Allen v. Currie

8 La. App. 30, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 423
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 La. App. 30 (Allen v. Currie) 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
Allen v. Currie, 8 La. App. 30, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 423 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

MOUTON, J.

Plaintiff is suing in damages for the benefit of William Allen, his minor son, the fathers of the following named minors: William C. Currie, Jr., Robert E. Stearns, Jr., Marion Roberts, Carrol Sandifur, Bert Jordan, Dominique Arrighi and Shirley Arrighi, all residents of the City of Baton Rouge. The amount claimed is $10,095.50 for the alleged injuries which resulted from the throwing of a poisonous acid on the face and neck of William Allen on December 17, 1924. The throwing of the acid on Willie, as he is referred to in the testimony, occurred in the Baton Rouge High Schol Building on Florida Street, at night, at about 10 o’clock. The minors hereinabove named, were all pupils of that school. They had organized a juvenile club or society, which they had named “The Lion Tamers Club.” They say they were all members of the club with the exception of William C. Currie, Jr., who had. not been initiated, but who was to become a member.

These boys usually met in a small room in the eastern corner of the building. They met there for amusement and study. Though they had no permission from the school authorities to assemble in that building, their meetings, as far as the record discloses, were not prompted by any evil or unlawful design, and were harmless.

The proof shows that on the night of the occurrence, Willie Allen, Charles Collier and Bowman were walking eastward on Florida Street, and that just as they passed the eastern corner of the school building they saw a light burning in the room where the boys of the “Lion Tamers Club” were having a meeting. The door of the building was open, and Allen, with his companions, being attracted by the light they had seen, entered the building and proceeded by the stairway to the fourth floor where the room is located. Allen and his companions were unarmed and did not know who was in the room where they had noticed this light towards which they proceeded quietly and noiselessly.

Counsel for defendant seems to intend to convey the idea in their brief that Allen and his companions were moving furtively on the stairway as they ascended, and that they were prompted by sinister motives.

It is true, as was the ease with the boys who occupied the room where the light waa shining, that neither Allen nor his companions had permission from any one in authority to enter this building, but there is nothing in the record to indicate that they went in or proceeded up on the stairway with the slightest intention of committing any wrong whatsoever. They did not know, as the evidence clearly shows, who were those that occupied the room where they saw the light, and they could certainly not have been actuated by any evil design in entering or continuing on to the fourth floor. They were simply attracted by a feeling of curiosity and nothing else.

[32]*32Allen and his companions reached the fourth floor, and when they got near or opposite the room where the meeting was being held, the floor creaked or some other noise occurred which was overheard by the boys in the room. It is shown that at that time these boys in the room were engaged in the telling of jokes or stories. As soon as they heard the noise in the hallway or near the door, the light immediately went out, and out of seven boys in that room, six rushed out together or in a bunch. Several, if not all, with bottles in their hands. All was then in darkness with the exception of one or two flashlights which one or two of the boys carried as they rushed out of that room.

Allen and his companions fled immediately, and without showing the least desire to resist or do any bodily harm to any one, a fact which corroborates our first statement to the effect that Allen and his companions had not gone up to that room with the slightest design to commit any wrong or to do any injury. They fled, as before stated, and the boys who had rushed out of the room chased and pursued the fleeing Allen, ¿nd Collier, one of his companions, westward through the building from where Allen and Collier ran downward along the stairway, and as they reached the third or second floor, acid was poured from a bottle and fell on Allen’s neck and face.

It is shown by the testimony of the boys who were in the room that the acid was thrown by William Currie, Jr., who, they say, was a mere invited guest, and had not then been initiated into the mysteries of ' the club. Proof that it was thrown . by Currie is confirmed, it is claimed, by the fact that some of the acid fell on Currie, and on Stearns who was immediately behind him when it was poured from the second or third floor on the fleeing Allen.

It is shown that several bottles were brought up in that room in which water was kept for drinking purposes, where lunches or meals were occasionally eaten by members of the club. These bottles, it is claimed by defendants, were all used as containers for water, with the exception of the bottle in which this acid was kept.

It is claimed by the boys of the club that this acid had been kept in that bottle for use in a radio battery they had up there. These booties it is shown were ranged on a shelf in the room with no mark whatsoever on this bottle that contained the acid. The fact is, that the bot-tole of acid stood in the middle of the row and that the acid it contained was not distinguishable from the water in the other bottles.

If these boys had been mere children such carelessness would, perhaps, be probable, but for high school students, ranging in age from sixteen to eighteen, to permit this bottle of poisonous acid to remain there undistinguishable by any label or other mark, seems to us incredible. This conclusion is emphasized by the fact that Currie, their invited guest as claimed, was not warned of the danger that lurked in this bottle of acid which defendants contend had been placed side by side with the bottles that were used for drinking purposes. Such conduct is not consonant with the ordinary rules of conduct in young men of that age.

There is another strange circumstance about these innocent appearing bottles that were permitted to sit in a room without designation or marks to distinguish one from the other. The fact is, that not a single one, as testified to by a member of the club, had a stopper. This was cer[33]*33tainly a peculiar fact. That the bottles were on the shelf that night, there seems to be no doubt; that not a single one had a stopper, not even the one with the deadly poison, is suggestive and cannot be accounted for unless there was a design or purpose in permitting such a condition of affairs in the room in which the members enjoyed their convivialities, including Currie, their pretended invited and innocent guest.

As we proceed in the analysis of this evidence, we believe the facts will reveal the reason why these bottles, including the one containing the acid, were left open. The evidence shows that the very moment the noise on the stairway or near the door was heard by the - boys in the room, the lights were turned out, and that each, if not all of the six boys rushed out together, grabbed one of the bottles and chased the intruders down the stairways of the building.

Robert Stearns, one of the boys who testified in the case, admitted that their meetings had been previously interrupted by intruders who had entered the building. No doubt, it was determined that these intruders had to be taught a lesson for entering the building and thus to invade the privacy of the association. The bottle of acid was kept evidently in readiness to effect the contemplated correction.

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Related

Tabb v. Norred
277 So. 2d 223 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Whipple v. Lirette
124 So. 160 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 30, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-currie-lactapp-1928.