Bishop v. Callais
This text of 533 So. 2d 121 (Bishop v. Callais) 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
Elizabeth BISHOP and E.C. Bishop, Individually and in His Capacity as Administrator of the Estate of His Minor Son, Mark Bishop
v.
Ivan CALLAIS, Cameron Barr, as Administrator of Coliseum Medical Center, Coliseum Medical Center (Community Psychiatric Centers, Inc.), et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Raul R. Bencomo, Susanne Cambre, New Orleans, for appellant.
Donna G. Klein, Michael M. Noonan, McGlinchey, Stafford, Mintz, Cellini & Lang, New Orleans, for appellees.
Before GARRISON, KLEES and LOBRANO, JJ.
LOBRANO, Judge.
The trial court maintained defendants' exception of no cause of action as to some of the claims asserted by petitioners. From this judgment, plaintiffs appeal.
Elizabeth and E.C. Bishop filed the instant lawsuit in their individual capacities, and on behalf of their minor son for the abuse alleged to have taken place while their son was confined for psychiatric treatment. Defendants are the Coliseum Medical Center, its insurer, the administrator, Cameron Barr, Community Psychiatric Center, and Ivan Callais, an employee (collectively referred to as defendants).
The petition alleges that Mark Bishop (plaintiffs' minor son) was sexually abused by Callais while confined at defendants' facility for treatment. The petition further alleges that the sole and proximate cause of the incidents was the negligence of defendants in various particulars, including failing to exercise due care in employment of personnel, failing to provide adequate security, and failing to properly supervise personnel. As a result, plaintiffs claim damages on behalf of their minor son, and also seek damages, individually, for their own mental anguish, humiliation, embarrassment and loss of consortium.
Defendants excepted asserting that the parents have no cause of action for the mental anguish or suffering sustained by them as a result of the physical or psychological injuries of their son.
The trial court maintained the exception as to the claim of Elizabeth Bishop. Presumably, the individual claim of E.C. Bishop, identical in nature, should have been included in the judgment, but for some unknown reason, it was not. It is from this judgment that plaintiffs perfect this appeal.
In brief, defendants concede that plaintiffs do state a cause of action for loss of *122 consortium, but strenuously argue that the parents cannot recover for their mental anguish because of injury to a third person.
Thus, the issue presented for our review is whether the parents of this minor child state a cause of action for their own nonpecuniary loss because of the alleged physical and/or psychological injury to their minor son.
It is well established that damages for mental anguish or distress (nonpecuniary) are recoverable in tort actions. Gele v. Markey, 387 So.2d 1162 (La.1980). However, the often cited "antique" obstacle to recovery of emotional distress caused by the injury to another is Black v. Carrollton Railroad Co., 10 La.Ann. 33 (1855). In that case the Supreme Court denied a father recovery for the "shock to parental feelings" he sustained because of the physical injuries sustained by his 14 year old son when the defendant's railroad car overturned.
Although the Black rule has been followed through the years, both the legislature and the jurisprudence have created limited exceptions. By enacting the express provisions of the wrongful death statute, the legislature gave some relief to the Black rule. Equally important has been certain jurisprudential exceptions which indicate an attempt at altering the strict adherence to Black.
In Holland v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance Co., 135 So.2d 145 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1961), plaintiffs contracted with an exterminator to eliminate rats, and placed rat poison in their home. Plaintiffs' son ingested the poison. The parents of the child sought medical treatment for him. The exterminator was contacted in order to determine the chemical content of the poison. He was unable to inform the plaintiffs quickly and definitively of the poison's ingredients thus delaying the medical treatment for several hours. The parents filed suit against the exterminator seeking not only damages for the injuries to their son, but also for their own mental anguish and shock. The trial court maintained the defendant's exception of no cause of action as to the parents' individual claims. The appellate court found an implied contractual independent duty owed to the parents, and reversed. The Court held that plaintiffs' petition asserted the breach of an independent duty owed them, and thus a cause of action was stated.
In Blackwell v. Oser, 436 So.2d 1293 (La.App. 4th Cir.1983), writ den. 442 So.2d 453 (La.1983), the parents of a child born with permanent brain damage sued the obstetrician who delivered the child. They sought damages for their own mental anguish. The defendant's exception of no cause of action was maintained by the trial court as to the father's claim, but was overruled as to the mother. This Court affirmed concluding that the mother, as a patient of the defendant was owed an independent duty, but that no such duty was owed to the father. The dissent in that case questioned the Black holding, and would have found a duty owed to the father as well.
In Skorlich v. East Jefferson General Hospital, 478 So.2d 916 (La.App. 5th Cir. 1985), our brethren of the Fifth Circuit, in a case very similar to Blackwell v. Oser, supra, held that the physician owed a duty to both the father and mother.
Despite the Black holding, Holland, Blackwell and Skorlich all suggest an attempt by the appellate courts to recognize a cause of action for mental anguish for injury to another when the claim is based on a breach of an independent duty established by a contractual relationship, either express or implied. Where no such relationship exists, however, the courts have adhered to Black. See, cases cited in Blackwell v. Oser, supra, at 1294.
In contrast to these "independent duty" cases, where a petition specifically alleges that the mental distress is the direct result of the breach of an express contract, our Supreme Court has restricted the claim to those situations where the contract has for its object "intellectual gratification". Meador v. Toyota of Jefferson, Inc., 332 So.2d 433 (La.1976). In that case, the court looked to the various translations of La. Civil Code Article 1934(3) in reaching this conclusion. Justice Dixon (now Chief Justice) *123 questioned the logic of delineating between "tort" and "contract" causes of action, and suggested that Louisiana's fact pleading theory of presenting a cause should allow plaintiff full recovery.
The reasoning of Meador is questionable today because of the passage of Civil Code Article 1998 in 1984. That article provides in part:
"Damages for nonpecuniary loss may be recovered when the contract, because of its nature is intended to gratify a nonpecuniary interest and, because of the circumstances surrounding the formation or the nonperformance of the contract, the obligor knew or should have known, that his failure to perform would cause that kind of loss."
Thus, recovery for nonpecuniary loss in breach of contract cases is clearly expanded beyond the "intellectual gratification" of Meador. Article 1998 requires that Courts determine the intended object and nature of the contract in its determination of damages.
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533 So. 2d 121, 1988 WL 105498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-callais-lactapp-1988.