White Hall Agr. Co. v. Police Jury

54 So. 337, 127 La. 1022, 1911 La. LEXIS 495
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 30, 1911
DocketNo. 18,529
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 54 So. 337 (White Hall Agr. Co. v. Police Jury) 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
White Hall Agr. Co. v. Police Jury, 54 So. 337, 127 La. 1022, 1911 La. LEXIS 495 (La. 1911).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

The White Hall Agricultural Company, and the Concordia Planting Company brought this suit to have declared null an election of the taxpayers of school district No. 5 of the parish of Concordia to determine whether or not to levy a tax of three mills upon the property within the limits of the district for a period of 30 years for the purpose of erecting school buildings in the district.

The complaint is that no legal election was held by the taxpayers, and that the police jury promulgated the result of the election, and declared that the vote was in favor of the tax; that this election was null for the reason that no petition was presented to the police jury to authorize the jury to call an election of the taxpayers.

Plaintiffs asked to have the sheriff of the parish, the president of the police jury, and the president of the school board cited, and did not ask for service to be made on the police jury or on the school board in their respective names.

In accordance with their petition, the president of the police jury and the president of the school board and the other defendants accepted service of the petition through their attorneys.

In due time thereafter the police jury of Concordia parish and the school board filed an exception on the ground that they had not been cited.

Thereafter the respective presidents of the police jury an‘d the school board filed an exception of no cause of action, of misjoinder of parties, and nonjoinder of parties.

The sheriff filed a similar exception with the additional ground of prematurity of the suit.

The exception of the assessor, also made a party, was to the same effect, save that he in addition alleged that he as assessor had placed the plaintiff’s property on the assessment rolls for the year 1910, and the injunction to restrain him from placing the property on the roll came too late.

These exceptions we are informed by the record were filed on the 3d day of October, 1910, and on the following day the plaintiffs moved to strike out the allegations of [1026]*1026the different defendants in their respective exceptions, except the allegations of E. F. Campbell, sheriff, who stated that plaintiffs’ petition showed no cause of action.

This defendant pleaded no cause of action, prematurity, that there was misjoinder and nonjoinder of parties, as just above mentioned.

The police jury and' others moved the court to have plaintiffs’ motion to strike out tried at the same time with the exceptions.

This motion was not granted.

Thereafter the motion to strike out was overruled. Except as to the sheriff, defendants’ exceptions were sustained. The judgment, it is urged, as to him -was erroneous, and ought to be overruled, and to that extent annulled and reversed, but affirmed in all other respects.

Plaintiffs appealed.

The police jury of the parish, the school board, and the presidents of each of these bodies and the other defendants filed a motion on the same day asking the district court to set aside plaintiffs’ order of appeal, which request was not granted.

In this court defendants have answered the appeal and asked that the judgment remain as it is, except with regard to the sheriff, whose exception, they alleged, ought to have been sustained.

Defendants severed in their defense, and their exceptions slightly differed one from the other.

The motion of "defendants” to refer to the trial of the exceptions plaintiffs’ motion to strike out was made in the name of the defendants ; that is, in the name of the president of the police jury, the president of the school board, and the other defendants.

Evidence was taken on the trial of the exceptions of misjoinder by the various defendants referred to above. Two witnesses were heard; one, the secretary of the police jury, and the other, the superintendent of the school board. They swore, and their testimony was not contradicted, that neither the police jury nor the school board had authorized any one to plead in the defense of the suit. There had been no proceedings of these bodies in that regard.

After the district court had dismissed the suit, reserving to the plaintiffs the right to amend, make parties and cite defendants, plaintiffs moved for an appeal to vacate the order of appeal, which was overruled.

The first exception is whether the defendants, to wit, the police jury, the school board, and the others were impleaded.

Defendants That Ought To Be Made Parties.

In our view of the law relating to citation, we are constrained to hold that these corporations were not sued and cited in the manner required. The Code of Practice leaves very little to interpretation upon the subject. One of its articles specially provides that a corporation must be sued in its name. Code Prac. art. 119. See, also, sections 112 to 19S of the same book.

The statutes are equally as clear. Section 7, Act No. 214 of 1902, contains also provisions upon the subject. Act No. 106 of 1892 is to the same effect.

The decisions of this court fpllowing the provisions of the Code of Practice and of the statutes hold in substance ’ that the police jury is a necessary party.

The following decisions are pertinent: Egan v. Russ, 39 La. Ann. 971, 3 South. 85; Sentell v. Police Jury, 48 La. Ann. 98, 18 South. 910.

As Relates to the Want of Citation.

The defendant is party to whom to address the citation (Code Prac. arts. 178, 179), and knowledge brought to the defendant in any other way will not cure a citation (Bertoulin v. Bourgoin, 19 La. Ann. 360; Payne v. Graham, 23 La. Ann. 773).

[1028]*1028The citation ought to he addressed to the corporation sued, and not to its president. Telephone Co. v. Judge, 50 La. Ann. 674, 23 South. 871; Railroad Co. v. Justice of the Peace, 48 La. Ann. 1417, 20 South. 911. See, also, Gubel v. Lafayette, 118 La. 494, 43 South. 63.

The defendant was not properly made a party.

Effect of Acceptance of Service.

The acceptance of the service by the president of the police jury and by the president of the school board did not bind the police jury and the school board. The corporations were not called into court to answer the petition.

Had judgment been rendered against the president of the police jury and against the president of the school board, it would not have been effective against the police jury and the school board, who were not parties. This is particularly true when considered from the viewpoint that these presidents were not authorized by the respective bodies over which they presided.

The presidents of private corporations as well as the presidents of police juries and of school boards have to be authorized to stand in judgment. Hoffpauir v. Wise, 38 La. Ann. 704; Bright v. Cemetery Ass’n, 33 La. Ann. 58.

All corporations being on the same footing in this respect, the case of Jeanerette Rice & Milling Co. v. Durocher, 123 La. 160, 48 South. 780, 781, is specially pertinent.

All the authorities hold that the citation must be addressed to the company or to the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 337, 127 La. 1022, 1911 La. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-hall-agr-co-v-police-jury-la-1911.