58 So. 570 | La. | 1912
This is a suit for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of a wrongful injunction sued out by the defendants against the execution of a contract between the plaintiff and the police jury of the parish of Iberville, for the construction
One of the grounds of the defense was that the injunction lasted only 11 days, when it was dissolved on bond on the application of John Arthur and other defendants in the injunction suit. This defense was sustained by the judge a quo, and all evidence as to damages suffered after the dissolution of the injunction was excluded. There was judgment in favor of the defendants rejecting plaintiff’s demand, from which he has appealed.
The injunction was granted on July 11, 1905, and leave was granted to dissolve on bond on July 22, 1905. Plaintiffs in injunction moved for a suspensive appeal to the Supreme Court from the order' of dissolution. This motion was refused, and thereupon counsel for plaintiffs notified the court and opposing counsel that application would be made to the Supreme Court in due time for writs of mandamus and other remedies. On the same day the release bond was executed, accepted, and filed.
Plaintiffs in injunction presented a petition to the Supreme Court praying for writs of mandamus, prohibition, and certiorari, addressed to the trial judge, commanding him to send up a certified copy of the proceedings in the suit, to the end that their validity might be ascertained, and prohibiting said judge from doing anything further in executing the order dissolving the injunction on bond, and until judgment shall be pronounced by the Supreme Court on the regularity of his proceedings, and ordering the judge aforesaid to allow the relators a suspensive appeal from the order dissolving the injunction on bond.
The Supreme Court being in vacation, the petition of relators was presented to Mr. Justice Nicholls, who, after considéring the application, ordered the judge to send up a certified copy of the proceedings in the suit, and to show cause before the court on November 6, 1905, why the writs prayed for should not be granted; and further ordered that the parties in interest be notified, “and are to file briefs in support of their respective pretensions, claims, and positions.”
The respondent judge answered the rule to show cause, and the proceedings terminated on November 20, 1905, in a judgment reading as follows:
“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the restraining order herein issued be now rescinded, and that the relators’ application be rejected with costs.”
We concur in that contention. The order granted by Mr. Justice Nicholls was that a certified copy of the proceedings be sent up, and that the judge and parties show cause why the writs prayed for should not be granted. As no writ was granted, it is impossible to apply the rules of practice applicable to writs of certiorari, prohibition, or mandamus, and the order itself did not enjoin or restrain the judge or parties from doing anything. Certiorari to send up or complete a record is not the writ provided for in the Code of Practice to set aside proceedings which are absolutely void. C. P. art. 857. Such a writ “concludes by enjoining upon the inferior judge to proceed no further in the ease, until judgment shall be pronounced on the regularity of his proceedings.” C. P. art. 856. But if judgment has been rendered and execution issued in the court below, the superior tribunal may arrest the execution by enjoining the party and the officer to proceed no further until the validi
It is therefore ordered that the judgment below be amended by dismissing the suit as in case of nonsuit, and as thus amended be affirmed; defendants to pay costs of appeal.