129 So. 209 | La. | 1930
Anthony P. Loyacano sued his tenant, Mrs. Septime Villere, and the surety on her bond, on 21 rent notes, for $160 each, and obtained judgment against the defendants in solido for $3,360. Only two of the notes, representing two months' rent, were past due; but it was stipulated in the contract of lease that default in the payment of one note would cause all of the notes to become due. Loyacano obtained a writ of fi. fa., under which the sheriff seized Mrs. Villere's personal property on the leased premises, but the proceeds of the sale, after paying costs, amounted to only $391.81. About two weeks after Loyacano had sued Mrs. Villere and her surety, Abraham Burglass sued her for $1,667, on an account, and obtained judgment for the amount on her confession of judgment. Burglass obtained a writ of fi. fa., under which the sheriff seized Mrs. Villere's right of occupancy of the leased premises. That was more than fifteen months before the date of expiration of the lease. Loyacano filed an intervention, or, more properly speaking, an opposition, in the *807 Burglass proceeding against Mrs. Villere, and, alleging that the lease was canceled, obtained a writ of injunction, ex parte, arresting the sale of the alleged right of occupancy of the leased premises. In the meantime, that is to say, after Burglass had seized the alleged right of occupancy, and only nine days before Loyacano obtained his injunction, he (Loyacano) brought a separate suit against Mrs. Villere and Burglass, to have the lease canceled for nonpayment of the rent. Burglass, as defendant in the suit, pleaded that Loyacano had no cause or right of action to have the lease canceled, and that he was estopped to demand a cancellation of the lease, because of his having obtained judgment against Mrs. Villere for the rent for the full term of the lease. The district court maintained these pleas, rejected Loyacano's demand for cancellation of the lease, and thus held, in effect, that Burglass had the right to seize and sell Mrs. Villere's right of occupancy of the leased premises in satisfaction of his judgment against Mrs. Villere. Loyacano appealed to the Court of Appeal, and the judgment was there affirmed; and he applied to this court for a writ of review, which was refused. See Loyacano v. Villere Burglass, 6 La.App. 37.
While the suit of Loyacano v. Villere Burglass, for cancellation of the lease, was being tried in the district court and on appeal, the injunction suit which Loyacano had brought by way of intervention and opposition in the proceeding of Burglass against Mrs. Villere, and which presented the same issue that was presented in the suit of Loyacano v. Villere Burglass, was allowed to remain dormant. Burglass had answered Loyacano's petition of intervention and opposition, urging the same defense which he urged against the suit of Loyacano v. Villere Burglass, for cancellation of the lease, *808 and setting up a reconventional demand for damages for attorneys' fees, for the wrongful obtaining of the injunction, and 20 per cent. statutory damages. After the case of Loyacano v. Villere Burglass was decided in favor of Burglass, he filed a supplemental answer and reconventional demand in the injunction suit, in which he alleged that Loyacano, under the protection of the writ of injunction, had collected and retained $2,250 for 15 months' rent of the premises at $150 per month; hence Burglass claimed that Loyacano had wrongfully deprived him of the only means of collecting his judgment of $1,667 against Mrs. Villere, and owed him the full, amount of the judgment, as damages for the wrongful obtaining of the injunction. Loyacano filed a plea of prescription of one year against the supplemental answer and reconventional demand of Burglass for the $1,667 damages, because the lease had expired by limitation, according to the terms of the contract, more than a year before Burglass filed his supplemental answer and reconventional demand for the $1,667 damages. The district judge maintained the plea of prescription; and, although he dissolved the writ of injunction on the authority of the decision which had been rendered in Loyacano v. Villere Burglass, the judge rejected the demand of Burglass for damages caused by the wrongful obtaining of the writ. Burglass appealed to the court of appeal, and that court (125 So. 144) affirmed the ruling that his claim of $1,667 damages made in his supplemental answer and reconventional demand was barred by the prescription of one year, but the court allowed him damages in the sum of $150 for attorneys' fees and 20 per cent. statutory damages on the amount of his judgment. Loyacano and Burglass each asked for a rehearing, and, their petitions being refused, applied to this court for writs *809 of certiorari and review, which were granted. Loyacano, of course, complains only of the decree allowing Burglass $150 damages for the attorney's fee and the 20 per cent. statutory damages; and Burglass, of course, complains only of the decree maintaining the plea of prescription in bar of his claim of $1,667 damages, set up in his supplemental answer and reconventional demand.
