Mansur v. Abraham

164 So. 421, 183 La. 633
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1935
DocketNo. 33552
StatusPublished

This text of 164 So. 421 (Mansur v. Abraham) 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
Mansur v. Abraham, 164 So. 421, 183 La. 633 (La. 1935).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The judges of the Court of Appeal for the First Circuit, availing themselves of the provisions of section 25 of article 7 of the Constitution (1921), have asked for instruction on a question of law. The question is whether, in a tort action, which is subject to the prescription of one year, the filing of the suit and serving of the citation on the next day after the year has [635]*635expired will interrupt prescription, when the last day of the year was Sunday. Putting the question another way, may the injured party, in such a case, wait until Monday, the next day after the year has expired, or must he file his suit on Saturday, the day before the year will expire, in order to interrupt prescription ?

In this instance the damages were sustained on the 17th day of December, 1932, in an automobile accident, in which two persons were injured. They filed their suits and had the citations served on Monday, the 18th day of December, 1933; which was one day too late if the right of action was not saved by the fact that the 17th day of December, 1933, was a dies non juridicus. The defendants pleaded the prescription of one year. The district judge overruled the plea, and, after hearing the case on its merits, gave judgment for $2,000 damages to the plaintiff in one of the suits, and for $250 damages to the plaintiff in the other suit. The defendants appealed to the Court of Appeal. That court sustained the judgments overruling the plea of prescription, but reversed the judgments on their merits, and rejected the plaintiffs’ demands. Mansur v. Abraham (La. App.) 159 So. 146, and Id. (La. App.) 159 So. 154. One of the three judges of the Court of Appeal handed down a dissenting opinion on the plea of prescription, but concurred in the judgments rejecting the plaintiffs’ demands. Another of the judges of the Court of Appeal concurred in the overruling of the plea of prescription, but dissented from the judgment rejecting the plaintiffs’ demands. The plaintiffs applied for a rehearing, which was granted. When the case came up on the rehearing, Judge Mouton, who had written the prevailing Opinion on the former hearing, had retired from office, and his successor, Judge Dore, took part in the second hearing of the case. The court then submitted to this court the question of prescription.

The rule has been established by a consistent line of decisions by this court, the earliest of which decisions was rendered more than a hundred years ago, that, when*the last day of a term allowed by law for taking any stated action in a judicial proceeding falls on a Sunday or other legal holiday, the action may be taken on the next day following, as effectively as if taken on the day before the last day of the term. Allen & Deblois v. Their Creditors, 8 La. 221; Garland v. Holmes, 12 Rob. 421; State ex rel. Luling v. Judge, 24, La. Ann. 333; State ex rel. Duffel v. Marks, 30 La. Ann. 97; Catherwood & Co. v. Shepard, 30 La. Ann. 677; Metropolitan Bank v. Aarons-Mendelsohn Co., 50 La. Ann. 1047, 24 So. 125: Meyer v. Bichow, 133 La. 975, 63 So. 487; Kelly, Weber & Co. v. F. D. Harvey & Co., 178 La. 266, 151 So. 201, 203. See, also, Bernadas v. Miller, 13 La. App. 706, 129 So. 175, by the Court of Appeal for'the parish of Orleans.

In Allen & Deblois v. Their Creditors, supra, decided in April, 1835, where the law allowed the creditors ten days in'which to file an opposition to the appointment of a syndic, and the tenth day in that case fell on Sunday, it was held that an opposi[637]*637tion filed on Monday, the eleventh day, was in time. The court gave these reasons for the ruling, viz.:

“In the present case, the tenth day was Sunday, and the opposition was filed on the next day. It cannot he said that the opponent was too late on Saturday night, because the law allows ten days, and at least any time within the tenth day would suffice. But the tenth day happened to be not a judicial day, and it was impossible to file the opposition on that day, all judicial proceedings being forbidden. If we should say, that the opposition comes too late, we should deprive the opposing creditor of one day allowed by law, or compel him to do, what is legally impossible.”

In Garland v. Holmes, supra, decided in 1846, it was held: “Where the last day allowed for obtaining an appeal falls on a day of public rest [the first day of January], the whole of the next judicial day is allowed.”

In State ex rel. Luling v. Judge, supra, decided in 1872, where the return day for the appeal, as extended, fell on a Sunday, it was held that the filing of the transcript on the next day, Monday, was in time.

In State ex rel. Duffel v. Marks, supra, decided in 1878, the last day of the ten days allowed by law for filing the transcript in the Supreme Court fell on a Sunday, and it was held that the filing of the transcript, on the next day, Monday, was in time.

In Catherwood & Co. v. Shepard, supra, decided in 1878, where the last one of the ten days allowed the defendant for answering the suit fell on 1st day of January, and a judgment by default was entered on the 2d day of January, it was. held that the judgment confirming the default was null because the 1st day of January was a dies non. The court announced the rule thus: “But if the last day of the time, allowed for the performance of any judicial act, falls upon a dies non, the whole of the next day is allowed for the performance of the act.”

In Metropolitan Bank v. Aarons-Mendelsohn Co., supra, decided in 1898, an order extending the time allowed for the filing of the transcript extended the time to “the first Monday in the month of November,” and it' so happened that the first Monday in November, that year, fell on the 1st day of November, which, being All Saints’ Day, was declared by Act No. 93 of 1892 to be a “day of public rest”; hence it was held that an application filed-on the 2d day of November, for another extension of the time allowed for filing the transcript, was not beyond the time allowed in the first extension.

In Meyer v. Bichow, supra, decided in 1913, the rule which in the other cases was applied to delays allowed in the course of judicial proceedings was declared applicable also to a case involving the question of peremption, thus:

“Where one has IS days in which to file a lien and serve an attested account, and the last day on which he can do it falls on a Sunday, he may file it on the first succeeding day which is not a dies non.”

[639]*639In Bernadas v. Miller, 13 La. App. 706, 129 So. 175, in 1930, the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans followed the ruling in State ex rel. Luling v. Judge, supra, and in Metropolitan Bank v. Aarons-Mendelsohn Co., supra, and held that where the time allowed for filing the transcript of appeal, as extended, fell on a Sunday, an application for further time was filed in time on the next day.

The attorneys for the plaintiffs in these cases cite Rady v. Fire Insurance Patrol, 126 La. 273, 52 So. 491, 139 Am. St. Rep. 511, as authority for the rule which we have stated; but in the Rady Case the reason why the service of citation on Monday, the 25th of June, 1906, was held to be in time to interrupt the prescription of one year was that the death of the plaintiffs son, for which the damages were claimed, occurred on the 25th of June, 1905, as a result of an accident which occurred on the 23d of June, 1905.

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Related

Mansur v. Abraham
159 So. 146 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1935)
Kelly, Weber & Co. v. F. D. Harvey & Co.
151 So. 201 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1933)
Allen v. Their Creditors
8 La. 221 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1835)
Rady v. Fire Ins. Patrol of New Orleans
52 So. 491 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1910)
Meyer v. Bichow
63 So. 487 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)
State ex rel. Duffel v. Marks
30 La. Ann. 97 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1878)
John H. Catherwood & Co. v. Shepard
30 La. Ann. 677 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1878)
Metropolitan Bank v. Aarons-Mendelsohn Co.
50 La. Ann. 1047 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1898)
Bernadas v. Miller
129 So. 175 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 421, 183 La. 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mansur-v-abraham-la-1935.