Messina v. Bomicino

27 So. 2d 397, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 477
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 1946
DocketNo. 2830.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 So. 2d 397 (Messina v. Bomicino) 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
Messina v. Bomicino, 27 So. 2d 397, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 477 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

An automobile collision which occurred in the early morning of September 1, 1945 in the town of Amite, gave rise to this proceeding.

The defendant who is a Louisiana negro living in the city of Chicago was driving his automobile on a trip from that city to Port Allen, Louisiana, where some of his family reside. He was following highway No. 51 which passes through Amite. That highway runs north and south, but on reaching the town of Amite it runs into Chestnut Street which runs east and west, and a driver following it has to make an, off-set which is one block long on Chestnut Street. The defendant Ernest Martin was making this off-set and had reached the intersection of Chestnut Street and the highway and making his turn in order to head south when the plaintiff's automobile which was coming north collided with his car and the damage to both cars resulted.

Apparently without taking the trouble to make much investigation about who the defendant was, except to examine the license plate on his car, the plaintiff filed a suit for damages under which he obtained an order and writ of attachment and the car which was then in the O.K. Garage in Amite, was seized. Service on the defendant was made through the office of the Secretary of State.

Suit was filed on September 5th, four days after the accident and the defendant having made no appearance, judgment by default was obtained against him on October 19, 1945 for the sum of $124.85 with maintenance of the writ of attachment and an order for the sale of the car in order to satisfy the judgment. *Page 399

On November 15, 1945 the defendant appeared in the district court for the first time in a petition addressed to that court in which he alleged that he had no knowledge of any suit having been instituted against him until November 10, 1945 at which time he at once engaged the services of an attorney to protect his interest. He alleges further that he was not indebted to the plaintiff for any part of the sum for which judgment had been obtained against him and his property attached; that he had a legal and equitable defense to the suit brought against him and that the filing of that suit and the obtaining of judgment were gross, fraudulent acts on the part of the plaintiff, done wth the fraudulent purpose of obtaining a sum of money when he well knew that he had no legal claim whatever to it and that therefore the judgment obtained against him under which his car was attached is null and void.

He then charges plaintiff with gross negligence which, he avers, caused the accident and resulting damage to his automobile in the sum of $175.50, which, with certain expenses incidental to its repair and loss of its use, he should recover judgment for against him.

On his application, the court issued a rule nisi against the plaintiff Messina ordering him to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not be granted staying all proceedings pending and judgment rendered in his favor with damages in the sum of $407.50.

This rule was made returnable on November 20, 1945, on which day an answer was filed by Messina and shortly thereafter he filed an exception of no cause and no right of action. There seems to have been no ruling made in the lower court on this exception which we understand to have been aimed at the form of proceeding instituted by the defendant, and as nothing is done or said about it on this appeal we take it that counsel for plaintiff does not question the regularity of the proceedings and relies solely on his defense on the merits.

The rule for a preliminary injunction was tried first and after trial the district court rendered judgment granting the same. Plaintiff's attorney then suggested to the court that the original petition of plaintiff in the suit as well as his answer to the rule be both taken as an answer to the merits and on these pleadings the case was then tried on the merits and resulted in a judgment nullifying the original judgment rendered on October 19, 1945 and permanently enjoining the plaintiff from proceeding further under the writ of attachment. The judgment also awarded the defendant the sum of $175.50 for the damage to his automobile but rejected the other items which he had claimed amounting to $232. From this last judgment plaintiff has taken this appeal.

The defendant has answered the appeal asking that the judgment be increased to the sum of $407.50. Plaintiff has filed in this court a motion to remand the case to the lower court for the purpose of having the judgment reduced. This motion is based on an averment supported by an affidavit signed by a man named Lessard to the effect that the defendant has recovered collision insurance from his insurance carrier in the sum of $125.50.

The undue haste with which plaintiff acted in filing suit against this defendant and his manner of obtaining service of process on him impress us at the start, with the weakness of his case. He apparently sought no information regarding defendant's name or his residence, at the moment of the accident, and relied exclusively on the license plate of his automobile to ascertain that he was a non-resident and lived in the State of Illinois. There is no basis whatever on which to predicate the alias "Ernest Bomicino" which is given him in the petition.

[1] In order to verify defendant's residence plaintiff's attorney wrote to the Secretary of State of Illinois, who, as appears from a card addressed by him on September 18, 1945, informed him that the license was properly issued to the defendant and moreover gave him the defendant's correct street and number address in the city of Chicago. There is no doubt but that under the circumstances, service through the Secretary of State was proper according to the provisions of Act 86 of *Page 400 1928 as amended by Act 184 of 1932 although under Act 215 of 1920 in which a plaintiff proceeds as did the plaintiff in this suit, to obtain an order of attachment, service of process might have been made through a curator ad hoc. We may well assume however that service through the Secretary of State's office was proper and yet it looks to us as though more might have been done to communicate with this defendant than was done in this case. True it is that a citation addressed to a non-resident of the State of Illinois does not mean very much to the Secretary of State as it would be very difficult to know how to begin to locate an individual so cited, still, when within a few days after the filing of the suit the individual's correct address is ascertained, as it was by the attorney for the plaintiff, it strikes us that there is a moral duty at least, on the part of some one to give that information to the office of the Secretary of State to the end that an attempt may be made to communicate with the party at that address. Nothing like that seems to have been done in this case and it was not very long after the delays, involving the distance such as it was, had expired, that a judgment by default was taken and later confirmed against the defendant.

[2] Moreover it is shown that defendant's automobile which had been damaged, was towed to the garage of a man who was appointed by the Sheriff as keeper and who also testified in the case as one of plaintiff's witnesses. It is also shown by the testimony of this very witness that defendant came to his garage on several occasions after the seizure to get some information as to the progress he was making in repairing the car and at no time, according to the defendant did he tell him that his car was under seizure until November 10, 1945 more than three weeks after judgment had been obtained maintaining the attachment.

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27 So. 2d 397, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messina-v-bomicino-lactapp-1946.