6 So. 2d 663 | La. | 1942
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *568
The relators applied to this Court for a writ of alternative mandamus to compel the Court of Appeal of the Second Circuit to consider their application for a rehearing. The adverse judgment was rendered on June 18, 1941,
The relators alleged that the Court of Appeal miscalculated the delay for the rehearing by including therein June 19, 1941, or the day on which the counsel received *569 the notice, and that this day should have been excluded from the fourteen clear days allowed them by law.
We granted the writ with a stay order and issued a rule to show cause, and the respondent, in her return, asked that the writ be vacated and the rule discharged for the following reasons:
First, that the application for the writ, filed on December 1, 1941, came too late or more than thirty days after July 7, 1941 the date upon which the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit, declined to consider the application for a rehearing, citing Article VII, Section 11 of the Constitution of Louisiana of 1921.
Second, that the relators neither served upon nor delivered to the judges of the Court of Appeal or to the respondent or her attorney, a copy of their application for the writ, before filing the same here, as required by Section 7 of Rule 13 of this Court.
Third, that the application is not in accordance with the requirements of Section 7 of Rule 13 of this Court, because there is not attached thereto a certified copy of the pleading upon which the refusal of a rehearing on July 7, 1941 was founded, nor a certified copy of the pleading upon which the per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeal, dated October 31, 1941, was grounded.
In connection with the first two grounds upon which the opposition is based, it appears from the record that after the Court *570
of Appeal, on July 7, 1941, refused to consider the application for a rehearing because it was not filed within the legal delays, the relators filed another application asking the court to reconsider its action in refusing to consider their petition for a rehearing. The Court of Appeal in a per curiam opinion rendered on October 31, 1941, reiterated its original holding.
From the foregoing, it is obvious that it can not be said that the relators waited from July 7, 1941, when the Court of Appeal refused to consider their application for a rehearing, until December 1, 1941, without taking any action to protect their interest, because they promptly filed in the Court of Appeal an application requesting the Court to reconsider its ruling and it did not render an opinion thereon until October 31, 1941.
Article VII, Section 11 of the Constitution of 1921, invoked by the respondent, by its very terms, has no application *571 to this case for the reason that this is a petition for a remedial writ, whereas, that section covers only a writ of review or certiorari to the Court of Appeal, in which case the application therefor must be made to this Court within thirty days after a rehearing has been refused by the Court of Appeal.
Under the amendment which we made on May 29, 1941 to Section 7 of Rule 13 of this Court, the mailing of copies of the petition for the alternative writ of mandamus to the judges of the Court of Appeal and the attorney of record of the respondent, respectively, is sufficient notice to them. Furthermore, under Section 2 of Rule 13 of this Court, the mere failure to give notice to the attorney or the judges in itself would not be sufficient cause to dismiss the application for the writ or recall or rescind the writ or the rule nisi. Bauman et al. v. Pennywell et al.,
As to the issue that the record is not properly made up, this Court, in the case of Laurent v. Unity Industrial Life Insurance Co.,
"A complete answer to such contention is that the writ has already been granted in this case, and the record of the First city court of New Orleans, upon which the Court of Appeal acted, is before this Court.
* * * * *
"The requirement that certain documents shall accompany an application for a writ of review is intended for our convenience *572 and information so that we might readily determine whether the case should be ordered up for decision by this court. The failure to fulfill the requirement might have justified the refusal of the writ, but it does not justify the dismissal of the proceedings after the writ has been issued, and the case submitted for decision in this court, when the issues involved are clearly presented by the record before the court."
In the instant case, we had already granted the writ and it appears that all of the necessary records pertinent to the issue as to whether or not the application for rehearing was timely filed in the Court of Appeal are before us.
This brings us to the primary question involved, namely, whether or not under the law the judges of the Court of Appeal were correct in counting June 19, 1941, the day on which the attorney of record for the relators received a copy of the judgment of the Court of Appeal, in determining whether the application or petition for rehearing was filed within the delay required by law.
The pertinent language of Section 24 of Article VII of the Constitution of 1921 reads:
"* * * Notice of all judgments shall be given to counsel of record; and the court shall provide by rule for the giving of such notices. No delays shall run until such notice shall havebeen given." (Emphasis ours.)
In the case of Murray v. Yazoo M.V.R. Co., 184 So. 413, the Court of Appeal of the First Circuit held: *573
"An application for rehearing was filed in this case on October 21st, 1938 [the original opinion of the court having been rendered on October 5, 1938, La.App., 183 So. 543], and a motion has been filed by the Appellee to dismiss the said application or ignore the same as having been filed too late. Notice of the judgment of this Court was received by Counsel for Appellant on October 6th, 1938, from which date the delay for filing an application for a rehearing is to be counted. Section 24, Article 7, Constitution of 1921.
"Act No. 16 of 1910 provides that judgments of the Courts of Appeal shall become final and executory on the fifteenth calendar day after rendition (after service of notice under the Constitution) unless the last day shall fall on a legal holiday, when the delay shall be extended to the first day thereafter not a legal holiday; provided that in the interval parties in interest shall have the right to apply for a rehearing. The fifteenth calendar day after notice was served in this case was October 21st, 1938, the day on which the application was filed, and on that day, according to the terms of the Act, the judgment had become final and executory. The last day for filing the application was October 20th, 1938, which was not a legal holiday, and no extension of the time after that day was permitted.
