State ex rel. Sintes v. Rightor
State ex rel. Sintes v. Rightor
Opinion of the Court
On Application for Writ of Mandamus. .
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Relator avers that he filed in the Civil District Oourt for the parish of Orleans, a petition against William J. Commerford, asking judgment for forty-eight hundred dollars; that he caused a writ of attachment to issue against him and made
A rule to show cause having been served upon the District Judge, he answered. He submitted to the court that the matter did not fall within its supervisory jurisdiction; that relator was fully protected in all of his rights by a right of appeal to the Supreme Court, if, indeed, said order complained of was one subject to review, in any
He declared that true it was that the time fixed for the answering of the interrogatories under oath in open court was originally fixed for Monday, January 4, 1897, and that the time to answer was regularly postponed until January 25, 1897, when the proceedings set forth in relator’s bill of exceptions took place.
He averred that exercising his best judgment he decided the question whether or not the said answers should be made in open court in the negative, for the reason that, in his opinion, the laws of the State did not authorize an order requiring garnishee to answer in open court,- but that the right to such answers in open court was preserved to relator upon a traverse of the written answers to interrogatories on file, if relator should desire to obtain such answers to interrogatories on facts and articles in open court. That his decision of the question was one rendered in the performance of his judicial duties, and was not the performance of a mere ministerial duty, and that the writ of mandamus did not lie to compel him to rescind the said order by him rendered. He prayed that the writ asked for be refused.
The bill of exceptions recites the different documents filed and orders given and proceedings had in Sintes vs. Commerford up to the calling of that case on January 25, 1897. It recites that upon that day the garnishees appeared in open court, through their attorneys, and objected to the right of the plaintiff and the court to require said garnishees to answer in open court upon the grounds:
1. That there was no law in any case warranting an order requiring such answers in open court; and
2. That even if there were such law it did not apply to those particular garnishees who were not residents. That thereupon the court, without hearing any evidence, sustained the garnishees in their first objection and rescinded the order of December 15 and 25, requiring said garnishees to answer said interrogatories in open court and denied plaintiff the right to have them so answered.
An examination of the pleadings in the suit of Sintes vs. Commerfordshows that thejiplaintifif filed a supplemental petition to which he annexed interrogatories, which he' desired answered by the parties therein named, but that in his prayer asking that the court order them to be answered he did not ask that they be ordered to be answered “ in open court.” For some reason not explained, the order signed by the judge required the interrogatories to be answered on the 4th of January, 1897, at 11 o’clock. Brainard Rorison on that day filed in court written answers. It does not appear that the Barber Asphalt Company answered at all.
Counsel for defendants press upon us that the suit is an appealable one, and that any erroneous ruling made in the course of the proceedings could be corrected on appeal; that we should not detach a special ruling from the main case and dispose of it by anticipation. The orders which issued in this case were based upon the theory that the right claimed by relator might on examination be found to be an absolute one which, if not granted now, might be entirely defeated by delay, either by the removal of the parties from the jurisdiction of the court or by death. Relator, would have presented on this hypothesis a very strong case for exceptional action on our part. In State ex rel. Chism & Boyd vs. Judge, 34 An. 1178, where the judge referred a case before him to be tried by a jury, which under the law was triable by the court itself, we said: “A mandamus is often sought and obtained to set in motion a judicial officer who is unwilling to proceed with the decision of a cause instituted before his court, the plaintiff therein having an absolute right to a determination of his action in the form and manner prescribed by law. State ex rel. Leeds vs. Judge, 32 An. 542; State ex rel. Cobb & Gunby vs. Judges, 32 An. 774; La. Ice Co. vs. State National Bank, 32 An. 597; State ex rel. Merchants’ Mutual Insurance Company vs. Judges, 33 An. 1070; State ex rel. Winter & Hunter vs. Judges, 33 An. 1096; State ex rel. Bloss vs. Judges, 33 An. 1351; High on Extraordinary Remedies, par. 250. A distinction is recognized between cases where it is sought by mandamus to control the decision of the inferior court on the merits of a cause, and cases where it has refused to go into the merits of a cause and cases where
We have on a number of occasions referred to our power under Art. 90 of the Constitution to grant exceptional relief (see State ex rel. Murray vs. Judge, 86 An. 578; State ex rel. Whitney Iron Works vs. Judge, 44 An. 1091, 1092; State ex rel. Lehman vs. Judge, 46 An. 168; State ex rel. Saizan vs. Judge, 48 An. 1501.
