Cambon Bros. v. Suthon

PROVOSTY, J.;

There was oral argument, and five briefs have been filed, on this motion to dismiss. The matter has impressed us throughout as being in the nature of a tempest in a teapot. Mrs. Lucius Suthon and her four children, Hugh, Fannie, Mary, and Georgina Suthon, executed a mortgage for a large amount in favor of the plaintiffs, *671Cambon Bros. The debt maturing and not being paid, Cambon Bros, instituted foreclosure proceedings. Mrs. Suthon and her three daughters sued out an injunction. The lower court decided in their favor, perpetuating the injunction. Cambon Bros, appealed, perfected their appeal, and brought it to this court. Before the case came on to be heard in this court, Mrs. Suthon died. The case was argued and submitted without any suggestion being máde to this court of the death of Mrs. Suthon, and so the court proceeded to decide the case as if Mrs. Suthon were still living, and reversed the judgment of the lower court, and dismissed the injunction suit. The appellees applied for a rehearing, still without any suggestion having been made of the death of Mrs. Suthon. The application for a rehearing was denied, and the mandate of this court was sent down to the lower court.

[1] There cannot be a suit without two parties, a plaintiff and a defendant. Ordinarily, therefore, the death of either party to the suit would cause it to lapse. Our law has, however, made provision against this undesirable result (C. P. arts. 21, 120), and the rules of this court contain provisions for making parties after the case has come to this court on appeal (rule 17 [67 South, xi1]). By these provisions is not meant that there can be such a thing as a suit without two opposing parties; all that is meant is that the proceedings shall continue valid as far as they have gone, and shall remain in court subject to be proceeded with as soon as the legal representatives of the deceased party have made themselves, or been made, parties. To that extent, and in that sense, the suit' continues in existence, but no further and not otherwise. Hence it is that any judgment that may be rendered in it while it is in this state of suspense, or mere semiexistence, is simply null and void. Edwards v. Whited, 29 La. Ann. 647; Succession of Pickett v. Pickett, 41 La. Ann. 882, 6 South. 655,

The proceedings had in this suit, therefore, after the death of Mrs. Suthon, were, in so fax' as the interests of her legal representatives were concerned, simply null and void; non avenue, not taken-place, as the French would say.

In view of that legal situation, the plaintiffs, Cambon Bros., applied to this court to treat as null and void, as not having taken place, all that was done in the suit aftei- the death of Mrs. Suthon, in so far as the intex*ests of her legal representatives are concerned, and to make these legal representatives parties, and to proceed in the suit as against them, starting from that time.

These representatives having been accordingly made parties, they, except Hugh Suthon, have moved to dismiss the appeal.

[2] Misses Fannie, Mary, and Georgina Suthon assign as ground of dismissal that they have accepted the succession of their deceased mother with benefit of inventory, and that therefore “no suit can be px*osecuted against them individually as heirs of said succession.”

That is a question properly to be considered on the merits, not on motion to dismiss.

[3] The testamentary executrix assigns as ground for dismissal that the plaintiffs and axxpellants failed to make the legal representatives of Mrs. Suthon parties at the time of her death or prior to the hearing of the case on the appeal or to judgment, although they knew of the death, and that therefore they have abandoned the axxpeal.

[4] This is, indeed, a strange conclusion. Abandonment must be the result of consent, of a conscious operation of the will, or it must be the result of some positive law. Defendants and appellees do not even suggest the former, and would seek to supply the latter by a process of inconclusive reasoning too long drawn out to be reproduced here.

*673In the case of Roberts v. Benton, 1 Rob. 100, cited in support of tbe motion to' dismiss, tbe appellant had failed to perfect his appeal. Tbe case evidently bears no analogy whatever to tbe present.

In tbe case of Bell v. Mix, 17 La. 467, also cited in support of tbe motion to dismiss, tbe facts were that at tbe January, 1840, term of court, on suggestion of defendant’s death, counsel for plaintiff and appellant obtained a continuance of the case for making tbe beirs of defendant parties; and that at tbe February, 1841, term, tbe defendant’s beirs had not yet been made parties. Tbe court said:

“A motion to'dismiss is now pressed upon us; we think it must prevail, as the party has suffered more than 12 months to elapse without using any diligence whatever to prosecute this appeal.”

It will be observed that, for all that appears, tbe appellant in that case was apparently not prosecuting tbe appeal, and might as a matter of fact have abandoned it. Tbe court bad good reason to believe from the circumstances that he bad; whereas an inference of that kind in tbe present case would be absurd.

Tbe motion to dismiss is overruled.

O’NIELL, J.,

dissents, being of tbe opinion that, when Cambon Bros, learned, after tbe mandate of this court bad been filed for execution in tbe district court, that Mrs. Sutbon bad died before tbe judgment of this court was rendered, their remedy was, not to apply to this court, but to take proceedings against the codefendants, tbe Misses Sutbon, in tbe district court, to show that they were the heirs of Mrs. Sutbon and were therefore bound by tbe judgment rendered on the appeal, to which they were parties.

.136 La. xiii.