Kelly, Weber & Co. v. F. D. Harvey & Co.

151 So. 201, 178 La. 266, 1933 La. LEXIS 1847
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 30, 1933
DocketNo. 32505.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 151 So. 201 (Kelly, Weber & Co. v. F. D. Harvey & 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
Kelly, Weber & Co. v. F. D. Harvey & Co., 151 So. 201, 178 La. 266, 1933 La. LEXIS 1847 (La. 1933).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This is a concursus proceeding, brought by Kelly, Weber & Co., Inc., a furnisher of materials used in the construction of a state highway. The defendants are F. D. Harvey & Co., Inc., contractor; the Union Indemnity Company, surety on the contractor’s bond; and the Louisiana Highway Commission, builder of the project. The plaintiff stated in the petition the names of several parties who had recorded claims for labor or materials furnished for the construction of the highway, and prayed that they should be cited to appear and assert their claims. Among those who were thus cited and appeared, and whose claims were recognized, were the Texas Creosoting Company, of Orange, Tex., and the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana. The claim of Kelly, Weber & Co., Inc., also was recognized.

The Louisiana Highway Commission filed an exception of no cause or right of action, which was overruled; and, reserving the benefit of -the exception, the commission answered, denying that there was any indebtedness due to Kelly, Weber & Co., Inc., but admitting that there was a balance of $8,375.91 due to the contractor, F. D. Harvey & Co., Inc. Judgment was rendered accordingly, ordering the Louisiana Highway Commission to deposit the sum of $8,375.91, with interest, into the registry of the court, for distribution, pro rata, among the furnishers of labor and material, according to the amounts for which the court gave judgment in their favor, respectively.

The Louisiana Highway Commission took a suspensive appeal from the judgment. Kelly, Weber & Co., Inc., and the Texas Creosoting Company and the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana have filed motions to dismiss the appeal on the following grounds:

First. That the petition for an appeal and the order of appeal were filed after the expiration of the ten days allowed by article 575 of the Code of Practice for taking a suspensive appeal.

Second. That the appellant did not pray for an appeal from the judgment.rendered in favor of the party now moving to dismiss the appeal, and that there was no order of appeal from that part of the judgment rendered in the ease.

Third. That the Louisiana Highway Commission judicially‘acknowledged the indebtedness for which the court gave judgment against the commission, and left in dispute only the interest on the amount, which is not sufficient in amount to bring the case within the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.

The Texas Creosoting Company makes the further complaint that, notwithstanding the company was represented by a law firm employed by the company, the citation to answer the appeal was addressed to, and served upon, a curator ad hoc, who was not appointed for *271 the purpose of service of citation to answer the appeal.

Taking up the complaints in their inverse order, we find no merit in the complaint of the Texas Oreosoting Company that the citation, addressed to the company, was served upon a curator ad hoc, instead of being served upon one of the attorneys employed by the company. In the petition for an appeal the appellant prayed for service of citation upon Kelly, Weber & Co., Inc., et al. As Kelly, Weber & Co., Inc., was the only plaintiff in the suit, it could not be doubted that the et al., in the prayer for service of citation to answer the appeal, meant the others in whose favor the judgment appealed from was rendered. The curator ad hoc, who was served with the citation to answer the appeal, was a member of the law firm whose members were appointed curators ad hoc, to represent the foreign corporation, when the suit was filed; and it appears that one of the members of the firmiwas a member also of the law firm afterwards employed by the- corporation. If the citation to answer the appeal was served upon the wrong party, the error of the clerk in issuing the citation, or of the officer who served it, should not be imputed to the appellant. Lewis v. Hennen, 13 La.. Ann. 259. The consequence of such an error would be not the dismissal of the appeal, but the granting of a reasonable delay for service of citation to answer the appeal. Code Prac. art. 898. There is no necessity nor request for any such delay in this case, because the appellee is before the court, praying for dismissal of the appeal on other grounds besides the alleged wánt of citation to answer the appeal.

The third ground -urged in the several motions to dismiss the appeal — that the highway commission acknowledged the debt and thereby left in dispute only the interest on the debt — is a matter to be considered in deciding this ease on its merits. The highway commission pleaded first that the plaintiff had no cause of action; and, the plea being overruled, the commission answered under protest, with reservation- of its exception of no cause of action. Whether there is any merit in the exception of no cause of action is a question which must await a decision of the case on its merits. The question of appellate jurisdiction, in a ease like this, is determined by the amount of “the fund to be distributed,” not the amount claimed. Const, art. 7, § 10. If the fund to be distributed in this case did not exceed $2,000, exclusive of interest, the appeal would belong in the Court of Appeal; but the fund to be distributed is $8,375.91.

The second ground urged in the motion to dismiss the appeal — that the appellant did not ask for an appeal from the judgment, rendered in,favor of any one of the parties, now moving to dismiss the appeal, and that no such order of appeal was granted — is not. well founded. The prayer of the appellant was merely for a suspensive appeal from the-judgment rendered in the case, and for service of citation upon Kelly, Weber & Co., Inc., et al. The et al. meant, of course,, the other parties, appellees. It is not necessary for an appellant to name the parties, to be cited as appellees, in the petition for an appeal. Vredenburg v. Behan, 32 La. Ann. 561. See, also, Barton v. Kavanaugh, 12 La. Ann. 332.

*273 The only remaining, and most interesting, complaint in the motions to dismiss the appeal is that the appeal was not taken within ten days from the day -on which the judgment was signed. That complaint, if well founded, is not. a cause for which the appeal should he dismissed, but a cause for which, if it is well founded, the appeal should be declared not to have stayed execution of the judgment appealed from. Reine v. Reine, 170 La. 839, 129 So. 364.

Article 575 of the Code of Practice provides that, if the appeal is taken within ten days, not including Sundays, from the. date on which the judgment is signed, or from the date of service of a notice of judgment in cases where such notice is necessary, the appeal shall stay execution of the judgment. The judgment in this case was signed on the 31st day of May, and the petition and order for the appeal were filed on the 13th of June; that is, on the thirteenth day after the judgment was signed. Two Sundays, the 4th and the 11th of June, intervened between the date of the judgment and the date on which the appeal was taken. The 3d of June was a legal holiday, being declared by Act No. 49 of 1928, p. 50, to be Confederate Memorial Day, and to be one of the “days of public rest and legal holidays,” mentioned in the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
151 So. 201, 178 La. 266, 1933 La. LEXIS 1847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-weber-co-v-f-d-harvey-co-la-1933.