Barataria & Lafourche Canal Co. v. Field

17 La. 421
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 La. 421 (Barataria & Lafourche Canal Co. v. Field) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barataria & Lafourche Canal Co. v. Field, 17 La. 421 (La. 1841).

Opinion

Simon, J.

delivered the opinion of the coux-t.

This is a suit for damages. Plaintiffs allege, that in the spring of the year 1840, they had neax-ly completed their work on the Baratax-ia and Lafoux-che Oanal, and were engaged in excavating the said canal, through a piece of land belonging to them, measuring five arpents fx-ont on the left bank of the Bayou Lafourche, by forty appents in depth, hounded on each side by lands belonging to the defendant, Eliza Mills, wife of William. Eield (separated in property from her husband); that they had employed in the-said wox-k about sixty slaves, and two dredging machines; when their said- land was over[258]*258flowed, and the further excavation of said canal was thereby interrupted; that the labor of most of said slaves was lost to them, their expenses increased by sickness of their slaves, caused by the overflow, and the completion of the said canal greatly retarded; by all which, in injuries, and particularly by that arising from the delay in the opening of the said canal, all occasioned by the said overflow, they have sustained damages to the amount of $15,000. They further represent, that the said inundation and damages were owing to the want of good and sufficient levees on the property of the defendant, Mrs. Field, lying on each side of their land, and to the neglect [424] and omission of the said defendant to make and maintain such levees thereupon, as by law she was required to make on her said property; that said neglect was gross, culpable, and intentional on the part of the defendant, who is responsible for the damage caused thereby. They also state, that in default oi the said defendant, the police jury of the parish of Lafourche interior was bound to cause said levees to be made and maintained in good faith, &c. &c.; and that the said police jury is therefore jointly and severally indebted to them in the said amount of damages, &c. &c.; they pray for judgment against the defendant, Mrs. Field, and the police jury in solido, for the sum of $15,000. The defendant, Mrs. Field, pleaded the general issue, and further averred, that she had suffered damages from the operations of the plaintiffs, who have obstructed the material drains of her plantation by the embankments of their canal; that her crop was totally ruined ; by the loss of which she has suffered damages to the amount of $10,000, which she pleads in reconvention against plaintiffs’ demand. The police jury also pleaded the general issue. The case was regularly tried by a jury, who found a verdict in favor of the police jury, and against the defendant, Mrs. Field, for $1200; and after an unsuccessful attempt to obtain a new trial, the defendant, Field, took the present appeal.

Our- first inquiries must he in relation to numerous bills of exceptions, taken by the defendant to the opinion of the court on divers questions of evidence, and also to the legality of the charge of the court to the jury.

1. The record shows us, that the court a quo, having decided that the plaintiffs had a right to show possession and acts of ownership by parol testimony, defendant’s counsel took and tendered a bill of exceptions, in which it was simply stated, that the plaintiffs had offered to prove ownership by parol; which bill the court refused to sign, unless it embraced the reasons on which it was grounded, and suggested to the counsel the' propriety of embodying all the testimony objected to, and admitted by the court in the bill [425] of exceptions; which was declined. "We are of opinion that the district judge' did not err in permitting parol evidence to be introduced, to prove a possession and acts of ownership; and we think, also, that he acted correctly in refusing to sign a bill of exceptions, which did not embrace the true grounds of his opinion. This court has often decided, that a party who takes a bill of exceptions, must spread on its face every thing necessary to bring the point in its true light before the appellate court. 8 FT. S. 889 ; 11 La. Reports, 309; 12 La. Reports, 266. The most reasonable and proper mode was undoubtedly to embody the testimony admitted by the court in the [259]*259bill of exceptions, as this would have enabled us to decide whether the court below erred or not. But this having been declined by defendant’s counsel, we must consider the evidence as if no exception had been taken to its admissibility.

2. The next bill of exceptions is one taken to the opinion of the court, permitting the plaintiffs to prove, that many of the inhabitants had been obliged to quit their houses, in consequence of the overflow resulting from the-crevasses on the land of the defendant. We think the district judge did not err. The object of the evidence was certainly pertinent to the issue, as it went to show the extent of the inundation, and the cause from which it proceeded.

3. Defendant’s counsel having proposed to ask a witness the following questions: “ Did you, or not, as inspector of the upper part of the fifth ward of the parish, apply to Judge Knobloch, as register of conveyances, to know to whom a tract of -unoccupied and uncultivated land in your ward, on the left bank of the bayou, belonged,- and were you not answered, that it belonged to Varice Ooulon? ” and other questions to the same purport, with regard to other tracts; the district judge refused to permit the interrogatories to be propounded, and said defendant took a bill of exceptions. We think the judge did not err; as the evidence sought to be introduced was not only harassing, but went to show title by parol and reputation. The best evidence to prove the facts alluded to, was the production of certified copies [426] of the acts said to exist in the office of the register of conveyances.

4. The district judge decided correctly in permitting the plaintiffs to prove what defendant’s husband had said in relation to her levees. It had been clearly shown that he was, and acted as the general agent of his wife, and transacted all her business; and his acts and conduct in the administration of the affairs of the defendant, were good evidence against her, particularly to rebut her reconventional demand.

5. The evidence offered from a suit between William Field, in his own name, and F. Girod, is in no manner connected with his declarations, referred to in the fourth bill of exceptions, and was properly rejected by the court; the record of said suit was res inter alios acta.

O. The situation of the plaintiffs’ levees, on the opposite side of the Bayou Lafourche, has nothing to do with that controversy, and cannot be made the subject of an investigation in this suit.

7. The last bill of exceptions, is one taken by the defendant to the judge’s charging the jury, that “ it was not necessary to show a police regulation, to compel a front proprietor to make his levees on the bayou which communicates with the river,” and referring them to the act of the legislature, respecting roads and levees, of 1829. This law of 1829 provides, that the levees shall be made by the riparian proprietors, in the proportions and at the time prescribed by the act. It fixes the height and base of the levees; gives the distance from the river; leaves the said distance on the bayou to the determination of the police jury; authorizes the police juries to appoint inspectors ; provides, in its 25th section, “ that every proprietor, whose levee shall have been broken by his own neglect to comply with the provisions of this [260]

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17 La. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barataria-lafourche-canal-co-v-field-la-1841.