24 So. 2d 814 | La. | 1946
The question in this case is whether a certain judgment, rendered on June 21, 1920, for the principal sum of $308.70, is now prescribed by the lapse of ten years, under the provisions of article
Article
The judgment in this case was rendered against Bennie Evans in favor of Hamner Co., Lted., on June 21, 1920, and was afterwards acquired by L. Boyd Hamner. He filed suit against Evans on June 17, 1930, to prevent or interrupt the prescription of ten years, and a domicile service of the citation and of a copy of the petition was made on that day; but the evidence shows that Evans did not receive actual knowledge of the filing of the suit until September 1, 1943. In fact, until that date he had no knowledge of the bringing of the original suit in which the judgment for $308.70 was rendered against him on June 21, 1920, because that judgment was taken without citation, on a promissory note embodying a waiver of citation and confession of judgment. Evans pleaded in this case that that judgment was null because the waiver of citation and confession of judgment were obtained before the debt was due, and hence were violative of Article 91 of the Constitution of 1898 and of 1913, now Section 44 of Article VII of the Constitution of 1921. But the question of validity of the original judgment, ab initio, need not be considered in this case.
The judgment for $308.70, was not recorded in the mortgage records, nor was any notice of lis pendens recorded in connection with the suit filed on June 17, 1930, to prevent or interrupt the prescription of the judgment for $308.70. The evidence leaves no doubt that Evans had no knowledge that a judgment had been rendered against him or that a suit had been filed against him until September 1, 1943, when the sheriff seized certain cotton, corn and *446
other crops belonging to Evans, to satisfy the judgment for $308.70. Evans then filed this suit, in which he obtained an injunction to prevent the execution of the judgment for $308.70, and prayed to have the judgment declared null or, if not null, outlawed by the prescription of ten years. After hearing the case the judge of the district court decided that the judgment for $308.70, dated June 21, 1920, was extinguished by the prescription of ten years. The judgment of the district court was affirmed by the court of appeal.
The district court gave two distinct reasons for its judgment. The first of these reasons was that the judgment rendered on March 29, 1938, in the suit brought on June 17, 1930, to interrupt the prescription of the original judgment, dated June 21, 1920, was null because the judgment dated March 29, 1938, was rendered on confirmation of default, and less than two legal days had elapsed between the entering of the preliminary default, on March 25, 1938, and the confirming of it on March 29, 1938. The second reason for which the district court held that the original judgment dated June 21, 1920, was prescribed was that the suit filed on June 17, 1930, to prevent the prescription, was abandoned by the plaintiff's failure to take any step in the prosecution of his suit during a continuous period exceeding five years; that is, during the period between the date of the filing of the suit, June 17, 1930, and the date on which the preliminary default was entered, March 25, 1938. The court of appeal affirmed *447 the judgment of the district court for that reason and found it unnecessary to pass upon the other reason.
Taking up the first reason for which the district court held that the judgment dated June 21, 1920, was prescribed, we take notice of the fact that the 25th day of March 1938, the day on which the preliminary default was entered in the suit to prevent prescription, was a Friday. See Calendar in Dart's Louisiana Gen. Stat., pp. 1030-1031. Therefore two full legal days did not elapse between the date on which the preliminary default was entered, March 25, 1939, and the date on which the judgment by default was confirmed, March 29, 1938. Article 312 of the Code of Practice requires that two days — not necessarily judicial days but excluding Sundays and legal holidays — shall elapse between the entering of a preliminary default and the confirming of the judgment by default. In this case the first day following the 25th of March 1938 was Saturday, which, according to Act
We prefer, however, to rest our decision, — that the judgment for $308.70 rendered on June 21, 1920, is prescribed — upon the ground upon which both the district court and the court of appeal rested their decision; that is, that the suit which Hamner filed against Evans on June 17, 1930, was abandoned by Hamner's failure to take any step in the prosecution of the suit during a continuous period exceeding five years, and that for that reason that suit did not have the effect of interrupting the prescription of the judgment for $308.70 rendered on June 21, 1920. In article
The suit which Hamner brought against Evans on June 17, 1930, to interrupt prescription of the judgment rendered on June 21, 1920, remained dormant on the docket of the district court for a period exceeding seven years and nine months, during which time no step whatever was taken in the prosecution of the suit. The first action taken in the suit after it was filed was the entering of the preliminary default on March 25, 1938.
It is argued for the relator, Hamner, that it was necessary for the defendant, Evans, to take some action to have the suit which was filed by Hamner on June 17, 1930, stricken from the docket of the court, in order to give effect to the abandonment of the suit by the plaintiff's having taken no action in its prosecution during the period exceeding five years. Our opinion, on the contrary, is that the holding by the district court and by the court of appeal that it was not necessary for Evans to have the suit stricken from the docket in order to give effect to the abandonment is supported by the jurisprudence on the subject. We must bear in mind that Evans is not pleading that the demand which Hamner made in the suit which he filed on June 17, 1930, to interrupt the prescription of the judgment rendered on June 21, 1920, was barred by prescription by Hamner's failing to take any step in the prosecution of that suit during the period exceeding five years. Evans is pleading that the judgment rendered against him in the original suit, on June 21, 1920, was allowed to prescribe by *450
the failure of Hamner to take any step in the prosecution of the suit which he filed on June 17, 1930, during the period exceeding five years. According to the exact language of article
The decision rendered by the district court on this subject, and affirmed by the court of appeal, is supported by the following decision by this court: Lockhart v. Lockhart,
For example, in Lockhart v. Lockhart,
Again, in Charbonnet v. State Realty Co.,
In Losch v. Greco,
In Verrett v. Savoie,
In Succession of Bonnette,
In Long v. Chailan,
All of the decisions which we have cited — and others rendered by this court and some by the courts of appeal — were reviewed in an opinion rendered by the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit in April 1942, in the case of Sandfield Oil Gas Co. v. Paul,
The judgment of the court of appeal affirming the judgment of the district court in this case is affirmed at the cost of the relator, L. Boyd Hamner.
FOURNET, J., concurs.
*455HAMITER, J., dissents.