Lotz v. Polizzotto

161 So. 901, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 592
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1935
DocketNos. 1460, 1461.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 So. 901 (Lotz v. Polizzotto) 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
Lotz v. Polizzotto, 161 So. 901, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 592 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

ELLIOTT, Judge.

This is a controversy concerning liability for the fees of an expert examiner of questioned documents, employed under an agreement of the parties in the above consolidated suits. The fee with expense added was fixed at $569.12 and taxed as cost to be paid by Mrs. Marie Hebert Lotz and John T. Silmon, defendants in rule. The amount covered his fee in both cases. John T. Silmon has appealed. Mrs. Lotz did not appeal.

The record shows that Mrs. Marie Hebert Lotz, testamentary executrix of the estate of Lewis B. Hart, acting in her said capacity, instituted suit No. 891 against Samuel Poliz-zotto on a note for $26,000 and another, No. 892, against Sam Polizzotto and V. Polizzotto & Sons on a note for $24,000; both filed May 26, 1928.

Acting under the provisions of Act No. Ill of 1926 defendants in both suits appeared on June 2, 1928, and, suggesting to the court that the suits were based on alleged promissory notes to. which a defense of forgery would be made, and that it would be necessary for them to incur heavy expense in employing an expert examiner of questioned documents, they each obtained from the court an order calling on Mrs. Lotz to show cause why they should not be authorized by the court to employ an expert examiner and why she should not be ordered td furnish bond for cost.

The court, acting on their respective motions, signed an order June 2, 1928, requiring Mrs. Lotz to show cause on June 12, 1928, why bonds should not be furnished as prayed for. If any answer was filed to these rules or action taken by the court thereon, the record does not show it, but the record shows that on November 16, 1928, she did furnish a bond in the sum of $500 in each case with John P. Silmon as surety. These bonds were made payable to John Omer Hebert, clerk of court, and each carries the usual conditions stipulated in bonds for cost.

The defendants then answered plaintiff’s suit against them. In each suit it is denied that defendants signed the notes, and alleged that their purported signatures thereto were forgeries, and, by supplemental petitions, demands in reconvention were set up against the plaintiff. The cases were consolidated by agreement of the parties, and, after a number of continuances, were, on motion of defendants, set for trial to take place on July 1, 1930.

When called, both cases were, on plaintiff’s motion, discontinued and dismissed at her cost; the court granting her motion without prejudice to the reconventional demand which was 'left pending against her.

Defendants, exercising their reserved rights, prosecuted their demand and obtained a judgment in reconvention against her in each ease, holding that the notes sued on were forgeries and ordering that as such they be canceled. The judgment in reconvention does not expressly* say who is to pay the cost, but under Code Practice, art. 551, Mrs. Lotz, having been east, was thereby made liable for the cost. Samuel Polizzotto and y. Polizzotto & Sons paid the fees of J. Eordyce Wood, employed by them as expert, and then obtained from the court an order calling on Mrs. Lotz and John T. Silmon, her surety, to show cause why the fee of said J. Fordyce Wood should not be fixed and taxed as cost against them, making good the amount Movers had paid Wood on said account.

Mrs. Lotz and Silmon appeared and urged as an exception thereto that the rule set up no right or cause of action against them, which was overruled. Defendants in rule then appeared, and, each answering the rule, urged a number of defenses against their alleged liability.

Silmon urges that he is not liable because the cases were consolidated without his consent. The consolidation was agreed to and ordered, no doubt, for the purpose of minimizing the cost, and the cost was made less by the consolidation. The consent of a surety on a bond for cost is not necessary in order to enable the parties to agree to, and the court to order, the consolidation, a mere incident preparatory to trial on the merits. The position of the surety was not altered nor prejudiced by the consolidation, but thereby bettered, so he has no ground for complaint on that account. He contends that he is not liable because the cost was not itemized. The note of testimony taken on the trial of the rule to fix and tax the fee shows how the amount was reached and made up. Our examination of the testimony satisfies us that the itemization and proof were sufficient, and that Silmon had no reason for complaint on that account.

He contends that J. Fordyce Wood was not appointed by the court and that he therefore cannot avail himself of the provisions of Act No. Ill of 1926 to have his fee taxed as cost on that account.

*903 The bonds each say on their face: “Plaintiff in the above numbered and entitled suit has under Act No. Ill of 1926 been by order of the court required to furnish bond for such cost as may accrue or be taxed in said case.”

The act referred to provides: “That in all cases the surety for costs shall be considered a party to such suit or proceeding and shall be condemned for the amount of costs recoverable in solido with the principal if cast in the final judgment in such proceeding.” Section 2.

The record shows the employment of J. For-dyce Wood as an expert, the work done by him as such, preparing for the trial on the merits, and the judgment in reconvention obtained by defendants against the plaintiff, establishing the forgeries.

Upwards of two years after the bonds were filed, but about six months before the suits were discontinued and dismissed, the parties entered into an agreement which, signatures omitted, reads as follows:

“Mrs. Marie Hebert Lotz v. Sam Polizzotto
“Mrs. Marie Hebert Lotz v. Sam Polizzotto et als.
“Nos. 891-892
“18th Judicial District of the State of Louisiana, Parish of Iberville.
“Stipulation:
“It is agreed and understood between the attorney for the plaintiff and the attorney for the defendant in the above numbered and en- ■ titled cases, that any handwriting expert employed by the parties shall have access to the original notes involved in these suits for the purpose of determining the authenticity of the signatures thereto, without however, removing the notes from the office of the clerk of court at Plaquemine, Louisiana. And in making said examination without the right to use chemicals, sharp-pointed instruments or any other article or thing which might in any sense change or otherwise affect said notes. It is further agreed and understood 'that in accordance with the laws of this state governing such matters, the fees of any such experts shall be fixed by the court in the legal manner and shall be assessed as part of the cost to be paid by the party cast, it being understood however that this clause is in no sense to change the law which governs the fixing of expert fees, either as to the number of witnesses by law or the amount. Done and signed at Baton Rouge, La., this -day of January 1930.”

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 901, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lotz-v-polizzotto-lactapp-1935.