Walker v. Fitzgerald

37 So. 2d 712, 214 La. 293, 1948 La. LEXIS 962
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 8, 1948
DocketNo. 38134.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 37 So. 2d 712 (Walker v. Fitzgerald) 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
Walker v. Fitzgerald, 37 So. 2d 712, 214 La. 293, 1948 La. LEXIS 962 (La. 1948).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

This controversy arises out of a contract executed by plaintiffs in 1939, styled as a “mineral lease”, wherein they conveyed to one Kerlin all of the sand and gravel in and under a certain tract of land in Grant Parish for a consideration of $25, plus payment of 4‡ per cubic yard for all gravel mined and removed from the property. The contract was subsequently assigned by Kerlin to the defendant; Fritzgerald, who thereafter (between 1940 and 1944) removed a large quantity of sand and gravel from the land making payment of 4‡ per cubic yard for all gravel withdrawn in accordance with the terms of the agreement. Although plaintiffs accepted these payments, they were dissatisfied with the arrangement (contending, apparently, that the amounts received by them were insufficient) and consulted an attorney for the purpose of having the contract can-celled. After certain negotiations and demands, which are unimportant to our consideration of the case, suit was filed by plaintiffs in the Eighth Judicial District Court, wherein they sought, primarily, the annulment of the agreement on the ground that it contained a potestative condition and, alternatively, a money judgment for the sum of $1,250, SI,000 of which was for timber allegedly removed or damaged by the defendant in his operation of the sand and gravel pit.

Defendant resisted by denying the existence of the alleged potestative condition and asserted that, even if it be potestative, plaintiffs were estopped from demanding an annulment of the contract as they had accepted the benefits of his operations. He further denied the charges respecting plaintiffs’ alternative demand for damages.

The case was tried on these issues but, after the hearing and while the matter was under submission, plaintiffs moved for and obtained a voluntary non-suit. Shortly thereafter, they filed the present suit in the same court in which they sought an *297 annulment of the contract on the same ground (potestative condition) and alternatively alleged that defendant had removed 35,402 cubic yards of sand from the premises between March 1942 and September 1943; that, since March 1943, he had removed an additional number of cubic yards of sand; that the exact number of yards were unknown to them, being a matter within the peculiar knowledge of the defendant; that, therefore, they were compelled to estimate, on information and belief, that at least 30,000 cubic yards of sand had been so removed and that, consequently, defendant was indebted to them in the sum of 4‡ per cubic yard on 75,-402 (should be 65,402) cubic yards of sand, or in the full sum of $3,016.00.

In due course, the defendant answered and asserted the same defense on the main demand which had been made to the previous suit. With respect to the alternative demand, defendant denied any liability for sand removed on the ground that the contract did not provide for payment of any sum for sand removed but for gravel only. He, however, declared that, during the entire period he had been in possession, he had removed 42,000 cubic yards of sand.

Subsequently, the parties entered into a stipulation to submit the cause to the court for decision upon the pleadings filed in the case and the proof adduced in the prior action which had been dismissed as of non-suit. They also stipulated that the value of the property involved was more than $100 but that it did not exceed $2,000. As thus submitted, the judge of the district court entered a decree rejecting plaintiffs’ main demand for an annulment of the contract but gave them a judgment for the sand removed by defendant in the sum of $1,680, which represented 4‡ per cubic yard on the 42,000 cubic yards admittedly withdrawn from the premises.

Thereafter, defendant appealed to the Court of Appeal and plaintiffs answered the appeal asking that the judgment of the district court be reversed insofar as it denied an annulment of the contract. The Court of Appeal, after hearing the matter, decided that it was without appellate jurisdiction and transferred the case, on its own motion, to this court. 24 So.2d 263.

At the outset, we direct our attention to the question of jurisdiction of this appeal. Under Section 10 of Article VII of the Constitution, the appellate jurisdiction of this court in civil suits is confined to cases a * * * where the amount in dispute or the fund to be distributed, irrespective of the amount therein claimed, shall exceed two thousand dollars exclusive of interest, * * * ’h 1

*299 In the instant case, plaintiffs’ main demand is for the annulment of a contract granting defendant the right to extract sand and gravel from a strip of land situated on a tract owned by them in Grant Parish. Therefore, since the demand is not for the recovery of money, it is the value of the right plaintiffs seek to enforce which determines appellate jurisdiction and not necessarily the value of the property involved in the suit, which is admittedly worth less than $2,000.

The Court of Appeal reasons in its opinion that, despite the fact that there is nothing contained in the pleadings or in the evidence which affirmatively shows that the value of the annulment prayed for by plaintiffs exceeds $2,000, this right is greatly in excess of that amount because, between 1940 and 1944, defendant had mined and sold 42,000 cubic yards of sand, approximately 68,000 yards of washed gravel and 33,000 yards of sand clay.

We cannot perceive that the fact that many thousand cubic yards of sand and gravel had been removed from the property' during a four year period justifies the conclusion that 'the right presently sought to be enforced by plaintiffs exceeds $2,000. It would be more plausible, we think, to measure the value of plaintiffs’ right by using as a basis the value of the sand and gravel which they would recover in the event of success, for that method, while not conclusively establishing the value of plaintiffs’ right, would exhibit the value of the thing secured by the judgment — i.e., sand and gravel worth less than $2,000. Perhaps plaintiffs’ right to have this property restored to them exceeds that amount but there is nothing in either the pleadings or the record affirmatively showing that this is the case. It is well settled that, in the absence of such showing, this-court is without jurisdiction. 2 See Green v. George, 213 La. 739, 35 So.2d 595 and cases there cited.

Nor do we think that we have appellate jurisdiction because plaintiff requested, in the alternative demand, recovery of $3,016, or 4‡ per cubic yard on approximately 75,000 cubic yards of sand. This demand, by plaintiffs’ tacit concession, was reduced to $1,680, or 4‡ per cubic yard on 42,000 cubic yards, prior to the time the case was submitted to the judge for his decision. It is the well-settled jurisprudence that appellate jurisdiction in a given case is to be tested by the amount in dispute at the time the judgment is rendered in the court of original jurisdiction. Hence, a payment made or a remit *301

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Bluebook (online)
37 So. 2d 712, 214 La. 293, 1948 La. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-fitzgerald-la-1948.