Jackson v. Hart

190 So. 220, 192 La. 1068, 1939 La. LEXIS 1159
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 29, 1939
DocketNo. 35297.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 190 So. 220 (Jackson v. Hart) 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
Jackson v. Hart, 190 So. 220, 192 La. 1068, 1939 La. LEXIS 1159 (La. 1939).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Rhoda Jackson, as tenant, brought suit in the First City Court of New Orleans against Joseph Hart, as landlord, and the London & Lancashire Indemnity Company of America, his insurance carrier, to recover $298.50 as damages for personal injuries resulting from falling plaster in the leased premises. Plaintiff’s, suit was brought in forma pauperis, and after issue joined but before trial, it was compromised for $75.00, which amount was paid to plaintiff. As plaintiff availed herself of the provisions of Act. 156 of 1912 (commonly referred to as the Pauper Act), the usual fees of the Clerk and of the Constable of the First City Court were not paid when due, nor were they paid at the time the compromise settlement was effected.

. Anthony Herrle, Clerk, and James Dempsey, Constable of the First City Court of New Orleans, therefore, filed rules in that court against Rhoda Jackson, Joseph Hart, and the London & Lancashire Indemnity Company, praying that respondents be condemned solidarily to pay movers’ costs. Herrle, the Clerk, claimed $16.30 as his costs, and Dempsey, the Constable, claimed $5.00 as his costs. Movers’ claims were predicated on the provision in section 3 of Act 156 of 1912, providing that “should any compromise be entered into contrary to this provision [the provision that no compromise shall be effected without the prior payment of costs], each party thereto shall be liable to said officers for the amount of said costs accrued at the.time of said compromise.” (Brackets ours.)

Rhoda Jackson made no appearance in answer to the rules, but Joseph Hart and the London & Lancashire Indemnity Company appeared and challenged the constitutionality of the statutory provision on which the claims of the movers are based.

The judgment of the First City Court was in favor of the plaintiffs in rule as prayed for. From this judgment Joseph Hart and his insurance carrier appealed to the Court of Appeal for the Parish of Orleans, which court maintained the plea of unconstitutionality, annulled the judgment, and dismissed the rules. 186 So. 747. The case is now before us on a writ of review.

Defendants in rule pleaded that the part of section 3 of Act 156 of 1912, which *1073 makes litigants compromising with pauper' litigants liable for the accrued costs, is unconstitutional in that the body of the act is broader than its title. Defendants in rule contend that the title of the act is insufficient to convey notice of the legislative intention to make a party litigant liable for the costs incurred by another party litigant whose claim is compromised. The title of the act reads as follows:

“An Act To authorize litigants who are unable to pay costs to litigate as plaintiff, defendant, or intervenor, in the courts of this State without the previous or current payment of costs and without giving a bond for costs, and fixing the extent, terms, conditions and manner of exercising the right herein granted.”

The provision of the act under attack has already been set forth herein.

Section 16, Article 3 of the Constitution of 1921 provides that: “Every law enacted by the Legislature shall embrace but one object, and shall have a title indicative of such object.” Under corresponding sections in preceding constitutions, it was required that the object of the law be “expressed*’ in its title. The effect of the changing of the wording of the constitutional provision was to relax the previous requirement that the statute must “express” its' object, so now all that is required is that the title of the statute should be “indicative” of its object. The constitutional provision must be construed broadly rather than narrowly with a view of effectuating, not of frustrating, the legislative purpose. This is the rule prevailing everywhere for the construction of such a constitutional provision. In State v. Martin, La.Sup., 189 So. 109, 110, recently decided, this Court quoted and approved the statement of the prevailing rule announced in Corpus Juris, volume 59, page 809, viz.: “In determining the sufficiency of the title of a statute, under a constitutional provision requiring the subject of an act to be expressed in its title, its language should be ’ reasonably and liberally interpreted, in the light of the general legislative purpose * * * and should not be technically or critically construed, nor should it be held insufficient unless the question is free from doubt.” In the Martin.case, the Court also referred to and reaffirmed the well settled rule of this State that, whatever is germane and incidental to the purpose may be set out in the title, but if the body of the act embraces cognate matter not strictly within the text of the title, such matter will, nevertheless, be covered by the title. Since the means adopted to carry out a law is not an object of the law, such means need not be mentioned in the title. Marr’s Crim.Juris., vol. I, pp. 11, 12.

In the Martin case, this Court reversed a ruling of the district court sustaining a motion in arrest of judgment and ordered the ■ discharge of the defendant who was prosecuted for the unlawful possession of a narcotic drug. The motion in arrest was based on the alleged unconstitutionality of that part of section 2 of Act 14 of the Second Extra Session of 1934, making it unlawful to possess a narcotic drug except as authorized in the act, on the ground that the possession of narcotics is not included nor referred to in the title of the *1075 statute. After reviewing the law governing the question, the Court reached the conclusion that the alleged unconstitutional portion of the statute was embraced and by necessary implication was indicated in the title of the act, and for that reason the Court overruled the motion in arrest.

Another case recently decided by this Court, upholding the rule of liberal construction, in a case such as this, is W. M. Barret, Inc., v. First National Bank, 191 La. 945, 186 So. 741. In that case the Court maintained the constitutionality of Act 163 of 1934 limiting the time within which actions may be brought to enforce the liability of a bank for the payment of forged or raised checks, holding that the title of the statute sufficiently complied with the constitutional requirement as to the titles of legislative acts. In so holding, the Court declared: “The title of an act is not required to be a complete index to every section, but it is sufficient if the title in general terms directs attention to the purposes of the law.”

It was successfully argued in the Court of Appeal that there was no word or hint in the title of Act 156 of 1912 that the body of the Act imposed any obligation on the party opposing the pauper litigant; that there is no suggestion that the act contains any limitation upon the right of any such opposing party to compromise the suit,, which is a well recognized right under Article 3071 of the Civil Code. We do not think the argument is sound.

The adoption of Act 156 of 1912 created an innovation in the established procedure of this State for the payment of costs in judicial proceedings. Until the adoption of that statute it was a settled policy of the State that every litigant, regardless of his financial condition, must pay or secure court costs in advance, the policy being crystallized as to the Parish of Orleans in Act 136 of 1880, and as to the other parishes, in Act 203 of 1898.

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 220, 192 La. 1068, 1939 La. LEXIS 1159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-hart-la-1939.