Schneider v. Manion

46 So. 2d 58, 217 La. 118, 1950 La. LEXIS 957
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 20, 1950
Docket39771
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 So. 2d 58 (Schneider v. Manion) 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
Schneider v. Manion, 46 So. 2d 58, 217 La. 118, 1950 La. LEXIS 957 (La. 1950).

Opinion

LeBLANC, Justice.

On July 12, 1949, judgment was rendered in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, Division “E”, in favor of the plaintiff, Claude W. Schneider, and against the defendant, Mrs. Louise Manion, his wife, decreeing a divorce “a vinculo matrimonii” between them. The judgment was signed on July 18, 1949 and on August 11, 1949, on motion of defendant, she was granted a suspensive appeal returnable to this Court on October 7, 1949, upon her furnishing bond, according to law, in 'the sum of Three Hundred Dollars. Defendant filed an appeal bond on August 24, 1949 which plaintiff, appellee, contends was beyond the time prescribed by law and he now moves to dismiss the appeal.

The procedure for taking an appeal is pointed out in Article 573 of the Code of Practice which provides that the party intending to appeal may do- so either by petition or by motion in open court, at the same term at which the judgment was rendered, “upon offering to give such surety as the court may direct, as hereafter provided.” Subsequent Articles prescribe the duties of the judge in stating the amount of the surety to be given by the appellant and in fixing the return day. Article 575 then provides that “if the appeal has been taken within ten days, not including Sundays, * * * it shall stay execution * * * ; provided the appellant gives his obligation, with good and solvent security, * *

By Act No. 49 of 1871, Article 573 of the Code of Practice was amended in order to regulate the taking of appeals in divorce cases and the article was then made to provide further as follows: “But in cases where the judgment decrees a divorce, such a petition or motion of appeal must be filed within thirty days, not including Sundays, after the signing of such judgment, instead of ten days, and shall operate as a suspensive appeal therefrom, and there shall be no devolutive appeal allowed thereafter.” In this connection it may be well to refer also to Act No. 24 of 1930, which provides “that no appeal shall lie from any final judgment of separation from bed and board .or of divorce after thirty days from its date, but any appeal perfected within that time shall suspend the execution of the judgment until the appeal shall have been finally disposed of.”

From the foregoing provisions of our law on the subject it is made to appear that in ordinary cases, a suspensive appeal must be taken within ten days, not including Sundays, from the effective date of the judgment and execution will be stayed *125 until definitive judgment on appeal, “provided the appellant gives his obligation, with good and solvent security”, and that in ■cases of divorce the appeal must be taken within thirty days, not including Sundays, after signing of the judgment and further that in divorce cases no devolutive appeal will be allowed after the thirty days referred to.

Reverting now to the dates which have •to determine the fate of the appeal in this case, v/e find that the thirty days began to run on July 19, 1949, and, excluding Sundays, they, expired on August 22, 1949. Defendant filed her appeal bond on August 24, 1949, and consequently she was two days late in filing it.

It is urged however, that by the terms of Article 573 of the Code of Practice, in so far as they relate to appeals in divorce cases, the mere filing of a petition or motion for the appeal shall operate as a suspensive appeal and it is further argued that a bond is not required for the reason that there is no property or thing to be bonded, the only issue being that with respect to the marital status of the parties.

It is difficult to think of a suspensive appeal without an appeal bond. Indeed, Article 573 of the Code of Practice, in providing the method of taking an appeal makes it a condition precedent that the applicant shall “offer to give such surety as the court may direct” and “as hereafter provided.” Thereafter, Article 575 definitely prescribes what the terms and conditions and also the amount of his obligation shall be. That is the bond he shall be required to furnish. The amendment to Article 573 by Act No. 49 of 1871 had for its purpose the granting of a longer delay, in divorce cases, for taking and perfecting an appeal. If there ever was any doubt about the necessity of a bond to suspend the execution of a judgment in such cases, it was certainly removed by the enactment of Act No. 24 of 1930 which provides first, “that no appeal shall lie from any final judgment of separation from bed and board or of divorce after thirty days from its date,” and then states “but a/ny appeal perfected within that time shall suspend the execution of the judgment until the appeal shall have been finally disposed of.” (All emphasis supplied.) Obviously, from those provisions it follows that the mere petition or motion for appeal cannot operate as a suspensive appeal and thus suspend execution of the judgment, but there must be, in addition, a perfection of the appeal which is accomplished by the filing of the bond as directed by the Court in the order of appeal. This is made clear by the decision of this court in the case of Lafayette v. Farr, 162 La. 385, 110 So. 624 wherein it is stated that: “The obtaining of an order of appeal within the time prescribed is not availing without the bond required by the order of appeal. It is not necessary that the citation to answer the appeal shall be served within the time prescribed *127 by law for taking an appeal, but the order of appeal, being subject to the condition that the appellant shall furnish a bond for the amount either fixed in the order or required by law, remains in abeyance and without effect until the bond is filed. Therefore an appeal is not deemed taken within the time prescribed by law for taking an appeal unless the bond required by the order of appeal is filed within the time prescribed.”

It is true that in that case the Court was considering a devolutive appeal in a case other than a divorce proceeding but the law as stated applies to all appeals, including those in divorce cases where only a suspensive appeal is allowed. In Shipp v. Shipp, 182 La. 1019, 162 So. 760, and Eiermann v. Modenbach, 198 La. 1062, 5 So.2d 335, cited by counsel for defendant, both divorce actions, the district court had mistakenly granted an order for a devolutive appeal and the appellant furnished bond within the thirty day period in the amount required by the order of Court. In both cases this Court entertained the appeal holding the bonds had the effect of suspending the judgments of divorce under the provisions of Article 573 of the Code of Practice and Act No. 24 of 1930, regardless of how the appeals, had been denominated in the order granting them. The decision in those cases sustain the proposition that the filing of a bond within the thirty day period is necessary to perfect an appeal which suspends the judgment in divorce cases.

Counsel for defendant contend however that the bond in this case was filed in time because, in addition to the intervening Sundays within the thirty day period, there should also be excluded the intervening Saturdays since by the terms of Act No. 445 of 1948, Saturdays as well as Sundays are declared to be full holidays in the Parish of Orleans.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 2d 58, 217 La. 118, 1950 La. LEXIS 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-manion-la-1950.