Newchurch v. Ascension Parish School Board

161 So. 889, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 586
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1935
DocketNo. 1482.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 So. 889 (Newchurch v. Ascension Parish School Board) 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
Newchurch v. Ascension Parish School Board, 161 So. 889, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 586 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Leon Newchureh claims of the Ascension Parish School Board the sum of $1,800 with interest on account of an alleged breach of contract entered into between him and the board on December 10, 1933. The contract was entered into for the period of four years and had reference to the transportation of school children along a certain route to the high school at Donaldsonville. The consideration for the service was $100 a month for a school year of nine months.

The plaintiff alleges performance on his part without complaint and that the “School Board has fully ratified the said contract with plaintiff by duly accepting his services thereunder for two years and by paying him his agreed salary during said time.” The $1,800 claimed by the plaintiff is for the last two years called for by the contract.

The defendant appeared and excepted to plaintiff’s petition, urging as a defense against his suit a plea of res adjudicata, and, in the alternative and in case the plea of res adjudi-cata was overruled, it then urged as a further defense that plaintiff’s petition set forth *890 no right or canse of action. The court sustained both exceptions. The plaintiff has appealed.

In order to act on the plea of res ad-judicata it is necessary to consider the aver-ments of the plaintiff in a previous suit entitled Leon Newchurch v. Ascension Parish School Board, No. 4176 on the docket of the district court, filed by him against the Ascension Parish School Board, and another party named O. Gonzales.

This previous petition alleges that the plaintiff, Newchurch, entered into a contract with the school board of the parish of Ascension, under which Newchurch obligated himself to furnish a school van, and to operate it in the transportation of school children along the van route from Cassard-Comeaux to Donaldsonville, and from point Houmas to Donaldsonville, for a period of four years; that for said work the school board obligated itself to pay him $100 a month for each school month during the four years. It is alleged that he performed the contract on his part without complaint for two years following date of contract; that the school board in employing him for said period of time acted with its power and authority; that the school board ratified the contract that had been entered into with him by paying him his salary for said work for a period of two years, except $300, which remains unpaid; that on the 28th of July, 1933, the school board by resolution authorized the employment of G. Gonzales to operate a school van upon the same routes and to transport the children along said routes to the high school at Donaldson-ville, and refused to permit him to longer perform the contract, and refused to pay him the salary due him under the contract agreed on for the years 1933-1934; that the school board in refusing to permit him to perform the contract and in refusing to pay him his salary had violated the contract; that unless restrained by injunction, the said Gonzales, with the connivance and assistance of said school board, will at the opening of the school session on or about September 11, 1933, take possession of said position as driver and operator of the said van on said routes, and the school board will recognize him as the only one entitled to be paid for the performance of said function.

The prayer in his said petition, omitting averments not pertinent in the present controversy, “that * ⅜ * a writ of injunction issue herein restraining until hearing, the said Ascension Parish School Board from in any manner violating its said contract with plaintiff herein, and commanding the said School Board to carry out'and perform its said contract with plaintiff.” .He further prayed that the school hoard be ordered to pay him $300 which the said school board owes him as aforesaid.

The court refused to grant the injunction, but the judgment rendered indicates that nothing further was done.

The only judgment rendered in said case is at the bottom of and concludes his reasons for refusing the injunction. It reads as follows : “The only questions before this court at this time are the exceptions filed by the defendants, and the court' believing the same to be sufficient to render its judgment thereon, therefore sustains the exception of no cause and no right of action filed herein by the defendants. It is unnecessary to decide the other question. For the foregoing reasons it is ordered adjudged and decreed that plaintiff’s application for a preliminary injunction herein be and the same is hereby denied. Plaintiff to pay all costs of these proceedings.”

The object of suit No. 4176 was to obtain an injunction prohibiting the school board from violating its alleged contract, to compel the carrying out and performance of the contract for the balance of the time for which it was entered into, and to compel payment to him of $300 alleged to be a balance due him for the two years during which he had transported the children thereunder.

In acting on the exception of no right or cause of action, the court, in reasons for judgment, stated that the contract, in the opinion of the court, was illegal; that the petition did not set forth any right or cause of action under which the plaintiff was entitled to a specific performance and to an injunction, but went no further. The suit was not dismissed. Plaintiff’s demand for $300 was not acted on, and the suit was left pending as to the $300 demanded by the plaintiff. The plaintiff applied to the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari and mandamus. His petition to the Supreme Court is not before us, but we infer that it was for the purpose of compelling the lower court to order a specific performance of the contract and to grant an injunction on the ground that the averments of his petition entitled him to that relief.

The Supreme Court refused to grant the writs prayed for, and in refusing used the following language; “The petition for writs of certiorari and mandamus is denied on the ground that the ruling complained of is correct.”

*891 After this action by the Supreme Court, the plaintiff brought the present suit, in which he alleges a contract for four years and the breach as before; that it was performed by him for two years, commencing from the time it was entered into; that the .school board fully ratified the said contract which the board entered into with him by accepting his services thereunder for two years, and by paying him his agreed salary for the said length of time.

There is no demand in the present suit .for performance nor for injunction. The object is to recover the damages sustained as a result of the action of the school board in awarding the transportation to C. Gonzales for two years of the time it was awarded to him. The present suit is on an alleged active violation of a contract and based on the Civil Code, arts. 1930, 1931, 1934, etc. The first was based on the provisions of the Civil Code, arts. 1926, 1927, 1928, and 1929, which have for their purpose to compel performance of a legal contract.

The authority of the thing adjudged takes place only with respect to what was the object of the judgment, and the thing demand- ' ed must be the same. Civil Code, art. 2286.

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Related

Brown v. Vernon Parish School Board
25 So. 2d 446 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1946)
Poole v. La Salle Parish School Board
183 So. 182 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 889, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newchurch-v-ascension-parish-school-board-lactapp-1935.