Turner, Wilson & Co. v. McMain

29 La. Ann. 298 | La. | 1877

Lead Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Howell, J.

In May, 1855, plaintiffs instituted this suit on a note for §5345 53 against the makers, W. W. McMain, F. Vose, and Mrs. L. C. Frierson. Citation was served on McMain only. The case was submitted to the judge in May, 1857, who ordered it to “be put back for further proceedings.” In 1873 it was again put on the issue docket, Mr. and Mrs. Frierson cited, default taken as to McMain, prescription filed by Mrs. Frierson, other proceedings had, and judgment rendered con-. demning McMain to pay the amount of the note and interest, and maintaining the prescription pleaded by Mrs. Frierson, and from the latter part of the decree plaintiffs appealed.

*299It is contended on their behalf that citation on MeMain, one of the obligors in sólido, was a continuous interruption of prescription as to his co-obligors.

Article 3552 of the Revised Civil Code provides that “a citation served upon a debtor in solido, or his acknowledgement of the debt, interrupts the prescription with regard to all others, and oven their heirs.”

This only declares the interruption of prescription as to co-debtors. Interruption and suspension are different, and the Code, in treating of the suspension of prescription, does not include the service of citation as one of the causes with regard to co-debtors. As to those who are not in court, the citation operates only as an interruption of the prescription which begins again to run.

This is supported by the fact that the law gives the same effect to both the service of citation and the acknowledgment of the debt. It has never been contended that an acknowledgment is a continuous interruption or a suspension of prescription.

We think the court a qua did not err in sustaining the plea.

Judgment affirmed.






Rehearing

On Rehearing.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Manning, C. J.

The note in suit is a solidary obligation. Shortly after its maturity suit was instituted against all parties, but citation was served only upon MeMain, and W. J. Frierson, the husband of one of the obligors. Mrs. Frierson was cited December 1,1873, and pleads prescription. This last service was nearly nineteen years after the maturity of the note.

The citation of one of the solidary debtors in 1855 interrupted prescription as to all the others. The liability of Mrs. Frierson will depend upon the question whether that interruption lasted during the continuance of the suit. The suit was never discontinued or dismissed, and ended by a Anal judgment upon the pleadings and process, as they were filed from time to time.

The counsel for the defendant relies on the declaration of the Code that if the plaintiff abandons or discontinues his demand the interruption shall be considered as having never happened (Civil Code, article 3485, new No. 3519), and, while admitting that frequent decisions of this court have required that the abandonment must be active, he insists that the conduct of the plaintiff in not calling his suit for trial from-1857, when a hearing was had and no decision made, to 1873, when his client was first cited, constitutes such an abandonment as the Code has in view. In other words, that the inaction of the plaintiff is equivalent to an abandonment.

*300Ho also contends that the interruption of prescription consequent upon a citation, is the same as that produced by an acknowledgment of the debt, and that in both cases prescription begins to run again immediately (Civil Code,'article 3517, new No. 3552), while his adversary insists that when the Code says a suit against one of the solidary debtors interrupts prescription with regard to all (idem., article 2092, new No. 2097), it means that the interruption lasts as long as there is a suit.

The distinction between an interruption and a suspension of prescription is clearly defined, and need not here be elaborated, since it does not enter into this case. Our inquiry is of the nature, extent, and duration of the interruption produced by a suit. Marcadé, treating of the interruption thus resulting, says:

“ Et d’abord une demande en justice, Particle ne parle, il ést vrai, que d’une citation en justice, ce qui pourrait fairo c.roire que l’effet interruptif n’est attribué qu’a la demande formée par exploit introduotif ¿’instance; mais la raisonvlit, et tout le monde le recommit aujourd’hui, que tonto demande en justice, qu’elle soit formée par uno citation ou autrement, interrompt la prescription. * * Ce n’est pas seulement pour le temps antérieur a la demande, que cette demande interrompt la prescription, c’est aussi, comino nous l’avons deja clit en nos observations préliminaires sur ce chapitre, pour'tout le temps que durera l’instance; en sorto qu’une prescription nouvelle ne pourra pas recommenccr contre le demandeur avant le jour ou sera rendu le jugement par lequel cette instance so terminera. S’il en eut été autrement, si la demande, en effagant le temps qui s’est écoulé avant elle, eutlaissée la proscription nouvelle rccommenccr á l’instant méme, il s’en serait suivi ce résultat absurde, que toutes les fois que le procés aurait duró pendant un teipps plus long que le délai de la prescription applicable a l’espéce, le droit du demandeur aurait été anóanti'par la prescription nouvelle avant que le jugement fut prononcé. * * C’est dono une prof onde hérésie que cello qui donne k la demando judiciairo l’effet d’anéantir la prescription antórieure en laissant commencer des le méme jour une prescription nouvelle.” Traite de la Prescription, p. 124

