Stafford v. Harper

On the Meeits.

This is a suit in damages against a sheriff and his deputies for alleged tortious acts. The action was brought in this city before a court of ordinary jurisdiction.

The record does not show whether Harper, the sheriff, was living at the institution of the suit. N o citation appears to have been served' upon, or even issued to, him.

One of the sureties, R. E. Rivers, was reached by the process of the court.

The widow of Harper, in her capacity as executrix of the will of her husband, and Rivers appeared, denying any liability, and asked to be dismissed with costs.

The case was tried, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for a portion of his claim. From such judgment the executrix and surety have appealed.

The former claims here that the lower court had no jurisdiction over the case, as a suit on a money claim against a succession is a probate matter: the latter insists here that no recovery can be had against him, unless the property of the principal shall have been discussed.

I.

If Harper was dead at the institution of this suit, the Fifth District Court had no jurisdiction over the matter. C. P. 164, 924, 986 ; Art. 83. Const, of 1868. If he died since the institution of the suit, the case should have been transferred to the court having jurisdiction of the settlement of the succession. 3 N. S. 522; 11 L. 360; 3 R. 92 ; 13 L. 378 ; 5 R. 2 ; 6 R. 44 ; 6 A. 793 ; 4 A. 248.

The plaintiff’s reply is unwholesome, that the Fifth District Court had jurisdiction because the suit is for three thousand ($3000) dollars, and that the jurisdiction of probate courts on claims of money brought against succession representatives is limited to suits in which the amount involved does not exceed five hundred ($500) dollars. In support of that theory he points to articles C. P. 986 and 924, ¡J13, which do not justify it.

By reference to the Code of Practice, such as it existed prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1868, it will be seen that the first article refers to the institution of suits on unliquidated money claims *1080for whatever amount before the court of probates, and that the paragraph of the article last referred to, contains no restriction as to the amount.

The words “ or before the district court, according to the amount involved,” found in article 986 of the present Code of Practice, and the proviso found in the 13th paragraph of article 924 of the same present Code, are innovations inserted in the Code of Practice, as revised in 1870, in furtherance of the constitution and the laws then in force.

By article 87 of that constitution, parish courts for the country parishes were created. They were vested with probate powers. They were to have no jurisdiction in a suit in which the amount claimed was over five hundred ($500) dollars, even where a succession was a party. Acts of 1868, p. 60 ; C. P. 127, 128, 454; 21 A. 478, 610, 616 ; 22 A. 81, 101, 593 ; 24 A. 127, 206, 288 ; 27 A. 411, 366.

By article 83 of that constitution, district courts were created for the parish of Orleans. The Second District Court was clothed with exclusive probate powers ; the other district courts, among which the Fifth, were to have exclusive jurisdiction over all civil cases, e*cepí pro&aie, so that the Second District Court had exclusive probate, and the other courts had exclusive civil, jurisdiction. The Second Court could not exercise civil, and the other courts could not exercise probate j urisdiction.

Both the parish courts and and the Second District Court were, therefore, vested with probate jurisdiction. The limitation of their powers as to amounts claimed, applied exclusively to the parish courts, and in no manner to the Second District Court, touching which there was special constitutional and statutory provision, and which was to be ruled and governed by the law as it previously stood, unimpaired as it was by the Constitution of 1868. The restrictions found in the Code of Practice as to amounts apply to the parish courts only. C. P. 164; Ballen vs. Andrews, 10 L. 218 ; Smith vs. Adams, 14 A. 409 ; State vs. Judge, 20 A. 466 : Champlin vs Bakewell, 21 A. 354 ; Lauve vs. Van Horn, 25 A. 446 ; Succession of Haggerty, 28 A. 87 ; Boutte’s case, 30 A. 181 ; and authorities herein before just quoted.

The Fifth District Court had, therefore, no jurisdiction over the case, in so far as the succession of Harper is concerned. The question of jurisdiction was not raised below. It is here presented. We could notice it proprio motu.

II.

Whatever may be the rights of the surety, Rivers, under section 354, of the Revised Statutes, which he invokes as shielding him, and which provides that no sale of the property of sureties shall be made until the property of the principal shall be discussed, it cannot be insisted upon absolutely that, under the circumstances of this case, the *1081surety cannot be sued and that, on an executory judgment, his property cannot be levied upon to satisfy it.

It is not always and under any circumstance that the property of the principal can be required to be first discussed by the creditor, of both principal and surety. R. C. C. 3046, 3047 ; 27 A. 324; 29 A. 843 ; 30 A. 486 Pothier, Obl. 410.

The principal and surety, in a case like this, can, and should be, when practicable, legally sued in one and the same action, as the claim springs from the same source and the parties are bound to the same extent, the surety having less means of defense, however, than the principal. R. C. C.3211, 2098, 3060 ; Troplong, Cont. p. 435, No. 494 ; p. 417, No. 470.

The lower court had jurisdiction over the suit as concerns the defendant, Rivers, who could not be sued before the probate court, and the defense made by him in this court is inadmissible under the pleadings and the circumstances of the case.

III.

We have looked into the record attentively to ascertain whether justice can be done to the parties, and find it in such condition that we cannot now udertake that responsibility. The interests of all concerned can be better protected and served by a new trial of the issues between them.

As the only certain date we have of Harper’s death is that of the appearance of his widow as executrix, we will not dismiss the suit as to his succession. The Second and Fifth District Courts for the parish of Orleans having ceased to exist, and being replaced by the Civil District Court for the same parish, the case, both as to Harper’s succession and as to defendant Rivers, must be referred for another trial to the last named court.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the lower court be reversed, that this case be remanded to be further proceeded with by the Civil District Court for the parish of Orleans; plaintiff to pay costs in both courts from the filing of the answers in the case.