delivered the opinion of the r court In this case the plaintiff claims from defendant $850 for rent of a house and blacksmith’s shop. The defendant pleads in compensation a debt, due to him from the former for work and labour performed in his trade a blacksmith, to an amount exceeding the sum demanded by thefplaintiff, and asks judgment for the surplus. To this plea of compensation and reconvention the plaintiff replied by dis
On the trial of the cause in the court below, the judge refused to suffer the plaintiff to give any evidence in- support of his replication or plea in compensation, and to the opinion by which this evidence was rejected, the counsel for the appellant took a bill of exceptions; which presents the only question in the case.
^ The compensation pleaded by the defendant being followed by a claim for a surplus remaining after full discharge of the plaintiff’s demand, must be considered as a^uiit in re-convention. It is true that reconvention is one mode of claiming the benefit of compensation,-and peculiarly so when any connection exists between the opposing claims of plaintiff and defendant. But when the party reconvening, demands more than sufficient to compensate the claim against him, his plea partakes much of the nature of an original suit, to which payment might certainly be pleaded; and compensation is a species of payment so-lutionis vicem obtinet. This is strictly true in cases where the opposing claims are liquidated and certain. If they be of the same nature and not of difficult liquidation, compen
The defendant relies on two principal , _ , grounds in support of the correctness of the opiniotrof the judge a quo, by which he rejected the evidence offered by the plaintiff on his plea of compensation. 1 st. That our code of practice does not authorise replications.— 2d. That the replication being a recon ven (¡oil on the part ofthe plaintiff, against that pleaded by the defendant, it is not tolerated by law.
The 239th article of the code of practice provides that new facts alleged by a defendant in his answer, shall be considered as denied by the plaintiff, and therefore admits neither replication nor rejoinder. By the 377th article of the section which treats of demands in reconvention, a defendant may plead it either as an exception in his answer to the principal demand, or institute a distinct and separate demand, and the plaintiff is bound to answer.
' Now in whatever form a defendant may choose to put his defence, if he demand judgment against the plain tiff for a surplus, in his plea of compensation and reconvention, it is no longer a simple exception; but beyond the extinction of the demand of the latter, it is the
The doctrine on this subject carried thus far is in conformity with the ancient laws of the country, and does not conflict with the general rule that reconvention is not permitted; which rule itself suffers an exception, as explained by Toulier vol. 7, page 495, art. 415. See, also, Febrero Bt. 2d, book 3, chap. 1, no. 256, same part, and book Chap. 2d, no. 212, and, the Curia Phil, page 75, no. 8. In the present case, the amount pleaded in compensation (to the defendant’s demand in reconvention) is equally easy to be liquidated, as the account set forth by the reconvenor. The reason of the rule which seems so much to eschew the danger of infinity in reconvention, will, we think, be sufficiently satisfied, by limiting the respondent to compensation alone—rejecting all claim for surplus.
It is therefore 'ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the judgment of the district court