18 F. Cas. 118 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana | 1876
It is urged in the first place that the court which rendered this judgment had no jurisdiction; that the complainant could not be sued or proceeded against in a court holding its sessions in the parish of Lafourche, first by reason of the United States statute which provides, by way of amendment to section 5198, “that suits, actions and proceedings against any association under this title, may be had in any circuit, district or territorial court of the United States, held within the district in which said association may be established; or in any state, county or municipal court in the county or city wherein the association is located, having jurisdiction in similar cases.” Section 5198, to which this clause is amendatory, provided that actions might be brought against national banks to recover twice the amount of usurious interest These are the only cases, so far as I can discover, which are expressly authorized by the title 52 with reference to national banks. This amendment does not exclude other forums, and relates only to actions expressly authorized by that title, and this action is not one of them.
Second. That the said court had not jurisdiction over the complainant, by reason of the statutes of the state of Louisiana which regulate the forum for actions. Code Prac. art. 163. In Gravier v. Baron, 4 La. 240, the supreme court of this state says: “Actions to foreclose mortgages, with all the incidental proceedings, are properly brought in the forum where the mortgaged property is situated.” The proceeding, therefore, to cause the erasure of these mortgages was in the proper forum.
It is urged in the third place that the court rendering this decree had no jurisdiction, because the procedure was by rule. The rule is in the nature of a petition, and notice of the rule conforms very nearly to the textual provisions of a citation. But I shall consider this objection as if the incidental proceeding had been instituted as an ordinary rule, and the question is whether, according' to the laws of Louisiana and the construction given to these laws by the supreme court of this state, mortgages can be erased by rule, as an incident to the foreclosure and sale? The case of Merrick v. McCausland, 24 La. Ann. 256, is conclusive, if this court has to take that decision as a guide.
It is urged that the supreme court of the United States in the case of Marshall v. Knox, 16 Wall. [83 U. S.] 557, have held that such procedure could not be taken by way of a rule. But that case, so far as this point is concerned, simply decided that in bankruptcy proceedings, where the object was to compel a seizing creditor whose claim was for rent, and who had instituted his proceeding in the state court and got possession of the property through the sheriff before the bankruptcy proceeding, to deliver up certain property to the assignee; and where the creditor thus situated had not made himself a party to the bankruptcy proceedings, he could not be brought in by rule, but must be sued in the form of a direct action. But that decision has nothing to do with the correctness of this procedure, which pertains to the proper manner pointed out by the Louisiana Code, for causing mortgages to be erased, and I am necessarily referred to the Louisiana statutes and the decisions of our supreme court Earlier decisions were against the propriety of the rule, but the last decision on this subject in
This disposes of the question presented which involved the jurisdiction of the court, my conclusion being that the court had jurisdiction. The next question is, does the decree present a case of res judicata? Article 2286, Oiv. Code, gives a complete definition of what would maintain the plea of res judicata so far as the subject matter and the parties are concerned: “The thing demanded must be the same, the demand must be founded upon the same cause of action; the demand must be between the same parties, formed by them against each other in the same quality.” I have no difficulty in coming to the conclusion that the cause of action was the same in both cases. The question presented here, and the question presented in the state court, was as to the binding force of the judgment, and the recorded agreement immediately subsequent thereto. The facts recited in the rule, and the issue relied upon in the answer, present the same facts and the same issue as here. The decision of the state court was, in effect, that the sale under the judgment to Cummings extinguished the mortgage note, and that whatever validity the judgment and the recorded agreement had, could only be from the date of inscription, which was subsequent to the mortgage under which Adams, the respondent here, holds. The whole transaction of the extension given to Cummings and the recording of the judgment and agreement was indivisible, and the court of the Fifteenth judicial district decreed in substance that it created no mortgage prior to that of the defendants here. The parties are clearly the same, and appear in the same quality in both proceedings. But not only according to the common law, but under our Code, to maintain the plea of res judicata, the judgment relied upon must be final. Civ. Code, art. 355G, subdiv. 31, declares: “The thing adjudged is said of that which has been decided by a final judgment, from which there can be no appeal, either because an appeal did not lie, or because the time fixed by law for appealing has elapsed, or because it has been confirmed on an appeal.” To be sure these definitions are declared to be given with reference to the terms of law implied in the Civil Code, but the courts of Louisiana refer to them and adopt them with reference to all judicial proceedings. In the case of Escurix v. Daboval, 7 La. 575, it was 'Bhld by Judge Martin that a judgment quashing an execution has not passed in rem judicatum when the matter in dispute is sufficient to- authorize an appeal, and when a year has not elapsed from the date of it to the tiine of the trial when it is offered as evidence to show the writ was properly quashed. The case in the Fifteenth judicial district court was clearly appealable, and a motion for an appeal, according to the record, had been made It does pot appear whether it was ever perfected. The judgment was rendered on December 18, 1875, and this plea was filed in this cause on November 3, 1876. The year within which an appeal could have been taken had not then expired. That the decree appears to have been executed by the actual erasure of the incumbrances from the record does not change the case, for if an appeal has been taken, and tbp decree should be reversed, the very judgment of reversal by the supreme court would, so far as these parties are concerned, re-instate the mortgages.
If the appeal from the judgment in the state court has not been perfected, the defendant may amend his plea by setting up that fact.
Nat. Bank Cas. (Browne) 207, contains only a partial report.]