Barrios v. Yoars

184 So. 212
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1938
DocketNos. 16871-16874.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 184 So. 212 (Barrios v. Yoars) 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
Barrios v. Yoars, 184 So. 212 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

These cases are consolidated and, since most of the facts involved in all of them are identical, we deem it expedient to render one opinion.

Each of the plaintiffs is a trapper and each, for years prior to the events herein recited, had obtained his principal income by trapping muskrats on marsh lands situated between the mouth of the Mississippi River and the City of New Orleans. For some time tjtere had been a controversy between the land-owners, including Fred Yoars, the present defendant, and some of the trappers, including the plaintiffs, concerning the rights of the plaintiffs to trap rats on lands of the landowners. For the purposes of this case it may be conceded that Yoars was the owner of all of the marsh lands on which these various plaintiffs were at that time engaged and it may also be conceded that the said Yoars had posted notices at conspicuous and numerous places warning all persons against trapping or otherwise trespassing <on the said lands. The lands were not fenced, or otherwise enclosed, and no crops or fruits were grown thereon and they could not be considered plantations or farms.

On February 26, 1934, in the matter entitled State v. Hebert et al., 179 La. 190, 153 So. 688, the Supreme Court of Louisiana held that it is not a violation of the trespass statute of this state— Section 822 of the Revised Statutes, as .amended by Act No. 162 of 1910 — to “trespass” upon such lands since the said statutes refer only to those who “ * * * shall enter upon any plantation or farm, or upon any grounds upon which crops or fruits of any kind are grown, or into .any enclosure without the permission of the owner * * *Without discussing what may have been the civil rights of the land owners involved, the court held that no criminal prosecution would lie, ■saying:

“* * * But the statute does not make such trespassing a penal offense, unless the land trespassed upon is a plantation ■or farm, or land on which crops or fruits of some kind are grown, or is inclosed by some kind of fence, either artificial or natural. The'fact that the land fronts on ;a stream, either navigable or non-navigable, does not make it an inclosure. And the proviso in the statute shows plainly that the mere posting of the land with warnings against trespassing is not enough to make it an inclosure, or subject to the provisions of the statute.”

When this decision was rendered, the association or “union” to which the various plaintiffs here belonged caused to be printed various copies thereof and distributed them throughout that section. It is abundantly shown that Yoars was well acquainted with the decision and well knew that, as a result of it, no criminal prosecution for trespass against these plaintiffs would lie. In fact, it is shown that one of the printed copies of the said decision was handed to him before he took the various steps on which these suits are based. On November 20, 1934, which was the day on which the trapping season for that year commenced, Yoars, though he knew of the decision which had been rendered many months earlier on February 26th of that year, caused the filing of criminal charges of trespass against and secured the arrest of Claiborne Zeringue, Sidney Barrios and Edward Barrios, who, as a result of the arrest, were taken before a justice of the peace. Subsequently, on November 26, 1934, he again instigated criminal proceedings against the said parties and again caused all of them and also Camille Barrios, to be taken into custody and again brought them before the justice of the peace, where they were required to furnish bond in order to secure their temporary release pending trial. Later, basing his action on the decision of the Supreme Court in the Hebert Case, the District Attorney for the Parish of Plaquemines dismissed all of those charges. Finally, Yoars, realizing that his only recourse would be to resort to civil proceedings, filed in the United States District Court a petition for an injunction and on November 30, 1934, secured a restraining order. After obtaining this preliminary injunction, Yoars, accompanied by a deputy sheriff of the parish, again visited the camp where the plaintiffs were living and, representing himself and the said deputy sheriff as officers of the United States, again took them into custody and brought them into the office of the United States Marshal in New Orleans. No charges were made against them and it is not shown that there had been any “trespass” committed by any of them since the issuance of the restraining order. *214 Since no charges were pending against them the United States Marshal released them from custody.

They bring these suits against Yoars seeking recovery of damages for malicious prosecution and false imprisonment and Camille Barrios also claims damages for personal injuries and mental anguish which he sustained as a result of the fact that on the afternoon of November 25, 1934, while Barrios was in the act of “running” his traps in the. marshes, his pirogue, which he had left at the edge of the navigable stream nearby, and his dry clothes, which were in the pirogue, were taken by the said Yoars with the result that he, in order to reach his camp more than five miles away, was required to travel over the marshes and cross intervening waterways. Claiborne Zeringue was forced to leave his wife and sick child at camp and the child afterwards died, and it is contended, therefore, that the mental anguish which he suffered aggravated the offense against him.

Camille Barrios claimed of defendant the sum of $9,500, Claiborne Zeringue claimed $8,500, Edward Barrios claimed $8,500, and Sidney Barrios claimed $8,500.

At the request of defendant the cases were tried by jury and verdicts rendered as follows: For Camille Barrios, $750, for Claiborne Zeringue, $425, for Edward Barrios, $200, for Sidney Barrios, $200, and, from judgments based on these verdicts, Yoars has appealed.

We have recited the above facts as though there was no controversy over them. Many of them are denied. But the evidence is so overwhelming that we believe' it unnecessary to refer in detail to it.

So far as the claims for malicious prosecution and false imprisonment or arrest are concerned, defendant seems to rely not on the defense that he acted with probable cause and without malice, but on his theory that, in spite of the decision of the Supreme Court and although no prosecution at that time would lie for acts such as plaintiffs committed, nevertheless they were, technically, “trespassers” and, therefore, should be barred from civil recovery. But the law is well settled that, where one institutes against another criminal prosecution and there is an acquittal, if the person who instigated the prosecution is to avoid liability for damages he must do so on the ground that he acted with probable cause^and without malice.

It is true that, where there has been a trial which has resulted in an acquittal, the burden of showing that ’there was malice and that there was no probable cause for the prosecution is placed upon the plaintiff in the suit for damages for malicious prosecution:

“We do not know just how far she was vindicated by the evidence offered in the criminal prosecution. It may be that the proof was lacking only in the matter of a reasonable doubt. The fact that the woman was acquitted is not, of itself, proof that the prosecution was inspired by malice, or was without probable cause. Grant v. Deuel, 3 Rob. 17, 38 Am.Dec. 228; Wells v. Johnston, 52 La.Ann. 713, 27 So.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrios-v-yoars-lactapp-1938.