Watkins Banking Co. v. Louisiana Lumber Co.

47 La. Ann. 581
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1895
DocketNo. 11,713
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 La. Ann. 581 (Watkins Banking Co. v. Louisiana Lumber Co.) 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
Watkins Banking Co. v. Louisiana Lumber Co., 47 La. Ann. 581 (La. 1895).

Opinion

On Motion to Dismiss Appeal.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, 0. J.

The reasons assigned for dismissal of the appeal are thus stated: “Appellant asked for and obtained an order of appeal June 25, 1894, returnable at the city of New Orleans on the second Monday of January, 1895, whilst the appeal was legally returnable at Opelousas on the first Monday of July, 1894, under Act No. 69 of 1884, which was then in full force. Two regular terms 'of the District Court for Oalcasieu — one in September, 1894, and one in November, 1894 — were held since said improper order and return day was obtained and appellants made no effort to perfect their appeal until the 10th of November, 1894, when they filed their appeal bond. They had ample time and opportunity to have had the improper order of appeal and return day corrected, even after the adjournment of the Opelousas term, and have said appeal made returnable at New Orleans, on the second Monday of November, 1894, as provided for by Act No. 69 of 1894, approved July 6, 1894, and [584]*584which was in force at the time the appeal was' perfected. The granting of the improper order of appeal, and the fixing of said improper return day were made according to the motion therefor by the appellants, and the order is attributable to their laches and negligence, and not to the court.

The order of appeal (granted June 25, 1894) reads as follows:

“Defendants’ counsel moves for an appeal, both devolutive and suspensive, from a judgment rendered against defendant company. It appearing to the court that it is a physical impossibility for the clerk to prepare a transcript in the case in time for the meeting of the Supreme Court in July, at Opelousas, the defendants are granted appeals as moved for, returnable to the Supreme Court at New Orleans, Louisiana, on the second Monday in January, 1895, upon defendants furnishing bond for devolutive appeal in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, and for the suspensive appeal in the sum of five hundred dollars.”

Under Act No. 72 of 1884, appeals to the Supreme Court from the parish of Calcasieu were returnable to the session of that court at Opelousas on the first Monday of July.

On the 20th of June, 1894, Act No. 12 of the General Assembly of Louisiana, approved June 18, 1894, was promulgated at Baton Rouge. By that act appeals from the parish of Calcasieu were made returnable to the Supreme Court at New Orleans on the second Monday of January.

The motion for and Older for appeal in this ease was made on the 25th of June, 1894, at which time, though Act No. 12 had been officially published at the capítol at Baton Rouge, it had not yet become officially promulgated in Calcasieu. The condition of the record was such at the time of the order of appeal as to render it impossible to complete and file the transcript at the Opelousas term of the Supreme Court in July, 1894. The law-maker, anticipating the possibility of such a contingency happening, had, by Sec. 4 of Act No. 45 of 1870, granted authority to the District Judge to make a change in the return day. It provided that in all cases of appeal the judge of the court from which it is taken shall make the appeal returnable to the Supreme Court at the next return day for appeals from the parish, if there be time enough after granting it to give the notice required by law and prepare the record; if not, then he shall fix the return day [585]*585for some day within the next term after the appeal is granted, allowing sufficient time to give the citation required by law and to prepare the record, if sufficient time within the term shall remain — if not, then he shall fix the return day for the following term.”

In the case at bar the judge fixed the return day as the second Monday of January, 1895. It is not only not suggested that the transcript of appeal could have been made out at any earlier day, but we find in the record, under date of November 10, 1894, a certificate of the District Clerk to the effect that he had not been able up to that date to prepare the transcript, and that he would not be able to do so until the second Monday of January, 1895 (the return day fixed by the District Court). The transcript was filed at that time. Appellee has overlooked the fact that this discretionary power of the judge refers to the dates of return, and that the places where appeals in civil cases are returnable are fixed, not by the judge but by the law. The designation of New Orleans by the judge in his order of 25th June as the place of return would not have authorized the dismissal of the appeal, if appellant had duly filed the transcript at Opelousas, had that been the legal place for returns from Calcasieu, on the second Monday of January, 1895, though appellant might have lost his appeal under such circumstances had he followed the judge’s improper (on that hypothesis) designation of place, and filed the record at New Orleans. The appeal as to place would have been dismissed. When the date for filing the appeal fixed by the judge was reached, appellant found New Orleans designated by Act No. 69 of 1894 as the place for appeals from Calcasieu, and he properly filed the record at that place. The provision in Sec. 3 of Act No. 69 of 1894 that “all appeals pending in the Supreme Court on the first day of August, 1894, and which have been made returnable at the cities of Monroe, Opelousas or Shreveport, are hereby transferred to the city of New Orleans, there to be tried on their respective return days as fixed by See. 2 of this act,” did not make this particular case (if it fell under that classification) returnable and triable at New Orleans on the second Monday of November, 1894 (which was the first return day after the passage of that act for returns from Calcasieu), though New Orleans was made thereby the place of return. The law was not intended to apply as to the time for the return to a case for which a special date of return had been fixed under the peculiar condition of ids record by the District Judge under his special grant [586]*586of authority. The judge’s order as to time remained unchanged by the change of the law. Though no use was made of the same in this court on the second Monday of November, 1894, the first day fixed under the last law for appeals from Calcasieu (and under our views, as expressed, there was no necessity for such use at that time), the certifica! e of the clerk, as we have said, shows that he had been unable up to that time to complete the record in the case, and appellant would have been entitled to an extension of time had that been its actual return day.

We are inclined to think that the law-maker, in referring in the closing portion of Sec. 8 of Act No. 69 of 1894 to appeals granted to the Supreme Court “ by an order of any court prior to the 1st August, 1894, from parishes from which appeals are made returnable to New Orleans under existing laws” (italics ours), and declaring that they should not be in any manner affected by the provisions of the last act, but should be returned on their respective return days, as fixed by existing laws, had in view Act No. 12 of 1894 as a then “ existing law,” although it had not yet, by reason of the date of its promulgation, become operative in Calcasieu. Appeals falling under that act were to be read out of Act No. 69. The date of return of appeals for Calcasieu, under the Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
47 La. Ann. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-banking-co-v-louisiana-lumber-co-la-1895.