Abraham v. Castille

158 So. 650
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1935
DocketNo. 1413.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 So. 650 (Abraham v. Castille) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abraham v. Castille, 158 So. 650 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This is a suit for damages against the owner of a calf, predicated on article 2321 of the Civil Code, which makes the owner of an animal answerable for the damage caused by it.

The undisputed facts are that this calf, which had strayed on the public road from the pasture in which it was inclosed, was thrown, from an impact with one automobile going in one direction, against the radiator of another car going in the opposite direction. The plaintiff, who was in this last car, claims to have suffered severe injury to her back and ankles by reason of the jolt she received when the car collided with the calf. She charges negligence against the defendant in having permitted the calf to be at large upon the highway in violation of the provisions of an ordinance of the police jury of St. Landry parish which prohibited the roaming at large of cattle on the highway in the Second Police Jury ward of that parish, within the territorial limits of which the accident happened.

The highway referred to is known as the “Pershing Highway” and is the main road connecting the cities of Lafayette and Oper lousas. The car plaintiff was in and which was being driven by her son, Ernest Abraham, was traveling northward from Lafayette, and the other car southward from the direction of Opelousas. The defendant’s property, which included the pasture in which his cattle were inclosed, is situated on the west side of the highway, a bit south of the town of Sunset, where the accident occurred. The ear going south did not stop after striking or being struck by the calf. The occupants were un- . known to the litigants in this suit and their testimony was therefore unavailable.

The defense to the suit is threefold: First, that the calf did not belong to the defendant, but was the property of his married son, and that it was in his (defendant’s) pasture by sufferance; second, that the pasture was properly inclosed by a lawful fence which had been erected by the Louisiana Highway Commission when the highway on which the pasture abuts had been constructed, and that if the calf escaped through the fence, it was through no fault or negligence on defendant’s part in properly maintaining the same, but the damage thereto, of which defendant was ignorant, was caused by the unemployed relief workers, while they were .cutting grass along the highway; and, third, that the approximate cause of-the accident was the negr ligenee of the drivers of the two automobiles in not controlling their cars in such manner as to meet the emergency created by the presence of the calf on the highway.

The lower court rendered judgment in fa,vor of the defendant, dismissing the plaintiff’s suit at her costs, and she has appealed.

The only witnesses to the accident itself were the plaintiff and her son Ernest, who was driving the automobile she was in. They both testify that the two cars were about to meet when the calf jumped from a ditch on the west side of the road in front of the other car which hit it, the force of the blow throwing it against the radiator of their car. ’ Certainly, as far as the driver of the car plaintiff was in, the accident was unavoidable, an'd according to their testimony, it would seem that the driver of the other car was no more to blame. There is no merit therefore in the defense that the accident was caused by the negligence of the drivers of the two cars. Neither does there seem to be any more merit in the defense that the .calf was not owned by the defendant, but belonged to his son. ' It appears that this son, named Aloysius, is a married man, who lives with his family in Houston, Tex. Even though it be admitted that the calf belonged to him, it is shown that it was born on the defendant’s place, where its mother was kept, and remained there constantly in charge of and under control of the defendant and his tenants. In the case of Stevens v. Mrs. E. D. Burguieres Planting Co., 120 La. 774, 45 So. 601, 603, which is relied on by defendant’s counsel in support of this defense, the facts *652 concerning the ownership, possession, and custody of the cow which had caused the damage plaintiff was suing for, were far more complicated and involved than they are in the present case; but the court, in its opinion, specifically stated that it did not think that they “had the effect of placing the cow in the possession of and custody of the corporation for the owners, or for Robert L. Brown.” Here, to the contrary, the defendant’s own testimony shows that by his keeping the cow and calf in his own pasture, where they had always remained, and permitting his tenants to milk the cow, he exercised acts of ownership and control over the animal which made him responsible in damages if he was otherwise liablei

The important issue in the case is the one regarding the negligence of the defendant, vel non, in not having a proper inclosure to keep his cattle in his pasture, or in failing to keep his fence in good order or repair.

In the case of Demarco v. Gober, 19 La. App. 236, 140 So. 64, this court, although it relieved the owner of liability for damage caused by his mule that was roaming at large on the highway, recognized the rule, as laid down in several decisions of the Supreme Court, to the effect that the “owner of any animal is responsible for damage caused by it, if there is proof of any negligence, however slight.” The rule is perhaps best expressed in the case of Martinez v. Bernhard, 106 La. 368, 30 So. 901, 55 L. R. A. 671, 87 Am. St. Rep. 306, as follows: “While the least act of negligence should be enough to hold one liable who owns a dog, yet it must appear that there was some negligence, however slight.” In the Demarco v. Gober Case, we held that the law makes no distinction between the kinds of animal the owner may have which may have caused the damage and the same burden of proof is placed on him. The proof in that case showed that the owner was not negligent “in the slightest degree.” There may be said to be some speculation, from a reading of the decision, as to what would have been the result had it been shown that there ,was a local ordinance prohibiting the roaming of cattle at large on the highway, which is the important feature in this case.

The first charge of negligence is that plaintiff’s fence did not conform to the standard fence required by the ordinances of the police jury of St. Landry parish. In this connection, it may be stated that plaintiff made no allegation in her petition charging a specific violation of any ordinance prescribing what is a lawful fence, limiting her averments to a violation of the ordinance prohibiting the roaming of cattle at large in the Second Police Jury ward of the parish, copy of which ordinance she annexed to her petition. . This ordinance was adopted in January 1925, to take effect the following month. The issue is raised in the answer of the defendant, however, wherein it is averred that “he maintains around his fields and pasture, a fence built and erected in conformity with the requirements of the ordinance of the Police Jury of the Parish of St. Landry * * The ordinance prescribing what shall constitute a lawful fence was adopted by the police jury of the parish in 1897. It provides that all fences shall be of a specified height and consist of so many boards and barbed wires, according to the number of each that may be used in its construction. It is true that the defendant’s fence did not have any plank or board at the bottom, but it is shown to have contained one barbed wire more than any of the fences prescribed under the ordinance.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abraham-v-castille-lactapp-1935.