Marcadé answers the question which the defendant’s counsel addresses to us, whether the plaintiff’s remaining quiet for a very long period shall not be legally construed as an abandonment of his suit: “ L’interruption dure tant que dure le procés, fut il de quarante ans, cinquante ans, et plus ;” and Troplong is equally explicit: “ Du reste, tant que le procés se poursuit, il n’y a pas de prescription possible; Taction durát-ello trente, quarante, et cinquante ans.” De la Prescription, p. 298.

We must then inquire if the doctrine of-this court has been in' accord with that announced by the French commentators. The earliest doctrine was in 1811, Riviere vs. Spencer, 2 Martin, 83, when it was said that *301prescription was interrupted in that case by a suit in 1795 which had been kept alive till 1801, and the new suit was within time, reckoning from the last date, and the court said: “ When possession is interrupted, full time must be reckoned from the cessation of the interruption.”

The point was met fully in Driggs vs. Morgan, 10 Rob. 123, when, considering the interruption of prescription by a reeonventional demand, the court said: “ Such interruption necessarily exists during the pendency of the action, and until its filial termination,” and quoted Dalloz: “ II n’y a pas de peremption, ni dos lois, de prescription possible, taut quo la procedure se poursuit,” In a later case, Wilson vs. Marshal, 10 An. 331, the language of the court was imperative: “ It is impossible for prescription to run while a suit is pending;” and in Barron vs. Shields, the court remarked the omission from our Code of those clauses of article 2247 of the Code Napoleon, which declares that the interruption of prescription is considered as non-avenue if the suit be informal, or the demand be rejected, and proceeded: “If a suit be instituted upon a note before it is due, and pending the suit the note matures and is protested for nonpayment, prescription of .that note is interrupted so long- as the suit lasts after maturity, even if the suit be ultimately dismissed upon an exception of prematurity.” 13 An. 58.

The text of that article of the Code Napoleon is : “Si l’assignation est nude par défaut de for ne ; si le demandeur se desiste de sa demando; s’il laisso périmer l’instanco; ou si sa demando est rejotée, l’interruption est regardée eoninie non-avenue.” We may add to these comments of the court the observation that the omission of the clause “ s’il laisse périmer l’instance” lias a special significance. The absence from our Code of that part of article 2247 of the Code Napoleon evinces that its object was to extinguish that “profound heresy” which Marcada notices as prevailing to some extent among the French legists, and to leave no room for doubt as to the effect of the interruption of prescription by a suit under our law.

One of the decisions referred to by the defendant’s counsel in his brief, Millaudon vs. Beazely, 2 An. 916, seems to support his theory. The language is: “ If it be conceded, as contended for, that the acknowledgment in the one case and the citation in the other interrupted prescription, it commenced again immediately to run as to this defendant, and was completed before the commencement of the present action.”

Independent of the loose manner in which the dictum is interjected into the opinion, and of its qualifying term, we may observe that the same court held in the following • month that the prescription interrupted by a suit commenced to run from the date of the judgment in that suit; i e., from its termination, and not its commencement. Hite vs. Vaught, idem, 970. These cases are cited in Richard vs. Batram, 14 An. *302144, where it was said prescription began to run again in favor of an obligor, at least from the date of the judgment against his co-obligor.

From this review of the decisions of this court it will be seen that the interpretation of the French commentators has been adopted here from an early period, and has been consistently adhered to (unless we may except the isolated dictum in Millaudon vs. Beazely as an exception), and we may therefore adopt the language of Marcadó, “ de tout temps on a reconnu que du moment que les droits en actions prescriptibles sont portés devant le juge, ils ne peuvent plus périr, pas plus par une prescription nouvelle que par Fancieime.” For these reasons—

It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment heretofore rendered in this cause be set aside and canceled, and that so much of the judgment-of the lower court as sustains the plea of prescription in favor of L. C. Frierson is annulled, avoided, and reversed, and that there be judgment in favor of plaintiff against her for the sum of í¡?5345 55, with six per cent per annum interest from the twenty-sixth day of April, 1852, and costs of both courts, and that the judgment of the lower court against W. W. McMain is affirmed.