Referring to the statutory damages, counsel for Loyacano cite the case of Kentwood Bank v. McClendon,
We do not find any proof in the record that Burglass actually paid or incurred the obligation to pay $150 for attorney's fees. Without such proof, the damages for attorney's fees should not have been allowed. Whitney-Central National Bank v. Sinnott,
Referring to the plea of prescription of one year, which was held to be a bar to the reconventional demand for damages for the amount of Burglass' judgment against Mrs. Villere, the attorneys for Burglass contend that this claim is for damages arising quasi ex contractu, and not ex delicto. If such damages are deemed to have arisen quasi ex contractu, they are subject to the prescription of ten years; whereas, if they are deemed to have arisen ex delicto, they are subject to the prescription of one year. We find it unnecessary in this case to decide whether such damages as are caused by a wrongful obtaining of an injunction result ex delicto or quasi ex contractu. The claim for damages, against which the plea of prescription of one year is set up, was asserted judicially before the injunction was dissolved, and in fact within one year — less than nine months — after it was decided, virtually, in Loyacano v. Villere and Burglass, that Loyacano had obtained the injunction wrongfully. The Court of Appeal ruled that the period of prescription commenced to run from the date on which the lease expired, because all of the damage that Burglass could have suffered by the sheriff's being enjoined from selling the right of occupancy was then done and completed. The court rested its ruling in that respect upon the proposition that there was nothing to prevent Burglass from judicially asserting his claim for these damages at any time after the expiration of the lease, even before it was decided that the injunction was obtained wrongfully. That is true; but it must be borne in mind that the claim for damages, no matter when asserted, could not have been allowed while the injunction remained in force. If Burglass had merely reserved his *811 right to claim damages, instead of claiming them in his answer to the injunction suit, the period of prescription against the claim for damages would not have commenced until it was judicially determined that the injunction was obtained wrongfully. This case is not different from one in which tangible property is seized and the sale is arrested by an junction and the property perishes or is destroyed because of the duration of the injunction. In Harvey v. Pflug, 37 La. Ann. 904, it was said:
"If any one under pretence of rights afterwards judicially determined to be unfounded, uses process of law to restrain another in the prosecution of a lawful claim, he cannot use the delay his own act has caused to defeat the claim he has wrongfully resisted. A party cannot provoke and protract litigation based on his refusal to deliver leased premises, and then avail himself of the lapse of time to avoid damages for his wrongful refusal. Prescription does not run pending the litigation thus provoked."
In Jones v. Texas Pacific Railway Co.,
"Although the action has accrued (soit ouverte), so long as it cannot be usefully prosecuted, prescription does not run. The reason is that prescription is founded on the negligence of the creditor; and a creditor cannot be held to have been negligent in bringing his suit, so long as it was not possible for him to bring it usefully."
The decision in Drews v. Williams, 50 La. Ann. 579, 23 So. 897, seems also to maintain that prescription does not commence to run against an action for damages for the wrongful obtaining of a writ of injunction until it has been judicially determined that the injunction was obtained wrongfully. *812
The judgment of the civil district court and of the Court of Appeal is annulled; the plea of prescription of one year is overruled; and the case is ordered remanded to the civil district court for trial of the reconventional demand of Abraham Burglass for damages, in his supplemental answer as well as in his original answer to the petition of Anthony P. Loyacano for an injunction. The costs already incurred in the Court of Appeal and in this court are to be borne by Anthony P. Loyacano; the question of liability for the costs incurred in the civil district court is to depend upon the final judgment to be rendered in the case.