Martinez v. Succession of Vives

30 La. 818
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1878
DocketNo. 7021
StatusPublished

This text of 30 La. 818 (Martinez v. Succession of Vives) 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. Succession of Vives, 30 La. 818 (La. 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Egan, J.

This suit is to revive a judgment rendered by the district court of Iberville on the eleventh of May, 186&. It was filed on the [819]*819ninth of May, 1876, and citation and copy of petition served personally upon the administrator of the deceased judgment debtor on the next day, the tenth of May, 1876, within less than ten years from the date of the original judgment.

On motion of the defendant’s counsel a default taken upon this service was set aside on the ground that the citation did not, as required by the Code of Practice, specify the number of days within which the defendant was called on to appear and comply with the demand or file his answer. Thereupon a new citatioq was issued and regularly served, though meanwhile more than ten years had- elapsed from the rendition of the judgment sought to be revived.

The defendant pleaded the prescription of ten years and other matters of defense not necessary to be considered, as this appeal is from a. judgment dismissing the suit on the exception of prescription only.

We have been invited by counsel on-both sides to consider the effect of the act of 1858 “ to require written proof in certain cases” in connection with that of 1853 providing for the first time a prescription for judgments. Both are now embodied in the late revision of the Civil Code. We do not, however, consider it necessary to embark in that field of inquiry in the present case, to which we do not consider the former act as having any application. The sole question here is whether or not. the citation issued on the ninth of May, 1876, and served together with a copy of the petition setting forth the nature and character of the-demand upon the administrator personally on the tenth of the same month, interrupted prescription. There is no pretense that the representative of the succession was not fully informed by that service of the-nature of the demand and cause of action; none that the copy of petition' served was not a true copy, or that it was not properly certified as such,, but only that the number of days within which he was called upon to-answer was not specifically set forth in the citation.

It must be remembered that this citation was issued in the present suit, and that there is here no question of the .effect of citation in another and different suit or proceeding to interrupt the prescription pleaded.

Neither can it be now contended in the face of the frequent adjudications of this court to the contrary that citation issued and served within ten years from the date of the original judgment does not stop prescription even though the judgment of revival be not rendered till after the lapse of ten years. This is but the recognition and application to suits for the revival of judgments of the principle of legal interruption of prescription operated by citing the defendant before a court ofi' justice, whether it be a court of competent 'jurisdiction or not, recognized in articles 3516 (formerly 3482) and 3518 (formerly 3484) of the Civil Code. Indeed, that mode of interruption is specially provided by the [820]*820very terms of the law which provides for the prescription of judgments. See R. C. C. article 3547.

The only inquiry remaining then is whether the service of the copy of the petition in this case upon the administrator personally, not constructively, together with a citation defective only in not stating the number of days within which he was called on to answer operated such legal interruption of prescription in the present case. The copy of petition served informed the administrator fully of the nature of the suit; even the citation itself gave not only the title of the cause and of the court but also the names of the parties and nature of the action, and was properly addressed to the defendant in his capacity of administrator of the succession of Adolphe Vives, the deceased judgment debtor. Indeed, it was in all respects regular except as to the time for answering the demand, and the service seems to have been so far effective that the defendant appeared by counsel in time to prevent the ripening into final judgment of the default taken upon that service.

The reasons givcD by the district judge for setting aside the default are solely the defect as to time for answering in the original citation.

In the case of Pratt vs. Peets, curator, 3 La. 281, where prescription was pleaded against a revocatory action after the dismissal of an intervention by the same plaintiff in another suit in which he set up the same fraud relied upon in that case, Judge Matthews, as the organ of the court, said: “A mistake in the tribunal it seems will not destroy the effect of a suit in the interruption of prescription; and by analogy it ought not when the error occurs in the manner of prosecuting such suit in consequence of which it is dismissed.” And the court overruled the plea of prescription.

In White vs. McQuillan, 12 L. 533, prescription was pleaded against promissory notes and it was urged that a previous imperfect service of citation did not interrupt prescription. There the service as in this case was personal, and the defect was that the copy of petition was not certified by the clerk under seal of his office. Judge Bullard, as the organ of the court said: “ We are of opinion that the service of the citation together with a copy of the petition, although it may not appear that the copy was duly certified by the clerk, is a sufficient judicial demand to interrupt prescription.” In Flower et al. vs. O’Connor, prescription was pleaded against a promissory note payable and belonging to a commercial firm dissolved by death of one of the partners. Suit had been previously brought before prescription had run upon the same note by the surviving partner as such, but without authority to represent the heirs or representatives of the deceased partner, and was for that reason dismissed as of nonsuit. It was claimed that prescription was thereby interrupted, and the court said : “ It is a well-settled doctrine in our [821]*821jurisprudence that one of the modes of interrupting prescription is by citing the possessor or debtor before a court of justice; that it matters not whether the suit is brought before a court of competent jurisdiction or not; that prescription is interrupted by suit, although the plaintiff therein be nonsuited ; that, a mistake ought not to destroy the effect of such suit when the error occurs in the manner of prosecuting it in consequence of which it may be dismissed;” and cites a number of authorities in support of the views expressed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 La. 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-succession-of-vives-la-1878.