Kendig & Co. v. Campbell

2 McGl. 275
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1884
DocketNo. 67
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 McGl. 275 (Kendig & Co. v. Campbell) 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
Kendig & Co. v. Campbell, 2 McGl. 275 (La. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

Honorable A. L. Tissot,

judge of the Civil District Court, acting as judge ad hoc, delivered the opinion and decree of the court, in the words and figures following, to wit;

The suit of plaintiff is upon a promissory note for $500.31 made by defendant to the order of plaintiff. -

The defense is that said note was offered in evidence and used in trial of a cause, before the honorable, the late Fourth District Court for the parish of Orleans No. 44265 of its docket, and became merged in the judgment rendered therein, and defendant was no longer liable on said obligation, but fully relieved and discharged therefrom by compensation, by the verdict of the jury in said cause. In consequence, defendant substantially pleads herein, the judgment in said suit, No. 44265 of the docket of the honorable the late Fourth District Court for the Parish of Orleans, as res adjudicata barring this action.

It appears that at some time in 1876, W. S. Campbell, the defendant in this case, instituted a suit in the said honorable the late Fourth District Court for the Parish of Orleans, for $50,000.00 against an association known as “The Coal Association” of New Orleans, composed of Coyle and Co., a firm composed of W. G. Coyle and Samuel Alstin, residents of this parish, and of Simpson Hornor, a resident of Pittsburgh, state of Pennsylvania, Kendig & Co., a firm composed of Helen M. Cutler (wife of Theodore Kendig) and Robert Watson, resident of this parish, and of James Watson, a resident of Pittsburgli, Pa., and Wilmot & Co., a firm composed of W. G. Wilmot, and John H. Irwin, residents of this parish, and of Thomas Faucett, resident of Pittsburgh, Pa., alleging that one [277]*277of the number of “said Coal Association” acting for said association, and with the sanction and approval of the other members of said association had caused his arrest maliciously on a false criminal charge. Therein he also claimed that said “Coal Association” owed him $400.00 for salary as- its bookkeeper and cashier, he having been illegally discharged from their employ. And, he alleged exceptions that the pretense upon which his said arrest, maliciously procured, was based, was that he had retained an amount of $400.00 of the defendant association’s money, which he had placed in the hands of a third person pending an. arbitration whether or not the $400.00 salary claimed to be due him was justly due to him. Thus, therefore, he was charged unjustly with the criminal charges of larceny and embezzlement, and maliciously and illegally arrested and imprisoned.

And that in order to obtain his release from said arrest and imprisonment, he was compelled to turn over to said coal association, “the said sum of $400.00 which he had retained as aforesaid on account of or as security for his salary due him by said association.”

The defendant “coal association” answered this demand by a denial of all and singular the allegations of said Campbell, with the exception of a few specially admitted, which they set forth and explained. They admitted having caused the arrest of Campbell, and justify their action .on the ground that he had no right to retain said amount of $400.00. In the course of their answer they denied owing him said sum and claimed that they had discharged him for cause, a wanton and malicious attack, and assault and battery, made by him on one of his employers, and defendant in the cause. And they charged that the excuse said Campbell had given for retaining said amount of $400.00 to wit: That he wished to secure his salary, was not true, “because the truth was, he was at that time the debtor of one of the respondents in the sum of $500.00 evidenced by his promissory note held by said defendant, and these two years passed due and wholly, unpaid.”

[278]*278In that case the note here sued upon was not pleaded in compensation or offset of Campbell’s demand. Nor could it be without admitting both the claim for damages and that for salary. It was not offered in evidence, the assertion of appellant to the contrary notwithstanding. It was not and could not be in question in that suit. It could not and did not form an element thereof. It could have, and actually had no other bearing in the case than to show that Campbell had no excuse in retaining the $400.00 which he had in his possession when arrested. The defendant association had denied their liability for the damages claimed of them; and they had also denied owing Campbell any salary. They do not claim to offset his demand by a claim for the amount due to one of them, as evidenced by this note. Nor did the holder of the note attempt to reconvene to recover the amount due. He would not have been allowed to do so. They used the note in that cause simply to destroy the alleged pretense set up by Campbell in justification of his retention of the $400.00 hence it is diffiult to conceive how this plea of res adjudicata can be sustained in this cause.

The revised Civil Code, article 2286 (2265) provides that:

“The authority of the thing adjudged takes place only with respect to what was the object of the judgment. The thing demanded must be the same; the demand must be founded on the same cause of action; the demand must be between the same parties, and found by them against each other in the same quality.” And Kerlam vs. Rippy, 3 Ann. 202, the Supreme Court decided that “the only test as to the effect of a decree as res adjudicata is its finality as to the matters embraced in it and its having the requisites prescribed by article 2265” (now article 2286) of the Civil Code.

So in Edwards vs. Ballard, 14 Ann. 362, it was held that: “the plea or res adjudicata is without force unless the object demanded in the former suit is precisely the same as that demanded in the action pending.”

So again in the case of William C. Peyton vs. A. A. Evans, J. C. Spiers, intervenor, 16 Ann. 135, it was decided that: [279]*279“the authority of the thing adjudged takes place only with respect to what was the object of the judgment. The thing demanded must be the same, the demand must be founded on the samé cause of action, the demand must be between the same parties, and formed by them against other in the same quality. Civil Code 2265.” And to the same effect is the decision in the case of J. S. Cantrello vs. Roman Catholic Congregation of St. James, 16 Ann. 442, and many other decisions up to the present. As stated by the Supreme Court in the case of Rhoda E. White vs. Myra Clark Gaines, 29 Ann. 772: “To establish the plea of res adjudicata, there must be an identity of parties, of capacity, of object, and of cause of action.”

Let us apply these tests here. Can this note, candidly, be said to have been the object, or to have formed even any part of the object of the judgment rendered in the suit of Campbell against “coal association?” Assuredly not. Was the thing demanded in that suit the same as is here claimed? No. No demand was made therein for this note. Was any demand made in that suit, for the amount due upon that note? None. The cause of action founded upon this note was never urged in that suit for damages and salary. The parties to this suit were parties to that other suit. But they formulated no demand against each other. Campbell formulated demand against the firm of Kendig and Co., and the individual members thereof, but the latter formulated none against him. Nor could they formulate any. They used the evidence of his indebtedness to them to repel a justification imagined by him to sustain his demand against them.

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Bluebook (online)
2 McGl. 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendig-co-v-campbell-lactapp-1884.