Bird v. Barrow

The judgment of the court was pronounced by

Kims, J.

The plaintiff instituted this suit upon a draft, and in his petition averred his residence, as well as that of the defendant, to be in the parish of- Terrebonne. After the entry of a default the defendant filed an answer, in which he denied specially that the plaintiff was then, or at the time of filing his petition, a resident of Terrebonne, and averred that he was a resident of the parish of Lafourche Interior. He further pleaded a general denial, and claimed in reconvention from the plaintiff and one Field, in solido, $1,500, being the value of thirty one hogsheads of sugar delivered to Bird and Field to be transported by them as freight to Field’s mills, and which through their carelessness and neglect were lost. On the trial in the court below he offered to prove the residence of the plaintiff to ba as alleged in the answer. The evidence was objected to. on the ground that the exception to the plaintiff’s residence was a- dilatory plea, and should have been made in limine litis. The objection was sustained, and the defendant excepted to the opinion of the judge. A judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the draft, and the reconventional demand was dismissed as in case of non-suit. From the judgment dismissing the claim in reconvention the defendant has appealed.

The district judge, in our opinion, erred in rejecting the evidence offered |to prove the residence of the plaintiff to be in the parish of Lafourche Inierior. The 7th section of the act of 1839, p.. 164. authorizes the defendant, hen he resides in a different parish from the plaintiff, to institute a denand in reconvention against the latter, although suoh demand be not necesiarily connected with, nor incidental to, the main cause of action. The allegation in the defendant’s answer that the plaintiff’s residence was not as iverre'd in his petition, but was in a different parish, was not a plea interposed to retard the progress of the suit. It was necessary that the avernent should be made and substantiated by proof, in order to enable the defendant to avail himself of the right accorded to him by the act of 1839, of *144instituting his reeonventional demand. The plea was intended to defeat the plaintiff’s claim, and to enable the defendant to obtain a judgment in re-convention. When the plaintiff’s residence is denied for that purpose it cannot be regarded as a dilatory exception, which the defendant is prohibited from pleading after a judgment by default, but is essentially a plea to the merits, and an averment necessary to give jurisdiction to the court of his reeonventional demand.

We can only relieve the defendant from the judgment dismissing his demand in reconvention, that being the only judgment appealed from.

It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the District Court dismissing the reeonventional demand of the defendant, be reversed. It is further ordered that the cause be remanded for a new trial according to law, with instructions to the district judge to permit the defendant to prove the allegations of his answer; the plaintiff paying the costs of this appeal.