Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901

State ex rel. Metropolitan Bank v. Judge of the Civil District Court

State ex rel. Metropolitan Bank v. Judge of the Civil District Court
Supreme Court of Louisiana · Decided November 15, 1901 · Breaux, Monroe, Nicholls
107 La. 474

State ex rel. Metropolitan Bank v. Judge of the Civil District Court

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Monroe, J.

This is an application for the writ of mandamus to compel th© judge of the district court to .allow the relator to file a motion for commissions to take the testimony of certain witnesses, and to make the necessary orders for the issuanc© of such commissions.

The respondent, in his return, states that he had no intention of refusing to permit relator to file the motion referred to and it is conceded that no action is needed as to that ground of complaint, the important question being, whether relator is entitled to the writ for the other purpose stated in the application. Upon that subject, the return of th© respondent is, ¡that the interrogatories prepared by the relator and the testimony which it proposes to take under commission, “are totally irrelevant, immaterial and impertinent to any issue pending” in .the cause in which the commissions were demanded, and he annexes to his return copies of the proceedings in connection with which the demand was made. From these, it appears that there had been filed in the district court the mandate of this court, whereby certain issues in controversy .between the relator and the Succession of J. J. Gragard, had been determined and the cause had been remanded for a purpose involving the taking ¡of further testimony, and that thereafter, the relator applied for the commissions to take the testimony of a number .of witnesses residing in different places. The counsel far1 the administrator thereupon took a rule upon the relator, suggesting that the taking of such, testimony would involve great delay and expenses and that it appeared ¡from the interrogatories propounded, which were exhibited with the rule, that the matters inquired about were no longer open to inquiry but were concluded by the judgment of this court, and that the taking of the testimony would be in contravention and contempt of said judgment. The relator was accordingly ordered to show cause why its application should not be denied, and, after hearing the counsel and considering the interrogatories, its application was denied, for the reasons which are given in the return of the respondent judge.

The remedy, we think, is by appeal, .the case not being materially different from what it would be if the testimony had been taken and *476excluded ou the trial, or if the judge a quo had refused to grant the delay necessary for the return of the commissions, or if he had made almost an order, in the course of the trial, which might be open to exception, at the time, and to correction in the review of the final judgment. As was said in the case of State ex rel. Halphen vs. Judge, 3fc Ann.' 97: “Our jurisprudence would be revolutionized if we should hold -that every right which has heretofore been enforced by appeal and every wrong which has heretofore been redressed .by appeal may now bo redressed, cr enforced, by mandamus whenever the necessities of a suitor may appear to require or invite it.”

Tie rule nisi herein issued is discharged and the application for the writ of mandamus is denied at the cost of the relator.

Nicholls, C. J., and Breaux, J., dissent.

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