Hill v. Richey
Hill v. Richey
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
In view of the fact that the judge of the district court has, since the handing down of our original opinion in this case, decided in the petitory action brought by defendant, Richey, against plaintiff, Hill, that Richey is the owner of the land which is the subject of this possessory action, a rehearing should be granted. Article 55 of the Code of Practice, as amended by Act 202 of 1920, declares:
“Petitory and possessory actions shall not be cumulated or joined together except by consent of parties. But he who is sued in a possessory action may bring a petitory action for, or an action to establish title to, all or any*1003 part of the property involved in the possessory action, without in any way affecting the pending possessory action, provided that if judgment be rendered in the petitory action in favor of plaintiff, the pending possessory action shall abate.” (Emphasis mine.)
Accordingly, forasmuch as the judgment has now been rendered in the petitory action, this possessory action has abated. The fact that the judgment in the petitory action may not be final, in the sense that an appeal may be taken therefrom to this court, should not deter us from protecting Richey’s rights under that judgment. In my opinion, the least that could be done would be to grant a rehearing and stay further proceedings in this suit until the petitory action judgment is finally reviewed on appeal.
For these reasons, I dissent from the refusal of a rehearing.
Opinion of the Court
This is a possessory action involving a tract of land comprising 86.65' acres in Rapides Parish, coupled with a demand for damages in the sum of $6,000 against the
Upon remand of the case, the defendants were ruled into court to show cause why the mandate of the Supreme Court should not be followed on the record as constituted. On the return day, in opposition to the rule, defendant Richey filed a motion to recall, contending that procedure by rule was unauthorized, and also filed exceptions of no cause or right of action. On the following day, after defendant’s motion and exceptions had been overruled, Richey answered, averring that “additional evidence should be heard and received to the end that the Court might properly and finally determine the issues presented by the record in this case.” He also filed an application and motion for consolidation of the trial of this cause with a petitory action filed by him against the plaintiff some seven months after this case was remanded to the District Court — which application was denied by the trial judge. Judgment was then rendered on the merits, in favor of plaintiff and against Kellogg Lumber Company in the sum of $4,131, with interest and costs; calls in warranty were maintained in favor of Kellogg Lumber Company and Kolb, and the same judgment as that rendered in favor of plaintiff was likewise rendered in favor of Kellogg Lumber Company against Kolb and Richey, and in favor of Kolb against Richey. Both the plaintiff and the defendants have appealed.
A study and analysis of the case relied on by the plaintiff in support of his contention that he is entitled to have judgment against all the defendants in solido will clearly show it has no application to the facts of this case. In Guarantee Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. E. C. Drew Inv. Co., supra, unlike the facts of the case at bar,
Defense counsel’s contention that the procedure by rule was improper and unauthorized is supported only by his statement that the purpose was to deprive the defendant of the right to offer further testimony on the amount of damages, if any; and is closely allied to his second contention, that the case should not have been decided on the record as originally constituted, without the taking of further and additional evidence. In this connection the district judge, in a carefully considered opinion, observed: “An examination of the transcript reveals that the issue of damages was tried in this court and could have been adjudicated prior to the appeal. * * * The mandate of the Supreme Court, through its silence on the subject, does not expressly authorize a re-opening of the evidence, and the opposition of Richey fails not only to point out why the evidence should be reopened, but also to request the Court to reopen it by simply stating 'that further and additional evidence should be received’ * * In any event, the opinion states that while the trial judge was “entirely satisfied that the record justifies the award of judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the Kellogg Company in the sum of $4,131.00, the value of the timber removed from the sixty
The trial judge properly denied defendant Richey’s motion to consolidate this case with the petitory action instituted by him against the plaintiff, under the express provision of the Code of Practice that "Petitory and possessory actions shall not be cumulated or joined together except by consent of parties. * * * ” Art. 55; and we think Richey’s motion filed in this Court to stay the proceedings until such time as his petitory action is finally determined is equally without merit. While the Article further declares that “ * * * he who is sued in a possessory action may bring a petitory action for * * * all or any part of the property involved in the possessory action * * it is only “if judgment [is] rendered in the petitory action in favor of plaintiff [that], the pending possessory action shall abate.” It necessarily follows that to allow the defendant Richey at this stage of the proceedings to take advantage of his laches and failure to promptly assert his title to the tract of land involved would be most inequitable. Cf. Smith v. Grant Timber & Mfg. Co., 130 La. 471, 58 So. 153.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
. Tlie defendant Richey, owner of land adjoining the disputed tract on the east, had sold the timber on his land to W. E. Kolb, with full warranty; Kolb in turn sold it to the Kellogg Lumber Co. with full warranty. Eollowing institution of this suit, Kolb and Kellogg Lumber Co. called Richey in warranty, praying that in the event plaintiff should recover from them, that there be judgment for like amount in their favor and against Richey. In answer, Richey recognized his liability to Kolb under his warranty.
. Plaintiff, by his own admission as found in his brief, “has not attempted to recover damages based upon either legal bad faith or moral bad faith on the part of the defendants * * * but * * * has restricted his claim to stumpage value.”
Reference
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