True Tag Paint Co. v. Wellman
True Tag Paint Co. v. Wellman
Opinion of the Court
“The want of citation is cured by the appearance of defendant in the suit for any other purpose than to allege the want of citation.”
And in Heard v. Patton, 27 La. Ann. 542, this court said:
“It has often been held that a defendant appearing to except to the citation cannot at the same time urge any matter of defense.”
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and'decreed that the judgment appealed from be affirmed, and that defendant be condemned to pay plaintiff 10 per cent, additional on the amount thereof, with legal interest from this date, and the costs of this appeal.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- TRUE TAG PAINT CO. v. WELLMAN
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staf.) 1. Costs Whore defendant never questioned his indebtedness to plaintiff, even when sued, except by a purely formal denial in the answer, and he had written plaintiff ten letters asking for time and promising to pay, and when threatened with suit, and later when sued threatened to “law” plaintiff to the end and to pay only after final judgment by the Supreme Court, and he took a suspensive appeal, and opposed plaintiff’s application to have the case put on the preference docket, his resistance of the suit was evidently for delay, and a penalty for a frivolous appeal will be imposed; the appeal in fact being frivolous. 2. Appeal and Error An exception to the citation based on alleged defects in the return cannot be reviewed where the return is not brought up in the transcript 3. Appearance An exception to the citation based on alleged defects in the return was vacated by the filing of an answer to the merits simultaneously with the filing of the exception, though the exception stated that defendant appeared for the sole purpose of the exception, and the answer stated that it was filed only on condition that the exception be overruled and with full reserve of the exception, as any appearance except distinctly for the sole purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction or to the citation amounts to an appearance which stands in place of citation. [Ed. Note. — For other definitions, see Words and Phrases, First and Second Series, Appearance.] 4. Sales A petition which with the itemized account annexed thereto and made a part thereof, showed that defendant owed plaintiff for goods bought from plaintiff, and showed what the goods consisted of, and the dates of purchase, was not insufficient to admit proof of the delivery of the goods.