Osborn v. Moore

12 La. Ann. 714
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedAugust 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 12 La. Ann. 714 (Osborn v. Moore) 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
Osborn v. Moore, 12 La. Ann. 714 (La. 1857).

Opinion

Merrick, O. J.

The plaintiff’s original demand against the defendant for seventy dollars is not within our jurisdiction.

On the defendant’s reconventional demand for damages for the alleged illegal arrest in this ease under the writ of arrest, we are of the opinion that the plaintiff was acting in good faith and upon an apparent cause of action, and that the defendant’s conduct and declarations were, in some measure, the cause of his arrest. We come the more readily to this conclusion, against the verdict of the jury, because the testimony consists in part of depositions which we feel ourselves equally competent with them to consider, and because the verdict for the amount rendered ($150) cannot be maintained on any principles. The defendant, upon being arrested, appears to have been immediately discharged by the Sheriff on giving up to him property as security, for his appearance, valued at $100. The jury were not at liberty to estimate the traveling expenses and loss of time of the defendant in preparing his defence and in attending on the court. The very nature of judicial proceedings presupposes that suitors will be put to some trouble in defending and prosecuting suits, but as a general rule, these damages are, in the eye of the law, supposed to be covered by the taxed costs. It is desirable that courts of justice should be open to all men, and that suitors should not he deterred from pursuing their rights through fear that they should be compelled to pay for the loss of time of their adversary, nor from using, in good faith, the process of the court and the means of redress prescribed by law, through apprehensions that they should be mulct in vindictive damages, if from any unforeseen cause, they should fail in their action.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the lower court be avoided and reversed, and that there he judgment upon the defendant’s reconventional demand in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, and that the defendant pay the costs of the appeal and his reconveniional demand in the lower court,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 La. Ann. 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-moore-la-1857.