Lopez v. Bertel

198 So. 185
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1940
DocketNo. 17389.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 198 So. 185 (Lopez v. Bertel) 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
Lopez v. Bertel, 198 So. 185 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This litigation results from an automobile collision which occurred at about 2:00 o’clock in the morning on May 7, 1939, at the corner of Canal Street and Carrollton Avenue in New Orleans.

The cars involved were a Ford owned by Lawrence Lopez, Sr., and operated by his son, Lawrence, Jr., aged 17, two companions being seated on the front seat with him, and another car owned by Numa V. Bertel, Sr., which car, he alleges, was also a Ford, but which his son, Numa, Jr., who was driving it, states was a De Soto.

Lopez initiated this proceeding by filing suit in the First City Court against Bertel, Sr., and his liability insurance carrier, New York Casualty Company, both on his own behalf and for the use and benefit of his minor son, alleging various acts of negligence of young Bertel as the cause of the accident. In behalf of his son he claimed $50, and in his own behalf he prayed that he be awarded $90 for loss of earnings caused by the inability to use his car for a period of eighteen days, $10 “for doctor’s bills growing out of said accident” and,$50 for that part of the automobile repair bill which he himself was required to pay.

While he does not allege it, it appears, from other facts to which we shall refer, and also by inference from other allegations, that, of the total repair bill amounting to $169, Lopez, Sr., paid $50, the balance having been paid by-his insurer under a policy of “collision” insurance, by the terms of which his insurer agreed that, should his car, as a result of collision, sustain damage necessitating repairs costing more than $50, the first $50 should be paid by him (Lopez) and the balance would be paid by it (the insurer).

The said insurer, American Mutual Liability Insurance Company, then intervened,' alleging that it had issued the said policy of collision insurance; that it had paid $119 of the cost of repairing the damage to the Lopez .car and that it had taken from Lopez a subrogation and an assignment of his rights against the tort-feasor. It prayed for judgment for $119 against Bertel, Sr., and his insurer, the New York Casualty Company.

Both defendants — Bertel, Sr., and the New York Casualty Company — in answer to the petitions of plaintiff and of inter-venor, denied that the accident resulted *187 from any negligence of young Bertel and averred that the true cause was the negligence of young Lopez. Bertel, Sr., then assuming the position of plaintiff in re-convention, charged that the damage to his car had been caused solely by the alleged negligence of young Lopez and he prayed in reconvention for judgment against Lopez, Sr., and his liability insurance carrier for the amount of said damage, to-wit, $276, the loss admittedly sustained by him as the result of the damage to his car.

To the petition of intervention of the American Liability Insurance Company, both Bertel and the New York Casualty Company filed an exception of no right or cause of action.

When the matter came up for trial below, the judge a quo referred the exceptions to the merits. After a trial there was judgment for Lopez, Sr., in his own behalf for $60 and, in behalf of his minor son, Lopez, Jr., for $50, and in favor of American Mutual Liability Insurance Company, intervenor, for $119, and dismissing the reconventional demand of Bertel. Both defendants have appealed and Lopez, Sr., has answered the appeal praying for an increase in the award to him in his own behalf to $150, as originally prayed for.

When the matter was argued before us, counsel for defendants suggested that, though there had not been filed in the trial court, nor in this court, any challenge to the jurisdiction of the court below—to-wit, the First City Court of New Orleans—we should, nevertheless, take notice of that lack of jurisdiction and, on our own motion, dismiss the suit since the lack of jurisdiction is said to result from the fact that the amount claimed exceeds the maximum jurisdictional limit of the First City Court. We shall first consider this suggestion.

Wherever the court below was without jurisdiction ratione materiae, we not only are authorized, but are required, to dismiss a suit even though there has been filed no pleading challenging the jurisdiction. Among the annotations appearing under Article 606 of Dart’s Code of Practice appears the- following: “When jurisdiction is wanting ratione' materiae, the court is bound ex officio to notice it; and the judgment of a court wanting such jurisdiction will be null. Dupey v. Greffin[’s Ex’r], 1 Mart. (N.S.) 198; Lafon[’s Ex’rs] v. Lafon, 1 Mart. (N.S.) 703; Waters v. Wilson, 3 Mart. (N.S.) 135; Kerr v. Kerr, 14 La. 177; Greiner v. Thielen, 6 Rob. 365; Fleming v. Hiligsberg, 11 Rob. 77; Tague v. Royal Ins. Co., 38 La.Ann. 456; Riggs v. Bell, 39 La.Ann. 1030, 3 So. 183; Gee[’s Heirs] v. Thompson, 39 La.Ann. 310, 1 So. 537; Weis v. New Orleans Board of Trade, 125 La. 1010, 52 So. 130.”

See, also, State ex rel. Fourroux v. Board of Directors, Public Schools, Jefferson Parish, 3 La.App. 2; Picard v. Monroe Sand & Gravel Company, Inc., 6 La.App. 362.

The argument that the lower court is without jurisdiction is founded on the contention that we should consider the amount in dispute as $319 and should hold that, since this exceeds $300, the maximum jurisdictional limit of the First City Court, that court was without jurisdiction.

The items of damage which are involved and which, according to defendants, should be considered as parts of the same claim, are as follows:

(1) Claimed by Lopez, Sr., on behalf of Lopez, Jr., for personal injuries to the latter. $ 50.00

(2) Claimed by Lopez, Sr., as medical bills made necessary by the injuries sustained by Lopez, Jr. 10.00

(3) Claimed by Lopez, Sr., as his own loss resulting from damage to his car. 50.00

(4) Claimed by Lopez, Sr., as the value of the loss of the use of his car for eighteen days_ 90.00

(5) Claimed by American Mutual Liability Insurance Company, subrogee of Lopez, as the amount paid by it on account of the damage to the Lopez car. 119.00

$319.00

The argument of defendants is that these items of damage form part of only one claim arising out of only one tort founded on only one cause of action; that the sub-rogation of a part of his claim by Lopez, Sr., to an assignee did not have the effect of permitting two separate parts of the same claim to be tried in the First City Court since, if there had been no subrogation and had Lopez filed suit for the entire amount, he could not then have presented that claim for $319 in that court, and that *188 the claim of Lopez, Sr., for himself and the claim on behalf of his son are also parts of only one claim.

As apparent authority for the view that the subrogation did not make two claims where only one existed before, we find interesting Hanton v. New Orleans & Carrollton R. R. Light & Power Company, 124 La. 562, 50 So. 544. Kearney v. Fenerty, 185 La. 862, 171 So. 57, also tends to throw light on this question.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-v-bertel-lactapp-1940.