Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board

172 So. 159, 186 La. 283, 1937 La. LEXIS 1079
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 4, 1937
DocketNo. 33931.
StatusPublished

This text of 172 So. 159 (Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board) 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
Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 172 So. 159, 186 La. 283, 1937 La. LEXIS 1079 (La. 1937).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

(1) The plaintiff is the holder of a batch of school certificates, about 213 in number, amounting to $8,906.95, issued by the Board of School Directors in 1874, 1875, and 1876, under the provisions of Act No. 36 of 1873, for teachers’ salaries and other expenses of the public schools in -the city of New Orleans.

This case was here before, on an appeal taken by plaintiff from a judgment sustaining an exception of no cause or right of action and plea of prescription of ten years, which are again pleaded in the case at bar.

On that appeal, the judgment of the Civil District Court was reversed; the exception of no right or cause of action and the plea of prescription were overruled, and the case was remanded to the Civil District Court for trial on its merits. Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 155 La. 116, 98 So. 860. Having tried the case, the Civil District Court gave judgment for the plaintiff for the amount sued for, with legal interest from judicial demand'.

The defendant appealed from that decision and, in Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 173 La. 114, 136 So. 287, 288, we affirmed our former ruling in Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 155 La. 116, 98 So. 860, to the effect that the right of action of plaintiff did not arise until the adoption of Act No. 214 of 1912 and that, inasmuch as the suit was brought within ten years after the passage of the act, the action was not prescribed. We based that ruling upon the authority of Gasquet v. Board of Directors of City Schools, 45 La.Ann. 342, 12 So. 506, and-announced that our ruling in Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 155 La. 116, 98 So. 860, was “the law of this case.”

The exception of no right or cause of action and the plea of prescription of ten years, pleaded by defendant School Board in the instant case, are therefore overruled.

(2) As stated in Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 173 La. 114, 117, 136 So. 287, 288: “On its merits, the case is governed by the ruling in Gasquet v. School Directors, 45 La.Ann. 342, 12 So. 506. In the syllabus of the decision it was said, of the certificates of the same tenor as the certificates held by the plaintiff in this case:

“ ‘The title of plaintiff depends on proof of indorsement of the certificates by the parties to whom they were payable.’ ”
“In the opinion which we rendered in this case [Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 155 La. 116, 98 So. 860], on the exception of no cause or right of action and on the plea of prescription, we did not direct attention to the fact that, under the ruling in the Gasquet Case, the plaintiff would be required to prove that the certificates which he holds were indorsed or assigned by the parties to whom they were issued. We said that the plaintiff should be given judgment for the amount of such certificates as he might *287 prove to be correct and valid; but we did not mean by that to dispense with proof of the assignment or indorsement of such certificates.” 173 La. 114, 119, 136 So. 287, 288. (Italics ours.)

As to the status of the certificates sued on in Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 173 La. 114, 136 So. 287, 288, it is said at page 118 of the opinion: “Among the certificates sued on in this case we find 7 that are not indorsed at all; 19 indorsed not'by the persons to whom they were issued but by other parties per procuration, without any proof of authority, or proof of the genuineness df the signatures of the parties who made the indorsements; 16 certificates on which the names of the indorsers do not correspond with the names of the persons to whom the' certificates were issued; and 10 certificates purporting to be indorsed by parties other than the parties to whom the certificates were issued, 9 of which certificates purport to bear the ‘mark’ of the parties to whom they were issued, and one of which does not even have the so-called ‘mark’ to represent the signature of the party to whom it was issued. The other certificates — about 161 in number— appear to have been indorsed by the parties to whom they were issued, but, as to these certificates, no one undertook to identify the signahire of any one of the supposed indorsers; and it would seem almost incredible that any one could identify these signatures fifty years after they zvere written. We are constrained, therefore, to follow the ruling in the Gasquet Case, and dismiss this suit, as in case of nonsuit,” which was done accordingly. (Italics ours.)

The present suit was filed in the Civil District Court for the parish ,of Orleans February 18, 1932, on 213 school certificates totalling the sum of $8,906.95, with interest prayed for from judicial demand, November 22, Í917, and all costs of suit. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against the Orleans Parish School Board March 31, 1936, in the'sum of $7,-702.19, with legal interest from judicial demand, November 22, 1917, and for all costs, and from this judgment the Orleans Parish School Board has appealed.

In the Gasquet Case, decided in February, 1893, recovery was had on certificates of the same tenor as the certificates held by the plaintiff in this case; but in that case the circumstances constituted corroborative evidence of the ■ genuineness of the indorsements on the mass of the certificates, and only 19 years had elapsed from the date of issuance of the first certificates in 1874.

In reviewing the testimony in that case (45 La.Ann. 342, 344, 345, 12 So. 506, 507), the court said: “The main witness is one C. W. Boothby, who, during most of the period covered by the certificates, had been superintendent of the public schools, or a member of .the board and chairman of the committee on teachers, in which capacities he received weekly and monthly reports, and many other communications, from the teachers, and also had the duty of superintending the pay rolls, and seeing *289 that they were properly signed by the teachers and other employees.

“He thus, from constant inspection, became, naturally, well acquainted with their signatures; and we find -nothing incredible in his ability to recall them, when exhibited to him, even after the lapse of years.” (Italics ours.)

In the instant case, the testimony of plaintiff as to the indorsements of these certificates was taken in 1933, or 59 years after the first issue in 1874. The strong corroborative circumstances in the Gasquet Case as to the genuineness of the indorsements are absent from the case at bar; “ * * * and it would seem almost incredible that any one could identify these signatures fifty years after they were written,” to use the.. language of Chief Justice O’Niell in discussing these same certificates in Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board, 173 La. 114, 119, 136 So. 287, 288.

' Plaintiff’s case rests upon the testimony of three witnesses, Charles M. Morales, Miss Eliska Louque, and Mrs. Louise L. Burton.

The following certificates were handed to Mr. Morales for the purpose of identifying the indorsements, after being marked as exhibits as follows: Nos. 43, 65, 66, 67, 68, 89, 120, 122, 124, 125, 126, 131, 178, 180, 197, 198, 205, 206, and 208. Tr., p. 13. Not one of these certificates was indorsed by the payee to whom it was issued.

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Related

Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board
136 So. 287 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)
Martinez v. Orleans Parish School Board
98 So. 860 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1924)
Gasquet v. Board of Directors
45 La. Ann. 342 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 159, 186 La. 283, 1937 La. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-orleans-parish-school-board-la-1937.