159 So. 603 | La. | 1935
The plaintiff sued to establish the boundary line between his land and the lands of the defendants. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants obtained an order for a devolutive appeal to the Court of Appeal for the First circuit, without giving an appeal bond; that is to say, in forma pauperis. The petition for the appeal was accompanied by affidavits (as required by section 2 of Act No. 156 of 1912) to the effect that the appellants were so poor that they were unable to pay the court costs or to give an appeal bond, or bond for costs. The petition for the appeal was filed on the last day previous to the day on which the year allowed by law for the taking of an appeal would have expired, and the order was granted on the day on which the petition was filed.
The plaintiff, appellee, filed a motion in the Court of Appeal to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that the defendants did not file their affidavits with their first pleading in the district court, as required by section 2 of Act No. 156 of 1912, p. 223. The Court of Appeal sustained the motion and dismissed the appeal. 156 So. 79. The defendants appellants, have brought the matter here on a writ of review.
It is true that the defendants did not file the affidavits (required by section 2 of Act No. 156 of 1912) with their first pleading in the district court. They filed first certain preliminary motions, and thereafter pleas of misjoinder of parties, and, these pleas being *419 overruled, they filed their answers to the suit. No suggestion was ever made, until the defendants filed their petition for an appeal from the final judgment, that they should be granted the right to defend the suit in forma pauperis.
Under the act of 1934, amending section 2 of Act No. 156 of 1912, there is no doubt that a litigant now may at any stage of the suit obtain the right to proceed in forma pauperis by filing the affidavits required by the statute, and need not have filed the affidavits with his first pleading. The act of 1934 was adopted at the regular session of the Legislature which convened on the 14th of May and adjourned on the 12th of July, 1934. According to the provisions of section 27 of article 3 of the Constitution, the acts of 1934 went into effect at noon on the 20th day after the Legislature adjourned. The 20th day after the 12th day of July was Wednesday, the 1st *421
day of August, 1934. The record in this case was filed in the Court of Appeal on the 9th day of January, 1934. The motion to dismiss the appeal was filed on the 15th day of March, 1934. The decree of the Court of Appeal, dismissing the appeal, was rendered and signed on the 30th day of June, 1934. A petition for a rehearing was filed on the 17th day of July, 1934, which was within the time allowed by law for the filing of a petition for a rehearing, and which was after the session of the Legislature of that year had adjourned, but before the acts of that session had gone into effect. If the petition for a rehearing had been acted upon and a rehearing denied before the 1st day of August, 1934, or before noon of that day, the appellants' case would have been thereby disposed of finally before Act No. 165 of 1934 went into effect. But the petition for a rehearing was not acted upon until the 3d day of October, 1934, on which day the Court of Appeal refused to grant a rehearing. The case, therefore, was actually pending on the petition for a rehearing, in the Court of Appeal, when the acts of 1934 went into effect. In the case entitled Succession of Wolfe,
"It is true that Act No. 165 of 1934 did not become effective until approximately fifty days after appellant's petition in forma pauperis was filed in the district court, but, when it did become effective, this cause was pending on appeal, and the act contains the following specific provision:
"`The privilege herein granted shall apply to causes presently pending before the courts.'
"Inasmuch as the provisions of the act apply to cases pending in the courts at the time of its passage, the petition in forma pauperis was filed in this suit timely."
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the right of the appellants in this case to prosecute their appeal in forma pauperis is protected by the provisions of Act No. 165 of 1934. The reason why the act, by its terms, was made applicable to suits pending in the courts when the act went into effect, is that the act is only remedial legislation. In the case of Mrs. Martha E. Garlick v. Lucien W. Dalbey et al.,
In the present case, the affidavits furnished by the appellants in support of their right to prosecute an appeal in forma pauperis did not set forth that they had been able to pay, and *423
had actually paid, the initial costs of the litigation, and that they had afterwards become unable to pay further costs or to furnish a bond for costs. An affidavit to that effect was not required by the statute until it was amended by the act of 1934, allowing the affidavits to be filed "at any time during the pendency of the suit." But the affidavits which the appellants furnished in this case did set forth that they were so poor that they could not pay the court costs, and that, by reason of their poverty, they were unable to give a bond for costs; hence it was a matter of no importance whether the alleged poverty occurred before or after the suit was brought against the appellants. The requirement, in the act of 1934, that a litigant who claims the right during the progress of the suit to proceed in forma pauperis must furnish affidavits to the effect that he "has actually paid the initial costs of the litigation," is not applicable to a defendant in a suit, because a defendant in a suit in any of the parishes outside of the parish of Orleans is not required to pay the court costs as they accrue, or as the suit progresses, or to furnish a bond for costs. Under Act No. 203 of 1898, § 5, p. 490, which act is not applicable to the parish of Orleans, the clerks of the district courts throughout the state may demand of the plaintiff in a suit a bond for court costs, at the time of the filing of the suit, and may demand additional security at any time thereafter, and may require the plaintiff to pay the accrued costs semiannually, on the 1st day of January and the 1st day of July, during the pendency of the suit. That act, of course, is not applicable to suits in which the plaintiff is granted the right to proceed in forma pauperis. By Act No. 111 of 1926, p. 170, the defendant in *424
a lawsuit, except in the parish of Orleans, and except in suits brought in forma pauperis or in suits brought by the state or by a political subdivision of the state, may demand of the plaintiff, or of an intervener or a third opponent, a bond to secure the payment of the costs. But, in the case of Whitson v. American Ice Co.,
The plaintiff and appellee, Buckley, directs our attention to the fact that section 2 of Act No. 156 of 1912 gives him the right to traverse the affidavits on which the right to proceed in forma pauperis was granted. This right to traverse such affidavits is retained in the act of 1934, amending section 2 of the act of 1912. The only way to reconcile that right with the right of an impoverished litigant to take a devolutive appeal from an adverse judgment as late as he sees fit within the time prescribed by law, and without giving an appeal bond, is to recognize the right of the appellee to apply to the appellate court to have the case remanded for the purpose of traversing the affidavits on which the right to *425 appeal in forma pauperis was granted, if sufficient time for the traverse was not allowed in the court which rendered the judgment. Hereafter, under the act of 1934, a motion to remand a case for that purpose ought to be deemed waived if not filed before the argument or submission of the case, and within the time allowed by article 890 of the Code of Practice for answering an appeal.
This case was argued and submitted on its merits in the Court of Appeal, when the motion to dismiss the appeal was submitted. The briefs filed in this court therefore contain a complete discussion of the case on its merits, to be considered only in the event that we reverse the judgment dismissing the appeal, and do not see fit to remand the case to the Court of Appeal for a decision of the case on its merits. But, inasmuch as the province of the Supreme Court in a case brought here from one of the Courts of Appeal on a writ of review is merely to reconsider the matter which was finally decided by the Court of Appeal, we have no alternative but to remand the case to the Court of Appeal for a decision of the merits of the case when that court has dismissed the appeal without deciding the merits of the case, and when we reverse the judgment of dismissal.