Looney v. Levy

35 La. Ann. 1012 | La. | 1883

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Poems, J.

Plaintiff claims of tbe commercial firm of Levy and Bodenheimer tbe sum of $6,030, for professional services rendered by him as an attorney and counsellor at law.

The services are alleged to have been rendered to tbe firm by plaintiff as their counsel in a large number of suits, in which the defendants were parties, and for general services rendered during the years 1877, 1878, 1879, 1880 and 1881, at the rate of $350 per annum.

The defense was: first, a general denial and the plea of prescription of three years, and subsequently a plea of compensation based on a promissory note of plaintiff’s of $1,128, and on an aceount alleged to he due by him to the firm amounting to $1,482.33.

From a judgment of $796.67 in favor of plaintiff, lie has appealed for the purpose of recovering more, and the defendants move for an amendment, with a view to a reduction of the amount allowed.

We will in the first place direct our attention to a motion for a new trial urged by plaintiff on the ground of newly discovered evidence, based on the following circumstances:

During the trial plaintiff admitted that he was indebted to the defendant firm, in December, 1881, in the sum of $1,482.33. This was the amount pleaded in compensation on the score of the aceount due by plaintiff.

In view of that admission, the aceount was not introduced in evidence. The Judge, having concluded to sustain the plea of prescription of three years as to all items of plaintiff’s account, which dated three years hack, he compensated the balance of the amount found in favor of plaintiff by the aceount of $1,482.33 pro tanto. Plaintiff contended that the account should he imputed in compensation to the prescribed items of Ms claim jiro tanto, which the Judge declined to do, for lack of any evidence to show that said aceount, or any portion thereof, was concurrent or contemporaneous in dates with his prescribed claims.

*1014After trial, plaintiff procured the detailed account of the defendant firm, which ran from 1873 to 1881, both inclusively, and urged that he had discovered the details of the account since the trial, and that he was thereby entitled to a new trial.

In making the admission of his indebtedness to the defendant firm, in the precise amount of the account which he subsequently annexed to his motion for a new trial, plainiiff must have known whereof he spoke, especially as he had added in his admission the statement, that this admitted indebtedness appeared by open accounts on their books,” referring to the defendants. This admission is an effective estoppel of any denial on his part of previous knowledge of the account. The new trial was properly refused.

The main contention on the merits of the cause turns upon the effect of the subsequent plea of compensation, on the previous plea of general denial, and of prescription.

Plaintiff’s contention is, that the two pleas are incompatible, and that the plea of compensation made in globo to his account, amounts to a formal waiver of the plea of prescription, and admits the existence of the debt.

In their plea of compensation the defendants used the following restrictive language: “ That the said late firm is not indebted to said plaintiff in a larger sum than the principal of said account and note and interest, which respondent now pleads in compensation, without, however, admitting that said firm is indebted unto said plaintiff in a larger aggregate sum than the amounts of said account and note.”

The Judge correctly ruled that the two pleas were not inconsistent, and that the plea of compensation admitted no part of plaintiff’s account, but the amounts equal to the account and note pleaded in compensation, as shown by the cautious and guarded language used by respondent in his plea of compensation.

This ruling is in harmony and in keeping with our jurisprudence on this subject. Colley vs. Latourette, 7 An. 222; Durham vs. Williams, 32 An. 962.

In the last mentioned case, we made an extended review of our jurisprudence on the subject of apparently incompatible pleas, and of the effect of such pleas when made in the alternative, as in the instant case. It would be useless to repeat here the reasoning which we used in that case.

We find also, that the District Judge correctly held that the continuity of an attorney’s account for services from year to year could not be invoked as a means of interrupting prescription, as his fees are due *1015and exigible at the termination of each litigation. Hiestand vs. Labatt, 11 An. 30; Morgan vs. Brown, 12 An. 159.

The evidence satisfies us that the services, the payment of which is not prescribed, were reasonably worth the charges made therefor. The Judge correctly held that, the note pleaded in compensation by defendants, which was due on January 4th, 1882, was presented, and that, as prescription had accrued at the time that plaintiff’s account began, the rule quae temporalia sunt, etc., did not apply.

After an exhaustive examination of the case, and much reflection and ripe deliberation, we find no error in the judgment appealed from, except in the following particulars:

The District Judge found that the item for general services for the year 1879 was prescribed.

That, item was not due before the 31st December, 1879, and the suit was filed on the 18th of December, 1882 ; hence, three years had not elapsed between the maturity of the item and the date of the judicial demand.

It is, therefore, ordered and decreed that the judgment of the District Court be amended by increasing the sum from $796.67 to $1,146.67 (eleven hundred and forty-six 67-100 dollars) and that, as thus amended, said judgment he affirmed at defendants’ costs in both Courts.

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