Martin Exploration Co. v. Joli Services, Inc.
This text of 360 So. 2d 902 (Martin Exploration Co. v. Joli Services, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
MARTIN EXPLORATION COMPANY
v.
JOLI SERVICES, INC.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Liskow & Lewis, Stephen T. Victory and George J. Domas, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.
Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Toler & Sarpy, Peter Frank Liberto, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.
Before SAMUEL, REDMANN and STOULIG, JJ.
SAMUEL, Judge.
Plaintiff, Martin Exploration Company, filed suit against defendant, Joli Services, Inc., to recover damages for breach of an agreement to pay a proportionate share of the cost of drilling an oil well in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana.
Several pleadings and exceptions were filed which have no bearing on the issue now before the court. Eventually, defendant filed an amended answer and reconventional demand against plaintiff alleging two causes of action. In the reconventional demand defendant alleged it acted with regard to plaintiff as agent or nominee for two individuals, Whipple and Simmons, but alternatively asserted the reconventional demand in its own right if it could not assert them as agent.
Simultaneous with the filing of the reconventional demand, Whipple and Simmons filed a petition of intervention which contained *903 the two causes of action set forth in defendant's reconventional demand and a third distinct cause of action. In the intervention, interveners admitted that two of the causes of action set forth in the intervention were identical to the causes of action set forth by defendant in its reconventional demand.
In response to the intervention, plaintiff filed an exception of lis pendens against the first two causes of action and an exception of no cause of action against the third cause of action. In response to defendant's reconventional demand, plaintiff filed exceptions of lis pendens and lack of procedural capacity.
After a hearing, the trial court overruled the exceptions of no cause of action and lis pendens filed against the intervention, but sustained the exception of lis pendens directed against defendant's reconventional demand and dismissed that demand. The defendant, Joli Services, Inc., has appealed from that judgment.
The record does not indicate whether the reconventional demand or the intervention was filed first. The court stated that while Article 531 of the Code of Civil Procedure requires dismissal of all but the first suit, the lack of evidence regarding which demand was filed first required him to use his discretion in making a dismissal. He dismissed the reconventional demand because it was filed by defendant as agent for interveners, and the two causes of action set forth in the reconventional demand were also set forth in the intervention. Consequently, the trial judge concluded no harm or prejudice would be incurred by any party by his acting in this manner.
We conclude the trial judge acted incorrectly in maintaining plaintiff's exception of lis pendens. Code of Civil Procedure Article 531 provides:
"When two or more suits are pending in a Louisiana court or courts on the same cause of action, between the same parties in the same capacities, and having the same object, the defendant may have all but the first suit dismissed by excepting thereto as provided in Article 925. When the defendant does not so except, the plaintiff may continue the prosecution of any of the suits, but the first final judgment rendered shall be conclusive of all." LSA-C.C.P. Art. 531.
This article is clear in its requirement that two or more "suits" be pending in one or more Louisiana courts for lis pendens to be applicable.[1] The parties do not cite, nor were we able to locate, any case which allowed an exception of lis pendens to defeat an action brought in the same suit before the same judge on identical or similar causes of action.
As originally drafted, the Code of Practice of 1870 forbid bringing the same suit in different courts, but allowed bringing the same suit in the same court. Code of Practice Article 94 provided "The same cause cannot be brought before two separate courts . . . ."[2] Code of Practice Article 335, consistently supplemented Article 94 by allowing a declinatory exception to a suit when "it arises from the fact of another suit being pending, between the same parties, for the same object, and growing out of the same cause of action, before another court of concurrent jurisdiction." Article 94 was amended by Act 62 of 1918 to provide that the "same cause cannot be brought before the same or separate courts,. . . ." Article 335 was never amended and was generally followed by the courts of this state.
A case germane to the one before us is Federal Ins. Co. v. T. L. James & Co., [3] which was decided under Article 335. In that case, Reynolds Metal Company filed suit against T. L. James & Company for damages to an airplane it owned. In a subsequent suit Federal Insurance Company *904 also filed suit against T. L. James & Company as insurer and subrogee of Reynolds for the same damages to the same airplane, alleging Reynolds acted at plaintiff's direction and for its use and benefit in filing the first suit. During the course of the opinion, this court made the following statements:
"The situation then amounts to this: Two suits are pending against the same defendants in the same court on the same cause of action and for the identical amount, one brought by the agent of Federal Insurance Company and one by the Federal Insurance Company in its own name. There is no law of which we are cognizant which forbids a plaintiff to institute two suits against the same defendant on the same cause of action in the same court. A plea of lis pendens which incidentally was not filed, would not have sufficed to terminate or retard the second suit. The jurisprudence is to the effect that a plea of lis pendens under C.P. art. 335 has no basis to rest on when predicated upon the pendency of a suit in the same court as that in which it is pleaded. Saint v. Martel, 126 La. 245, 52 So. 474; Weems v. Moise, 3 La.App. 224. In the former case the Supreme Court said [126 La. 245, 52 So. 476]:
"If it had been the intention to legislate against the bringing of such suits in the same court, it is not to be supposed that language would have been used which, ex vi termini, limits the prohibition to the bringing of them in `separate courts,' and which declares that one may except to the jurisdiction of a court when he has already been sued by the same plaintiff for the same thing on the same cause of action in `another court of concurrent jurisdiction,' but does not declare that he may plead such exception when so sued in the same court in which the first suit was brought. The distinction is obvious and the reason for it is not less so; for, if a multiplicity of suits by and against the same person arising from the same cause of action and for the same thing, could be brought in as many different courts, the defendant would be unnecessarily harassed, and there would result a multiplicity of judgments, which might either conflict with each other, or, each being for the same thing, lead to confusion, and, perhaps, injustice in their execution; whereas, such suits brought in the same court may be cumulated, but, even if that be not done, it is not likely that the same judge will make rulings which conflict with each other, or that he will twice condemn a litigant for the same thing. * * *'
In Bogart v. Rils, 8 La.Ann.
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360 So. 2d 902, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 2940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-exploration-co-v-joli-services-inc-lactapp-1978.