Wisdom & Levy v. Bille

45 So. 554, 120 La. 700, 1908 La. LEXIS 556
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 9, 1908
DocketNo. 16,857
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 45 So. 554 (Wisdom & Levy v. Bille) 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
Wisdom & Levy v. Bille, 45 So. 554, 120 La. 700, 1908 La. LEXIS 556 (La. 1908).

Opinions

NICHOLLS, J.

The present cause was brought to this court for review on the following application made to it by Dr. Waldemar Bille, one of the defendants:

“The petition of Dr. Waldemar Bille respectfully represents that in the month of December, 1906, the firm of Wisdom & Levy brought three separate suits against petitioner as in-dorser on a series of notes, all growing out of the same transaction and between the same parties, Nos. 27,279, 27,435, and 28,288 of the First city court of New Orleans, one being for 91.34, another for $20.21, and another for 27.44. That in each of the said suits petitioner was sued as indorser, and there was no allegation in any one of the said petitions that notice of dishonor had ever been given to petitioner as required by law, nor was there any allegation in any of the said petitions which would excuse the holder of the notes from giving notice of dishonor. And petitioner was sued wholly as indorser, and petitioner was therefore not liable as indorser. And the contention on the part of the counsel for the plaintiffs was that, because that he had alleged in each of the petitions that each of the said notes had been protested, that that was equivalent to an allegation of a notice of dishonor; there being no allegation that notice of protest had been given, which would have been one of the methods of giving notice of dishonor.
“That, the said three suits being pending in the First city court, the following agreement was signed by counsel on February 20, 1907: ‘It is agreed that these three cases bearing the above title and numbers may be consolidated and allotted to one judge and tried together, and the evidence taken in one may be used in all, and all may be tried before division O.’ Signed by W. A. Bell and Robert Perrin, attorneys for Wisdom & Levy and Benjamin Rice Forman, attorney for Dr. Bille. And thereupon after filing said stipulation, the following order was made on motion of William A. Bell, attorney for Wisdom & Levy: ‘Suggesting that the above numbered and entitled case now pending before division A of the First city court discloses the same parties and cause of action before division O of said court, and, further, that the attorney for the defendant has agreed to a consolidation of said cases for trial before division O, as per agreement hereto annexed, it is ordered by the court that suit No. 28,288, division O, entitled “Wisdom & Levy v. Bille & Bille,” be consolidated with No. 27,277 and 27,435, and that these said cases be tried together before division C and disposed of by one single judgment.’ Thereafter, the said consolidated cases coming on to be tried before the Honorable Henry Ren-shaw, one of the judges of the First city court, petitioner excepted to his trying the same, and to the jurisdiction of the court, because as the result of the consolidation the matter in dispute exceeds the jurisdiction of the court, being $158.99. This exception was erroneously overruled, and thereupon the Honorable Henry Renshaw, having heard the case, dismissed all three cases as in case of nonsuit because there was neither allegation nor proof of notice of dishonor, and he should have rendered an absolute judgment in favor of the defendant, the case having been submitted on its merits. Thereupon Wisdom & Levy took an appeal to the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans, and, the cases coming on to be heard before Judge Estopinal, sitting alone, on the 17th of May, 1907, petitioner, through his counsel, moved to dismiss the appeal, because the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans has no jurisdiction of an appeal from the First city court when one judge was sitting alone, in-[703]*703asniueh as the matter in dispute exceeds the ■sum of one hundred dollars ($100), and if that court should try the case, which should he heard by at least two judges, and moved to dismiss the appeal for the further reason that W. H. Bille, the other party to the suits, had not been made a party to the appeal.
“This motion was promptly denied, and the Honorable Judge Estopinal, sitting alone, then proceeded to try the case and render judgment reversing the judgment of Judge Renshaw, and render judgment in favor of Wisdom & Levy and against petitioner for the amount of the ■said notes, on which he was indorser, with interest and 20 per cent, attorney’s fees.
“That the said judgment was clearly contrary to law. Act No. 64, p. 147, of 1904, has not changed the law on the subject of negotiable instruments, but simply declared the law as previously existed, and the subject of '“presentment for payment’ is treated of under article 6 (sections 70 to 88, inclusive), and so distinct is the ‘notice of dishonor’ that it is treated of in article 7 (sections 89 to 118, inclusive), and section 89 says: ‘When a negotiable instrument has been dishonored by nonpayment, notice of dishonor must be given to each indorser and any indorser to whom such notice is not given is discharged.’
“The judgment by Judge Estopinal in the ■said case is contrary to statutory law. Petitioner has filed an application in due season for a rehearing, of which a copy is annexed, and the rehearing was refused on the 18th of October, 1907, and a copy of the said ruling on the application is also annexed. Judge Estopinal rendered no written opinion in any of the said cases, and petitioner has filed with the cleric ■of the Court of Appeal and served upon the Honorable William A. Bell, attorney for Wisdom & Levy, notice of his intention to apply to this honorable court for relief.”

In view of the premises petitioner prayed:

“That your honors would issue a writ of certiorari or writ of review, and order the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans to send up the three records entitled ‘Wisdom & Levy v. Bille & Bille,’ that the errors contained may be corrected, and that your honors may fender such judgment as should have been rendered in the first instance, rejecting the demand of the plaintiff in said cases, and for costs and general relief.”

An order for certiorari and writ of review was granted on the 18th of November, 1907, and was issued as prayed for, and the records have been brought up as ordered. The plaintiffs, Wisdom & Levy, have prayed this court to have the said order set aside, vacated, and avoided on the ground that it was erroneously granted upon one single petition herein filed by the applicant for a writ of review to this court of three separate and distinct judgments rendered in three separate suits bearing the docket numbers 4,206, 4,207, and 4,208 of the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans, and the numbers 28,288 and 27,435 and 27,279, respectively, of the docket of the First city court of New Orleans, from which last-named court three separate appeals were taken under three separate bonds; judgment upon the three said suits never having been entered, either in the city court or in the Court of Appeal under one judgment or one docket number.

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 554, 120 La. 700, 1908 La. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisdom-levy-v-bille-la-1908.