Brandon v. Gottlieb

132 So. 283, 16 La. App. 676, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 71
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1931
DocketNo. 709
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 132 So. 283 (Brandon v. Gottlieb) 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
Brandon v. Gottlieb, 132 So. 283, 16 La. App. 676, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 71 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

LeBLANC, J.

Plaintiffs are the father and mother of a young negro hoy who was injured in an elevator accident in the Cangelosi building in the city of Baton Rouge, on Thursday, July 21, 1927, and died as a result of his injuries on the following Saturday, July 23, 1927. They seek-to recover damages in the sum of $12,000 for the death of their son, which, they allege was caused through the negligence of the lessee of the building, Lewis Gottlieb, in maintaining an old and dilapidated elevator therein and in not having an experienced and competent tender operating it on the day that he was injured. The Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York, indemnitor of the lessee of the building, is also made party defendant to the suit, and judgment is prayed for against both defendants in solido.

Plaintiffs allege in their petition that there had been a pretended adjustment and settlement of all .claims for liability, which they aver was obtained under certain circumstances and conditions detailed by them at length, all of which they attack on the ground of fraud and misrepresentation on the part of defendant .Gottlieb’s agent, M. E. Byrd, and also on the part of one W. A. Merchant, claim adjuster and representative of the Metropolitan Casualty Company, the other defendant.

This purported settlement in compromise or release, as it is styled, formed the basis of an exception of no cause of action; which was sustained by the district court in December, 1927. On appeal to this court, the judgment of the lower court on the exception was reversed and the case was remanded to the district court for further trial on the merits. See Brandon v. Gottlieb et al., 8 La. App. 415.

Defendants resist the claim on three grounds: (1) That the settlement in which plaintiffs accepted $350 was a complete adjustment of- any and all claims they might, have against them, and operated as a release which they aver that it is, from all liability whatever for any damages ■ that might arise out of the injury and death of their son, all charges of fraud and misrepresentation are of course denied; (2) that- there was no negligence on , the part of the lessee of the building whatsoever; and (3) that plaintiffs’ son, by his own wanton and gross negligence contributed to his -own injury and resulting death.

It was on .the Friday following the Thursday on which the.accident happened that the question of a settlement was first broached. Byrd, Gottlieb’s, agent, had gone to the hospital where the injured boy was, to see how he was getting along. He says that while there he was asked something by the boy’s father as to how the expenses were going to be paid. He answered him that he thought the company (meaning no doubt' the insurance company) would pay all the doctors’ and hospital expenses. With ’ this opening, which offered an opportunity of adjusting what might eventually turn out to be, as it subsequently did, a large. .claim for damages, Byrd lost no tihie in getting into communication with Merchant, the claim adjuster of the insuranee company. Merchant came from New Orleans -to Baton ■ Rouge on the, .following day, Saturday, and, after a hurried investigation -of the accident, he and Byrd had a conference with-the boy’s father and one of. the latter’s friends named Joe King. A [678]*678proposition to pay $850 cash for a release from all claims for damages, at the same time disclaiming all liability, was submitted, but it was not accepted that day. It was the same proposition which however resulted in the signing of the release by the plaintiffs a few days later.

It seems that from the very beginning there was no hope for the boy’s recovery. Byrd appreciated that fact, as the testimony reveals. It was on the very Saturday that they were trying to effect a settlement that he died, and we hesitate to think that, on that unfortunate day for them, his parents were in a condition of mind to. consider and carefully weigh the details of a proposition which meant the relinquishment of any and all claims for damages for the death of their son. The matter of settlement did not seem to be that pressing, and it might have been more proper .to defer for a day or two at least the opening of any negotiations leading thereto.

However, as already noted, plaintiffs did not accept on that day, the orfer made to them, and we would not be disposed to set aside the release because of these agents’ impropriety alone, if their action may be so termed, were it not for another more important and serious circumstance surrounding its. confection, which in our opinion, affects its validity.

In their investigations of 'the accident, Byrd and Merchant learned that there was but "one person who claimed to have seen how it happened. That was- Mrs. O. P. Kennedy, a lady who With her husband occupied offices on the second floor of the building. She was interviewed by them and gave an account which would appear unfavorable to the defendants. In making their offer to the plaintiffs, Byrd and Merchant laid before .them their theory as to how their son was injured, based on facts learned by them, which would indicate that he alone was at fault. They did not, however, give them the information which they had obtained from Mrs. Kennedy, according to which, the boy was injured through the gross carelessness of the operator of the elevator. Their reason for withholding that information they say, was because Mrs. Kennedy refused to commit her statement to writing and also because of some remark made by her which satisfied them that she was not telling the truth. The fact that they did not believe her did not give them the right to suppress what she had told them when they came to deal with the plaintiffs in order to obtain a release from them. The latter were entitled •to the benefit of that information as well as the other information they had received and judge for themselves of its truth or falsity. It would have been fairer not to give them any of the knowledge they had and let them make their own independent investigation. By disclosing only a part of it and suppressing some, they led these plaintiffs into an error of fact, which it may be said “comes under the head of fraud’’ which is sufficient to invalidate the contract. Civ. Code, arts. 1821, 1832, also Civ. Code, art. 1847, pars. 2 and 5.

In view of the conclusion we have reached with regard to the release, we can dispose of the defendants’ contention that it cannot be set aside until plaintiffs have returned or tendered the return of the money they received, by referring again to •the former judgment rendered by this court in this case reported in the 8 La. App. at page 415, from which we quote:

“No one can retain the benefits under a contract and lawfully avoid its consequences. There will be restitutio in integrum. [679]*679The party who wishes to avoid, the consequences must first offer to restore the other to the situation he occupied previous to the contract. Although we are not referred to any statutory law to that effect, we believe that this is an elementary rule in.' jurisprudence. The Civil Code, Art. 1913, provides that in order to enforce a commutative contract or- to secure damages for its non-performance, one must first tender to perform his part of the obligations under the contract, hut we are not referred to any article providing that in order to set aside a transaction one must offer to return that which he may have received when the transaction was, entered into, and for that reason, we say that such a rule originated in jurisprudence and is solely founded upon equity. Our Supreme Court substantially so held in the case of Germaine v. Mallerich, 31 La.

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 283, 16 La. App. 676, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandon-v-gottlieb-lactapp-1931.