113 So. 127 | La. | 1927
Plaintiffs, as administrators of the public wharves of the Port of New Orleans, sued the defendant, as owner of the Japanese steamship Fukuyu Maru, for alleged damages to one of said wharves, caused by the alleged negligence of those in charge of said steamship.
As to which plaintiff urges (1) that, being a "state agency," no prescription runs against it because prescription does not run against the state in civil matters, Const. 1921, art. 19, § 16, p. 121; and (2) that, in any event, said prescription was interrupted by plaintiff having libeled the ship before the Admiralty (United States District) Court within the year.
But the prescription liberandi causa, which operates a release from debt by the mere lapse of time, is another matter.
And in view of R.C.C. art. 3521, which declares that prescription runs against all persons unless they are included in some exception *867 established by law, we are not prepared to hold that the exception thus established in favor of the state applies to any or all other public corporations or agencies; for this constitutional provision is only the reduction to statutory form of a principle of public law already long established by universal jurisprudence, which principle has very generally been confined to actions brought by and in the name of the state itself. 17 R.C.L. 973.
In Stanbrough v. McCall, 4 La. Ann. 322, 324, it was held that, where the creditor had two actions for the amount of his debt, one in personam and the other in rem against the property of his debtor, the pursuit of his claim in either form interrupted prescription as to the other form of action.
This was the case here. Plaintiff had two actions for the recovery of its claim, one in personam and one in rem. The pursuit of its action in rem against the ship interrupted prescription as to the action in personam which it now brings.
We think the trial judge erred in sustaining defendant's plea of prescription.
THOMPSON, J., concurs in the decree, but is of the opinion that prescription does not run against the plaintiff board.