Outdoor Electric Advertising, Inc. v. Saurage

21 So. 2d 375, 207 La. 344, 1945 La. LEXIS 770
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1945
DocketNo. 37272.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 21 So. 2d 375 (Outdoor Electric Advertising, Inc. v. Saurage) 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
Outdoor Electric Advertising, Inc. v. Saurage, 21 So. 2d 375, 207 La. 344, 1945 La. LEXIS 770 (La. 1945).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Outdoor Electric Advertising, Inc., a Texas corporation, instituted this suit on *347 June 26, 1942, to recover the sum of $2828, alleging that such amount represented the balance due by defendant to it under several written contracts for the erection and maintenance of certain signs along the highways of Louisiana advertising defendant’s business. Thereafter it filed a supplemental and amended petition amplifying some of the allegations originally made.

On September 2, 1942, defendant answered, admitting the execution of two of the contracts on which the suit is based and tendering primarily the defense that “the plaintiff failed to comply with its obligations under the contracts entered into with respondent in that the signs covered by said contracts were never maintained by plaintiff-in accordance with the terms of said agreements.”

Trial of the merits, on the issues thus created by plaintiff’s pleadings and the answer of defendant, was commenced on December 15, 1942. On that day witnesses for both litigants were examined in open court,. their testimony consuming eighty-seven pages of the transcript; but the trial was not then completed, the parties agreeing that the case would be held over for the purpose of taking additional testimony either by deposition or by oral examination out of court.

In the following February and March, counsel filed stipulations or agreements for the taking of testimony by depositions of witnesses residing in distant states. Before the resumption of the trial and the offering of the depositions, however, defendant, on May 24, 1943, tendered an exception (which he did not name), based on the provisions of Act No. 8, Third E.S., of the Legislature of 1935. These read in part:

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of Louisiana, That no foreign corporation doing business in this State shall be permitted to present any judicial demand before any court of this State, unless and until it has complied with the laws of this State for doing business herein, and unless and until it has paid all taxes, excises and licenses due to the State, provided that nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent the bringing of a cause of action against any such foreign corporation.”

In the exception defendant avers that plaintiff, a foreign corporation, is doing business in this state without having secured the required certificate of authority, and without having paid the various taxes due by it; and he shows that “plaintiff is prohibited from judicially invoking the benefits of the laws of this state and is prohibited from presenting any judicial demand before any court of this state.”

At a separate trial of the exception, the district judge heard evidence on defendant’s averments. _ Later he sustained the exception (referring to it as an exception to the right to assert a right of action) and ordered plaintiff’s suit dismissed. It was his opinion, as the written reasons for judgment discloses, that the exception was of the kind that could be offered at any stage of the proceedings; and he concluded from the evidence adduced that plaintiff was doing business in Louisiana without complying with the laws of this state.

*349 Plaintiff appealed devolutively, contending here, as in the trial court, that defendant’s exception is dilatory in nature and cannot be considered or admitted for the reason that it was not pleaded specially in .limine litis before the joining of issue.

Exceptor, on the other hand, insists that the exception is one that may be filed at any stage of the proceeding before final judgment. In the trial court, during the hearing of the exception, exceptor’s counsel remarked: “It is an exception leveled at the legal right of the plaintiff to bring an action in the courts of this state.” Here, in their brief, counsel argue:

“ * * * The State has seen fit to prohibit such corporation from using its Courts until they comply with its laws and pay all taxes, etc. due to the State, and the Court should ex proprio motus, dismiss such a suit, even in the absence of pleading by the defendant, should the record reveal the doing of business, and the failure to have complied with the laws for the doing of business in this State.”

Similar exceptions have been urged in other cases previously before the courts of this state, being designated therein by various names. That filed in Norm Advertising, Inc., v. Parker (Court of Appeal, Second Circuit) was called an exception to the jurisdiction of the court. It was referred to in R. J. Brown Co. v. Grosjean, 189 La. 778, 180 So. 634, ás one of plaintiff’s lack of capacity to stand in judgment. In Proctor Trust Company v. Pope, La. App., 12 So.2d 724, the designation was an exception to procedural capacity. This .court in Hess Warming & Ventilating Company, Inc. v. Home Comforts Corporation et al., 205 La. 1045, 18 So.2d 611, 612, inferentially termed it a plea of want of capacity to institute and prosecute the suit and to stand in judgment. But in none of those previous cases has there been considered or determined the matter of when during the pendency of the proceeding the exception should and must be offered.

Obviously defendant’s exception is not that of no cause of action which may be pleaded after issue is joined. In the Hess case, cited supra, it was said that the exception of no cause of action admits for the purpose of the trial thereof all the factual averments of the petition, and that its function is not to traverse the alleged facts but to test their legal sufficiency. •Further, we observed in that case:

“ * * * The question as' to whether the plaintiff corporation is amenable to the provisions of Act No. 8 of the Third Extra Session of 1935 is a question which involves its right and capacity 'to prosecute ■this suit and to stand in judgment herein. That question has nothing whatever to do with the plaintiff’s cause of action as such. It involves an affirmative defense which must be raised by special plea and disposed of by the introduction of evidence. * * ”

Neither’can defendant’s plea be treated as an exception of no right of action. An’ exception of that kind .is. in the nature of, perhaps the same as, the exception to the want of interest in the 'plaintiff to maintain the suit. Its basis, as is shown by many cases - in which it has been .considered, is Article 15 'of the .Code .of- Pr.acr *351 tice which recites: “An action can only be brought by one having a real and actual interest which he pursues, but as soon as that interest arises, he may bring his action.” The purpose served by the exception of no right of action is shown by the following language used in Succession of Breaux, 168 La. 712, 123 So. 300:

“* * * We are not prepared to say that the plaintiff’s petition would set forth a cause of action, or sufficient ground for annulling the judgment of probate, if the plaintiff disclosed a right of action, or an interest to be served by annulling the judgment of probate. We prefer, however, to rest our affirmance of the judgment appealed from upon the fundamental proposition that, as far as the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition go, he has no interest whatever to serve by this suit, and hence no right of action.

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Bluebook (online)
21 So. 2d 375, 207 La. 344, 1945 La. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/outdoor-electric-advertising-inc-v-saurage-la-1945.