Watts v. Collier
This text of 72 So. 822 (Watts v. Collier) 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.
Opinions
On Motion to Dismiss.
The appellant in this case obtained orders for both a suspensive and a devolutive appeal. The judgment being for $35, he made the amount of his suspensive appeal bond $52.50, that is to say, $35, the amount of the judgment, plus one-half of that sum and he made the amount of his devolutive appeal bond $75, as fixed by the judge. 1-Ie cumulated the two bonds in one for $130 for the two appeals. This cumulation is allowable, since a bond, though purporting to have been given for the one appeal, may be good for the other.
The question of whether the costs must be added, in computing the amount of the suspensive appeal bond, came before this court in Brown v. Brown, 9 La. Ann. 310, and again in Paland v. Railroad Co., 42 La. Ann. 290, 7 South. 899, and was decided in the negative. And in State ex rel. v. Judge, 29 La. Ann. 776, this court said that “jurisprudence and long uniform practice have settled the interpretation”; that the costs are not required to be thus included.
In the decisions cited by appellee, in support of the motion to dismiss, this question was not involved. Thus, in State ex rel. v. Judge, 21 La. Ann. 64, the sole question was as to whether the suspensive appeal bond to be given in the ease should have been in an amount fixed by the judge or in an amount “exceeding by one-half the amount” of the judgment. In Moussier v. -Gustine, 25 La. Ann. 36, the ground of the motion to dismiss was not that the costs had not been included in the computation of the amount of the bond, but that “the surety on the appeal bond was the same person who was surety on the' injunction bond.” What the court decided in Malain v. Judge, 29 La. Ann. 793, was that in a case where a moneyed judgment has been enjoined, and the injunction has been dissolved with damages, it is the judgment appealed from — namely, that dissolving the injunction — that regulates the amount of the suspensive appeal bond, and not the enjoined judgment. And, in like manner, the point decided in State ex rel. v. Judge, 35 La. Ann. 1174, was that, where the collection of taxes has been enjoined, and the injunction has been dissolved, the enjoined taxes are not required to be included in the amount of the suspensive appeal bond. True, the court in making its ruling in those cases used the expression that the suspensive appeal bond would have been sufficient if given for the capital, interest, and costs of the judgment appealed from; but this expression, as bearing upon the question whether or not costs have to be included in a suspensive appeal bond, was the merest obiter, as that question was not involved in those cases, and, as shown hereinabove, that question has been expressly decided the other way in several cases.
The motion to dismiss is overruled.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
72 So. 822, 140 La. 99, 1914 La. LEXIS 1975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-v-collier-la-1914.