"Excluding the day on which the notice was served and the day on which the application was filed, fourteen days were allowed in which to file the application. From October 7th to 20th, inclusive, was *574
the period given in which to file the application — the last day for filing, being the 20th and not the 21st on which it was filed. See O.K. Realty Co., Inc., v. John A. Juliani, Inc.,
"Therefore the application comes too late and it cannot be considered." (Parenthesis ours.)
See also McCaskey Register Co. v. Lumpkin, La.App., 197 So. 640.
The judges of the Court of Appeal of the Second Circuit relied upon their opinion expressed in the case of McCollister v. Police Jury of Sabine Parish, La.App., 197 So. 661, and stated that if the delay for filing an application for rehearing is held not to begin on the day that the notice of judgment is mailed to the attorney of record but the day after he receives actual notice thereof, it would be confusing and difficult for the court to determine, for all practical purposes, when the delay for filing an application for rehearing had expired. The contention that inconvenience might result can not prevail over the provision of the Constitution as interpreted by this Court that the day on which counsel of record receives the notice of the judgment is excluded in computing the fourteen days that the litigant has in which to apply for a rehearing.
If the date on which counsel of record received the notice is excluded, mere computation shows that the relators' application for a rehearing was timely filed on July 3, 1941, and, therefore the Court of Appeal erred in refusing to consider it. *575
It is our opinion that the day on which counsel for the relators received notice of the judgment of the Court of Appeal in the form of a certified copy thereof is to be excluded in computing the fourteen days that the relators were entitled to under the law within which to file their application for a rehearing in the Court of Appeal.
For the reasons assigned, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the Court of Appeal is annulled and set aside, and
It is now ordered, adjudged and decreed that the Honorable Judges of the Court of Appeal of the Second Circuit are hereby ordered and directed to consider and determine the relators' application for a rehearing in this case; the respondent to pay the costs of this Court and all other costs to await final determination of the case.
Concurrence Opinion
As I understand, the only question in this case is whether the 15 days, which are provided for in Act 16 of 1910, shall be computed from the day on which the notice of judgment is sent by mail to counsel of record, or from the day on which the notice is delivered to him. The statute provides that judgments rendered by the courts of appeal shall become final and executory on the 15th calendar day after rendition and that in the meantime parties in interest shall have the right to apply for a rehearing. But Section 24 of Article 7 of *576 the Constitution requires that notice of the judgments of the courts of appeal shall be given to counsel of record, that the courts shall provide by rule for the giving of such notice, and that no delay shall run until such notice shall have been given. In this case the judgment was rendered by the court of appeal on June 18th and on that day a copy of the judgment was mailed to the attorney for the parties against whom the judgment was rendered. The attorney received a copy of the judgment, which constituted a notice of judgment, on the next day, June 19th. There is no doubt or dispute that the 15th day after June 18th, the day on which the notice or copy of the judgment was mailed, was July 3rd. Nor is there any doubt or dispute that the 15th day after June 19th, the day on which the notice or copy of the judgment was received, was July 4th. The petition for a rehearing was filed on July 3. Therefore, if the 15 days should be computed from the day on which the notice or copy of the judgment was mailed the petition for a rehearing was filed too late, but, if the 15 days should be computed from the day on which the notice or copy of the judgment was received by the attorney, his petition for a rehearing, being filed on the 14th day thereafter, was in time. I concur in the ruling that the notice was not given until it was received. Section 24 of Article 7 of the Constitution leaves no doubt about that, because it declares that the notice shall be given to counsel of record, and that the court shall provide by rule for the giving of such notices and that no delay shall run until such *577 notice shall have been given. If the writers of this section of the Constitution had intended that the mailing or sending of the notice would mark the day from which the delay for applying for a rehearing should be computed, they would have used the word "mailed", or the word "sent", instead of the word "given". Rule 9 of the rules of the court of appeal provides that the notice, or copy of the judgment, shall be delivered in person or by mail. To deliver by mail means not merely to mail but to deliver. The court of appeal in this case refers us to the opinion rendered by that court on this subject in McCollister v. Police Jury of Sabine Parish, La.App., 197 So. 661. It is made very plain there that the only error of the court was in considering the mailing of the notice as constituting a giving of the notice, or, as the rule requires, a delivery by mail. The only question in the present case is whether the court of appeal was right in calculating the 15th day from the date on which the notice or copy of its judgment was mailed or from the day on which the notice or copy of the judgment was received by the attorney for the parties against whom the judgment was rendered. On that question I agree of course that the provision in Section 24 of Article 7 of the Constitution, as well as the wording of Rule 9 of the Rules of the Court of Appeal, leaves no doubt that the 15th day must be calculated from the day on which the notice is actually given, or delivered, or, as the rule provides "delivered in person or by mail." To construe the rule the other way would violate Section 24 of Article 7 of the Constitution. *578