As the ruling complained of was one made on an issue raised and contradictorily disposed of between the parties in interest, in a case appealable to us, we are to inquire whether the matter, as presented, be of a character such as to call for the supervisory control over the action of District Courts which we only exceptionally exercise in that class of cases.
In Derbes vs. Decuir, 5 R. 491, plaintiff was appellant from a judgment rejecting his claim against the defendant on an alleged assumption of the latter of one-half of a sum due to the plaintiff by defendant’s father-in-law. The demand was for a sum of overfive hundred dollars. Plaintiff claimed that evidence of the promise was to be. found in the deposition of one Delahoussaye and resulted from his neglect to answer the interrogatory of the plaintiff in this respect. The precise relation which he (Delahoussaye) occupied in the litigation, the report of the case does not disclose. It would seem, however, that he had been cited into court to answer in open court one or more interrogatories, and that having failed to do so, they were taken for confessed. The Supreme Court held that this order taking the interrogatories for confessed was improvidently rendered. It said: “ The neglect to answer would have been sufficient if the interrogatory had been required simply to be answered, but being required to be answered in open court it was the duty of plaintiff’s counsel to call on the court to appoint a day for that purpose. This was not done (C. P. 351.) In Stewart vs. Carlin, 2 La. 73, we held that “ if a party be ruled to answer interrogatories in open court and his opponent does not move for and fix a certain day on which to answer, they will not be taken for confessed if the party interrogated fail to answer.
One of the garnishees (Rorison) has filed written answers to the interrogatories propounded, the other, a corporation (the Barber Asphalt Co.), has taken no action whatever so far as the record discloses.
Article 246 of the Code of Practice authorizes a creditor who suspects that a third person has in his possession property belonging to his debtor, or that he is indebted to such debtor, to make such third person a party to the suit by having him “ cited to declare on oath ” what property belonging to the defendant he has in his possession, or in what sum he is indebted. The article does not point out the precise manner in which this “declaration under oath” shall be made.
The next article (Art. 247) authorizes the creditor to likewise annex to his petition interrogatories on facts and articles to be answered categorically under oath by the garnishees, but is still silent as to how or in what mode the interrogatories are to be answered.
Article 248 provides for the special case where the creditor has reason to believe that the person to whom he has caused interrogatories to be propounded is “about to depart from the State without having” filed His ANSWERS to such interrogatories. In such a case the creditor may have the party interrogated a;rested.
This article Shows that it was in contemplation of the lawmaker that the answers should be “ filed” in court, not that they should be taken down by the clerk in open court. The person so arrested is declared by Art. 249 to be entitled to be discharged if he immediately, in presence of the court, answer in writing and pertinently the answers propounded to him, and file such answers in the office of the clerk of the court.
It will be seen from this that even where there may be reason to apprehend that the party interrogated is about to leave
Article 262 declares that the garnishee who has been cited in a suit must “ put in his answer” within the usual delay, declaring “in the same” what property he has belonging to the defendant * * * and if interrogated on facts and articles he must answer under oath clearly and categorically each question put to him touching such matter.”
The article 'does not direct that the answers thus ordered to be “ clearly and categorically ” made should be.made orally in open court.
The articles of the Code which we have cited are found under the special heading of attachment and garnishment. No reference is made to the later Art. 351, nor does this latter article refer back to them. It is true that the interrogatories propounded under all of the articles are designated as “ interrogatories on facts and articles,” but it does not follow necessarily from this that all the rules governing interrogatories propounded under Art. 351 should also apply and control those propounded under Arts. 246 et seq. It may be that the District Judge would have the “power” to order in some particular case that the garnishee’s original answers be made orally in open court, and to enforce his order by way of penalty, but this is something other than that a creditor should have an absolute right to require him to take such action, and to force him to do so through a mandamus when he declines.
The case at bar is one where the judge having inadvertently given an order when not asked, and having rescinded the same when called to his attention, is sought to be compelled to adhere to his original order.
The case is not one which calls for the relief asked.
For the reasons herein assigned, it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed that the order hereinbefore granted be set aside, and relator’s application be and, the same is hereby rejected.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State ex rel. Christopher Sintes v. N. H. Rightor, Judge Civil District Court
- Status
- Published