Andrade v. Shiers
This text of 564 So. 2d 787 (Andrade v. Shiers) 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.
Opinion
Jesus ANDRADE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Jesse SHIERS, Ramona Shiers and Southern Farm Bureau Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*788 Singer, Boothe & Dean, Winnsboro by Stephen G. Dean, for plaintiff-appellant.
Brittain, Williams, McGlathery, Passman and Sylvester, Natchitoches by Russell L. Sylvester, and Cooper, Hales & Posey, Rayville by Mark E. Posey and Myrt T. Hales, Jr., for Jesse and Ramona Shiers.
Cotton, Bolton, Hoychick & Doughty, Rayville by Terry A. Doughty, for Southern Farm Bureau Ins.
Before MARVIN, SEXTON and HIGHTOWER, JJ.
MARVIN, Judge.
In this action for personal injury damages that arose when a cow belonging to a defendant homeowner butted the homeowner's father-in-law immediately after the father-in-law carried the cow's two-hour-old calf about 40 feet away from a muddy river bank, the father-in-law, plaintiff Andrade, appeals a judgment rejecting his demands against the homeowners and their liability insurer.
As against the homeowners, the issue is correctness and legal effect of the trial court's factual conclusion that plaintiff's conduct in carrying the calf away from the river bank unreasonably provoked the cow to strike plaintiff and thus constituted "victim fault," which was legally sufficient to bar recovery because it was a substantial factor in causing plaintiff's injury.
As against the homeowners' liability insurance carrier, the issue is the correctness of the trial court's conclusion that plaintiff was a "dependent resident of the insured's household," and was excluded from recovering under the liability provisions of the policy.
We affirm the judgment in favor of the homeowners' insurance company. As against the homeowners, we reverse and render judgment in favor of plaintiff, allocating responsibility for plaintiff's injury 80 percent to plaintiff and 20 percent to the homeowners.
TRIAL COURT'S REASONS
We paraphrase and edit what the trial court wrote as reasons for judgment:
Andrade, a resident alien, came to Richland Parish to live with his daughter and son-in-law in August, 1984. Andrade's home in Mexico had burned some 10 years before that time. He alternated living with his sister and another son in Mexico. He owned no property whatsoever.
Andrade was furnished meals and a place to live in the home of defendants, sleeping in a room previously occupied by his grandchildren. He had no job and no income other than gratuities given to him by his children for cigarettes and personal items. He did not and could not reimburse defendants for his room and board, but was totally dependent upon *789 them for food and shelter from August 1984 until he moved elsewhere in February 1987.
Andrade's injury occurred May 31, 1985. He last saw a doctor about July 1, 1985, and remained in the home, without medical supervision or restriction, until February 1987. Andrade intended to be a resident of the home and a part of his daughter's family for a lengthy or indefinite time and remained there for 19-20 months after the birth of his grandchild, the accident, and his release from medical treatment after the accident.
Defendants raised some cattle on a small fenced area through which the Boeuf River flowed. On numerous occasions, Andrade had been in the pasture and walked among the cattle, without incident. On May 31, 1985, while alone in the pasture, he saw the calf, about two hours old, nearing the mud at the river bank, and the mother cow a short distance from the calf. He attempted to move the calf away from that apparent danger and was attacked by the cow. He should have known that a mother cow would react adversely to his attempt. His action was the cause of this incident and "victim fault" which bars his recovery. Rozell v. Louisiana Animal Breeders Cooperative, Inc., 496 So.2d 275 (La.1986) [hereafter referred to as Rozell II]. Like the bull in Rozell, this mother cow of a two-hour-old calf would be explosively dangerous and thus constituted an unreasonable hazard. Bracketed material supplied.
INSURANCE POLICY EXCLUSION AFFIRMED
The trial court was correct, factually and legally, in concluding that Andrade was a resident of the home of his son-in-law and daughter and was excluded from recovering under the liability provisions of their homeowners' insurance policy.
CC ART. 2321 STRICT LIABILITY AND COMPARATIVE FAULT?
Art. 2321 liability is "fault in the nature of strict liability" that is presumed and imposed on the owner of a domesticated animal that harms another. Holland v. Buckley, 305 So.2d 113, 119 (La.1974). The liability arises because of the legal relationship between the owner and the animal. The injured person need not prove the "negligence" of the owner. Howard v. Allstate Ins. Co., 520 So.2d 715 (La.1988), citing Rozell I, 434 So.2d 404 (La.1983). Compare, however, the holding in Boyer v. Seal, 553 So.2d 827 (La.1989), that an elderly plaintiff who tripped and fell when a house cat either rubbed against or ran through her legs cannot recover for her injury because she did not prove that the cat "created an unreasonable risk of harm."
Rozell I, at fn. 7, p. 407, had said that notwithstanding "misleading" language in some cases discussing the "strict liability" concept of fault under CC Arts. 2317, 2321 and 2322, a cow or other domestic animal should not necessarily present an unreasonable risk of injury for its owner to be liable. Rozell II, three years later, however, termed the bull "explosively dangerous and ... an unreasonable hazard of injury, even to the man hired to attend him," noting that Rozell did nothing unreasonable to cause the bull to attack him. 496 So.2d at 278-279. The court suggested that application of the "strict liability doctrines leaves no room for contributory negligence," which was the law when Rozell was injured but not the law when the opinion was written. Rozell considered, but did not apply, the contributory negligence bar then applicable.
Boyer, supra, states that while the plaintiff is required to prove the domestic animal causing injury created some unreasonable risk of harm, the plaintiff need not [go further? and] "establish that the animal was inherently dangerous or that it committed an aggressive act [in order to recover]." 553 So.2d at 828.
In the light of this record and of the most recent pronouncements in Howard and in Boyer, we conclude as follows: A domesticated cow, accustomed to being around people, including this plaintiff, is not inherently dangerous. An unsecured *790 cow with a newly born calf, however, either becomes inherently dangerous to any plaintiff who may move the calf or poses an unreasonable risk of harm to any person, even a knowledgeable one, as this plaintiff was, who places himself in reasonable proximity to the calf. Plaintiff was over 70 years old. His daughter testified plaintiff had been around cattle most of his life. Moreover, and unlike the cat involved with Ms. Boyer, this cow "committed an aggressive act" by attacking plaintiff when he put the calf down.
To the extent above stated, we agree with the conclusion of the trial court that a cow with a two-hour old calf is dangerous and constitutes a hazard.
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564 So. 2d 787, 1990 WL 84455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrade-v-shiers-lactapp-1990.