks to deny any part of the account or as to any particular items on the account for the reason that no complaint is made in the answer of the defendant of any specific item thereon and that no specific item can be challenged under a general denial, because the defendant is required under Act 300 of 1914 to specify what items on the account were correct or incorrect and what are correct, if the account is not correct as a whole, and particularly is this true since all of the items grew out of one particular transaction, since it appears in the cross interrogatories propounded to the witnesses for plaintiff that only a part of the account is going to be denied.”

The objection was sustained and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant, as prayed for. A motion for a new trial was thereafter filed and overruled.

Defendant perfected this appeal and now complains “that the ruling of the lower court in excluding defendant’s proof under the form of answer filed by him does violence to every acceptable and recognized form of pleading in Louisiana. Further, the legal and practical effect of the ruling of the lower court is that the defendant, without valid reason, has not had his day in court, tie has filed the character of answer permitted and even required by the Pleading and Practice Act of Louisiana, and yet he cannot offer proof thereunder.”

Act No. 157 of 1912, as amended and re-enacted by Acts Nos. 300 of 1914, 228 of 1924, and 27 of 1926, known as our Pleading and Practice Act, provides in part that, “The defendant, in his answers, shall either admit or deny specifically each material allegation of fact contained in plaintiff’s petition; provided that nothing in this Act contained shall be construed as affect *508 ing in any way the existing rules of practice in regard to what defenses must be specially pleaded by a defendant.” This provision impliedly repealed Article 323 of the Louisiana Code of Practice to the extent that it stated that, “When the defendant answers to the merits, he is not bound to answer specially to all the allegations contained in the petition; it is sufficient to deny, generally, all the facts stated * *

The statute under consideration permits, but does not require, the defendant to make affirmative allegations in his answer. The matter of what defenses must be specially pleaded is governed by the rules of practice that prevailed before the adoption of such statute. Newspaper Feature Service v. Southern Publishing Co., 140 La. 702, 73 So. 777. Any defense that is in the nature of a confession and avoidance requires special allegations. Byrne v. Hibernia National Bank, 31 La.Ann. 81. Included in this classification is the defense of payment. Times-Picayune Publishing Co. v. Jacobs, 13 La.App. 1, 126 So. 741; Ethridge-Atkins Corp. v. City of Alexandria, La.App., 178 So. 673.

It appears to us that the answer in the instant controversy meets the requirements of the quoted provision of the Pleading and Practice Act, and properly places at issue plaintiff’s demands. Therein, defendant has specifically admitted the allegations of paragraph one of the petition, and in like manner denied the allegations of paragraphs two and three. True, the answer does not separately refer to each of the various items listed on the statement attached to the petition, allegedly furnished by plaintiff, such as tractor parts, labor and expenses; but a separate reference thereto is unnecessary in view of the in globo allegations of paragraph two of the petition. Anent this question, it was said in Newspaper Feature Service v. Southern Publishing Co.,-supra [140 La. 702, 73 So. 779], that: “To require the defendant to subdivide or separate the allegations of each numbered paragraph, and specifically deny each allegation therein, would imply that the plaintiff had embodied more than one material allegation of fact in a single paragraph of his petition, in violation of the first rule laid down in the pleading and practice statute. That rule permits the plaintiff — in fact it requires him — to separate his allegations of fact so that there shall be only one material allegation contained in each numbered paragraph. If he complicates the allegations of his petition by alleging more than one material fact in a single paragraph, so that an answer thereto might not be specific, the fault is in the plaintiff’s, not the defendant’s, manner of pleading. The statute has put it into the power and under the control of the plaintiff to make the defendant’s answers as-specific and direct as the plaintiff may require, by alleging each material fact in a separate paragraph, separately numbered,, as far as practical.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-d-adams-co-v-dauterive-lactapp-1940.