21 La. Ann. 266 | La. | 1869
The plaintiff instituted this action to annul a lease made by public act by and between himself as lessor, and the defendant as lessee, on the ground that the latter has .violated its provisions by failing to pay the rent and certain tases. The prayer of the petition is that the lease be annulled and that the property therein leased be returned to plaintiff and that he be put in possession of the same.
The defendant filed the declinatory exception of lis pendens, averring that similar suits involving the same cause of action and demand had been previously instituted, and were still pending in the Second Justice’s Court of New Orleans, the Third District Court of New Orleans, and the Fifth District Court ’for the parish of Orleans. The Court below dismissed the exception, and the cause having been tried on the merits, and judgment having been rendered in favor of plaintiff as prayed for, the defendant has appealed.
■ The exception was properly discussed. None of the suits mentioned in the exception constituted lis pendens as to the controversy now before us. The suit in the Justice’s Court was for an amount of taxes alleged to be due by the tenant. The suit in the Third District Court was for rent. In each a judgment for money only was demanded, and
In the case before us the plaintiff sues for a different object from any embraced in the other suits we have recited. The distinction between an action for rent, which is in enforcement of the- contract to pay it, and leaves the tenant in possession, and an action to dissolve the lease and to recover the property, is plain.
Upon the merits the case is free from doubt.' • The defendant lias failed to pay his rent as it fell due, and as demanded, and the judgment was properly rendered in favor of the plaintiff as. prayed for.
It is therefore ordered and adjudged that the judgment appealed from be affirmed with costs.
Rehearing refused.