State ex rel. Broussard v. Voorhies

25 So. 96, 51 La. Ann. 500, 1898 La. LEXIS 588
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 19, 1898
DocketNo. 12,990
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 So. 96 (State ex rel. Broussard v. Voorhies) 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
State ex rel. Broussard v. Voorhies, 25 So. 96, 51 La. Ann. 500, 1898 La. LEXIS 588 (La. 1898).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This controversy grows out of the proceeding in the .respondent’s court, entitled State ex rel. Gonsoulin vs. J. A. Babin, Justice of the Peace et al — the complaint of relators in this proceeding being that respondent therein, in effect, annulled and reversed judgments of said justice, of which he possessed neither supervisory nor appellate jurisdiction, and in violation of their rights as plaintiffs and appellees in respondent’s court.

The history of this litigation is fully related in State ex rel Babin vs. Voorhies, Judge, 49th Ann. 1717.

It appears from our opinion in that case, that relators herein instituted suit and obtained judgment against the relator, (in State ex rel Gonsoulin vs. Babin, Justice), for the sum of seventy-six dollars, which was appealed to the court of the respondent, in this proceeding; and that said respondent first rendered a judgment reversing that appealed from at plaintiff’s costs and remanding same for execution, and thereafter so amending said decree as to allow plaintiffs therein, relators here, to make the cane-growers parties to the suit, contradictorily, with whom the proceedings were to be carried on — this decree •closing with the phrase, viz.: “the court, therefore, grants the new trial for the purpose of remanding the cause to the lower court for further proceedings.”

■ It further appears therefrom, that, on the return of said cause to the justice court, the plaintiffs therein,' relators here, voluntarily discontinued same by entering non-suit, and immediately thereafter instituted one hundred and forty-three suits before the same justice of the peace, in each of which one of the cane-growers, and the original defendant, Gonsoulin, were made co-defendants in solido — the said cane-growers being the same persons who are referred to in the respondent’s aforesaid decree.

That, in each one of those suits, the amount in controversy was below the lower limit of the respondent’s appellate jurisdiction; and in each of same an absolute judgment was rendered by said justice of the peace for the amounts respectively demanded against both defendants in solido, and for costs.

[502]*502That, at this stage of the proceedings, Gonsoulin applied to the respondent judge herein, in the case entitled State ex rel Gonsoulin vs. Babin, Justice, for writs of certiorari and prohibition, upon the allegation that the respondent, Babin, Justice, had rendered the aforesaid one hundred and forty-three judgments in direct disregard and violation of his own decree remanding the cause as aforesaid — alleging that he had enjoined the execution of the judgments in said suits in said justice court, and that his injunction had been dissolved.

That, at this stage of the proceedings, relator, Babin, applied to this court for certiorari and prohibition, on the ground, that the respondent’s court was without jurisdiction to entertain Gonsoulin’s application, because ho had no appellate jurisdiction of the suits and judgments he complained of.

It further appears from our aforesaid opinion, that we held as follows, viz.:

“The District Court, having tho power to supervise its own judgments,, and tho ease of R. F. and J. C. Broussard vs. Adrien Gonsoulin, having been before it, and a judgment therein rendered, we think it was within the competency of that court on tho application to it of the defendant, Gonsoulin, declaring1 that the judgment in question was being1 executed in a manner different from its terms, or, that it was being actively violated by the justice court wherein it originated, and to which it was remanded, to order the justice of the peace to send up his records for examination, with a view of ascertaining what the legal situation was, to the end that such action should be taken as the law and facts of tho ease authorized, and that it was the duty of the justice to comply with that order.

“Whether the District Court would be justified or warranted, after examination, in making writs of certiorari, or prohibition, which it caused to issue to the justice, peremptory in a particular case, is a different question from whether it had jurisdiction to simply malee inquiry through such writs into the subject matters complained of. Jurisdiction is the power to judge — it includes the power to judge wrongly a's well as rightly.

“We do not think relator warranted in asking relief at our hands in the present situation of affairs.

“The District Court having power to send writs of certiorari and prohibition to justices of the peace in a certain class of eases, when its jurisdiction to that end has been invoked in a particular case, as being [503]*503one of that character, they are entitled to issue tentative writs and to primarily determine whether that jurisdiction legally extends to the ultimate affording of the relief asked. Relator had a right to raise-the issue he did, as to the power of the District Court, and to have-that court pass on that exception; hut none the less he should have-produced and submitted his records as ordered, and made his return or answer and enabled the issues raised to.be determined.

“Should the (judge) reach an illegal conclusion as to his powers and duties in the particular case, it will be time enough to have recourse to this court. State ex reí Kirsch vs. Judge, 45th Ann. 1206.”

In pursuance of the foregoing instructions, and very careful and guarded interpretation of the law, the respondent herein proceeded with the trial and determination of the aforesaid cause in his court,, entitled State ex rel Gonsoulin vs. J. A. Babin, Justice of the Peace; and it is of his finding and judgment in that case, that the relators, as plaintiffs and appellees in the sundry cases on appeal in his court,, make complaint and demand relief at tho hands of this court.

They make extracts from the respondent’s decree, and broadly allege “that in rendering said judgment, tho district judge is in flagrant violation of tho law and constitution of the State; and, after admission on his part, that he could entertain no jurisdiction under proceedure for writs of certiorari and prohibition, except in aid of his-appellate jurisdiction, reversed the judgments of the justice of the peace, and, at the same time, dissolved his own writs primarily issued.”

The portion of the judgment of which the relators complain is as-follows, viz.:

“A careful examination of the books of the (respondent) shows that the court has made a serious mistake concerning the judgments rendered by (him) in tho 143 cases of R. F. Broussard ei als. vs. Adrien Gonsoulin, the relator, and others. In its former decree, the court stated, that only two of these cases had been finally adjudicated' upon, and that in the 141 remaining cases, new trials had been granted. * * * This was an error. In all those cases, the new trials have been refused, and as a sequence the original judgments rendered remain unaltered.

“A judgment rendered is revised or amended by the granting of anew trial. The refusal to grant a new trial leaves the judgment rendered unchanged. C. P. 557; 563.

[504]*504

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 So. 96, 51 La. Ann. 500, 1898 La. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-broussard-v-voorhies-la-1898.