Mitchell v. Holomon

120 So. 672, 10 La. App. 219, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 468
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1929
DocketNo. 3373
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 120 So. 672 (Mitchell v. Holomon) 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
Mitchell v. Holomon, 120 So. 672, 10 La. App. 219, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 468 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

WEBB, J.

Plaintiff, Minerva Mitchell, instituted this action against V. R. Holomon and the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company, a commercial partnership, to recover judgment against Holomon for damages alleged to have been sustained as the result of the failure and refusal of Holomon to comply with a contract made with plaintiff, and to recover judgment against Holomon and the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company decreeing the nullity of a certain note and mortgage securing same, which note had been drawn by plaintiff and had passed into the hands of Holomon and thence to Bridges-Channel Clothing Company.

The substance of plaintiff’s contention is that, she had, on December 11, 1925, entered into a contract with Holomon, wherein the latter agreed to erect a dwelling house on a certain lot belonging to plaintiff by the first of the year 1926, for the price of six hundred sixty-five dollars, which was to ■ be paid by plaintiff in installments of thirty dollars per month, beginning after the completion of the building, but that Holomon had obtained from plaintiff one hundred fifteen dollars at the time of the agreement and had fraudulently persuaded her to draw a note for six hundred sixty-five dollars payable to her order, on August 27, 1927, and by her endorsed in blank and secured by a mortgage on the lot on which Holoman had agreed to construct the building, and that Holomon had obtained possession of the note and had negotiated it to the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company which had full knowledge of the transactions between plaintiff and Holomon.

Plaintiff alleged that she had been damaged by the failure of Holomon to construct the building and his fraudulent act in obtaining the note, in the sum of five hundred sixty-two dollars, and she prayed for judgment against Holomon for that amount, and for judgment against Holomon. and the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company decreeing ' the note and mortgage securing same to be null and void.

Both defendants filed exceptions of misjoinder, and the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company excepted that the petition failed to state a cause of action, and the exceptions being overruled, defendants answered under reservation of their rights in the exceptions.

Holomon denied the allegations of plaintiff’s petition as made, and purported to set up the real contract and manner in which he acquired the note, which was that, he had agreed to construct a house for plaintiff at the price of seven hundred eighty dollars, and that plaintiff, in consideration of his obligation to build the house, had delivered to him one hundred fifteen dollars and the note and mortgage described in plaintiff’s petition, with the understanding that she would pay the note in installments of thirty-five dollars per month, and with the understanding that he would negotiate the note and obtain funds to comply with his contract to erect the building for plaintiff; and he further alleged that he constructed the frame of the house, using materials of the value of two hundred seventy-three and 64-100 dollars, and that he should have credit for that amount on any judgment rendered against him; and the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company denied plaintiff’s allegations and alleged that the note had been acquired by it before maturity and in good faith for a valuable consideration, without any knowledge of the trans[221]*221action, between plaintiff and Holomon, and, on information and belief, it also set up the same explanation of the transaction as between plaintiff and Holomon as alleged by the latter, and further alleged that it was entitled to judgment against plaintiff for the amount of the note together with interest, costs and attorney’s fees, with recognition of the mortgage, and it prayed that plaintiff’s demands be rejected and that it have judgment against plaintiff in reconvention, and, in the alternative, in event the court should hold that it was not a holder of the note in good faith, for judgment against plaintiff for the amount or value of the materials used by Holomon in constructing the frame of the building, with recognition of the mortgage for that amount.

On trial, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against Holomon for damages in the amount claimed, and in the further sum of six hundred sixty-five dollars, with interest and attorney’s fees as stipulated in the note transferred by Holomon to the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company, and rejecting plaintiff’s demands as against the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company, from which judgment plaintiff appealed.

Both of the defendants answered the appeal.

Holomon complains of the judgment against him for damages, and of the failure of the court to allow credit for the value of the lumber and other materials used in constructing the frame of the building, and he prays that the judgment for damages be set aside and that the judgment for six hundred sixty-five dollars, or the amount of the note, interest and attorney’s fees, be credited with the value of the materials used in constructing the frame of the building, and, in the alternative, in event the relief first prayed for should not be granted, he prays that the exception of misjoinder filed by him in the lower court be sustained, and further in the alternative, and in event the judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demands to have the note and mortgage annulled should be reversed, that the judgment rendered against him for the amount of the note, interest, etc., be set aside; and the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company complains of the failure of the court to grant it judgment on the reconventional demand, and prays that the judgment be amended in that respect, and, in the alternative, that it be affirmed, and further in the alternative, that the exception of misjoinder filed by it be sustained' and plaintiff’s suit dismissed.

Holomon did not file any brief in this court, and while the Bridges-Channel Clothing Company, in its -brief, urges that the exception of misjoinder should have been sustained and that we should review the ruling on the exceptions, it clearly appears from the answers of defendants to the appeal that the exceptions are urged only in event it should be found, after reviewing the cause, on the merits, that defendants are not entitled to have the judgment amended.

The exception of misjoinder is a dilatory exception, which does not go to the merits, and must be filed in limine litis (C. P., Arts. 332, 333; Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank vs. Davies, 144 La. 538, 80 So. 713), and even though filed before the answer, such exceptions are waived by voluntarily going to trial on the merits (Cross, Pleading, p. 164, sec. 170), and certainly one could not after voluntarily submitting the cause on its merits, insist on a ruling on a dilatory exception which had been filed, and we are of the opinion that the defendants, having first asked that the cause be reviewed on the merits, waived any right they may [222]*222have had ,to have the ruling on the dilatory exceptions reviewed.

On the merits, we first consider the cause as between plaintiff and Holomon, and with reference to the complaint of Holomon that he should have been allowed credit for the value of the materials used by him in constructing the frame of the house, and that the evidence did not warrant the judgment against him for damages.

Holomon really does not make any defence to the demands of plaintiff, other than a denial that he had been guilty of any fraud in obtaining the note from plaintiff, and that he should be allowed credit for the value of the materials alleged to have been used in constructing the frame.

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 672, 10 La. App. 219, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-holomon-lactapp-1929.