Burnett v. Cockrill

145 So. 398
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1933
DocketNo. 1060.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 So. 398 (Burnett v. Cockrill) 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
Burnett v. Cockrill, 145 So. 398 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LE BLANC, J.

On October 30, 1931, J,ean Burnett, minor daughter of Jámes L. Burnett, was- injured in an intersectional automobile collision at North boulevard and Royal street in the city of Baton Rouge. A Chevrolet coach belonging to Francis L. Johnston and being driven by him, and in which Miss Burnett was riding as a guest, collided with a Ford coach owned and being driven by B. M. Cockrill.

*399 Hiss Burnett’s father instituted this suit in his own behalf as well as for the use and benefit of his minor daughter, seeking to recover the following damages:

For himself,
Doctors’ Bill.$75.00
Hospital Bill.40.00
Damage to his daughter’s clothing'.25.00
$140.00
Fo>r the use and benefit of his daughter, Permanent injury to speech and voice.$4,000.00
Disfigurement of neck and head. 2,000.00
Physical and mental pain 5,000,00
. Loss of earning power as radio singer and theatrical performer. 3,000,00
Humiliation and embarrassment as a result of impediment in voice and speech. 1,000.00
$15,000.00
$15,140.00

The claim is being prosecuted against Johnston, owner and driver of the Chevrolet car in which Miss Burnett was a guest, the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, in which Johnston carried a casualty policy of insurance in the sum of $10,000, and the Standard Plumbing, Heating & Supply Company, Inc., of Baton Rouge, Oockrill’s alleged employer and in the scope of whose employment, it is also alleged, he was at the time of the accident. Cockrill himself was not cited and he refused to testify under deposition.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $115 for himself and the sum of $2,500 for the use and benefit of his minor daughter, against all defendants, in solido. Appeals were taken by all defendants, and plaintiff has filed an answer thereto asking for an increase in the judgment to the sum of $10,115.

In paragraph 10 of his petition, plaintiff alleges that the Ford coach involved in the accident was owned and operated at the time by “B. M. Cockrill, defendant herein, the agent, servant and employee of the Standard Heating & Supply Co. Inc., defendant herein, and at the time of the accident, the said Cockrill was acting in the scope of his employment with the said Standard Plumbing, Heating & Supply Co., Inc., and was engaged in the furtherance, carrying on and operation of the business of his said employer.” Again, in paragraph 11 of the petition, Cockrill is referred to as the agent, servant, and employee of the Standard Plumbing, Heating & Supply Company, Inc., engaged at the time of the accident in the scope of his employment and in the transaction of his employer’s business. In a supplemental petition, the allegations of paragraph 10 are elaborated on at length. The effect of the answer of the Standard Plumbing, Heating & Supply Company, Inc., to these two paragraphs and to the allegations of the supplemental petition, is a denial of Cockrill’s negligence as therein also alleged, and also a special denial that he was its agent and employee. The lower court held that as the denials had not been made in the alternative, defendant Standard Plumbing, Heating & Supply Company, Inc., had waived the denial of his agency, and that therefore the allegations that he was acting within the scope of his employment had to be taken as admitted. Judgment against the Standard Plumbing, Pleating & Supply Company, Inc., was accordingly rendered without proof of the facts alleged as to Cockrill’s employment and that he was at the time of the accident engaged in the course thereof.

To support the ruling of the trial court on this point, plaintiff relies principally on the case of Wardlaw v. Harvey & Jones (La.App.) 138 So. 892, wherein the court in effect holds that a denial Of negligence and a denial of the agency are inconsistent and should have been pleaded in the alternative. We are also referred to the case of Adams v. Bell Motors, Inc., 9 La. App. 441, 121 So. 345. Both of these cases were decided by the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit.

We do not consider the Adams Case as authority here because there was a reconven-tional demand involved in the answer in that case which appeared not to have been properly pleaded, but which, because of the nature of the special defense set up in the answer itself, the court held in effect constituted an' admission by defendant that the automobile involved in the accident was in its control and' possession, and that the driver thereof was acting within the scope of his authority. '

In the Wardlaw Case also, after denying agency, the defendants, without pleading in the alternative, alleged that the accident was due solely to the negligence of the plaintiffs, and that if it should be found that it was not, that it was then the result of their contributory negligence. In addition thereto, the special plea was made that the plaintiffs had the last clear chance to avoid the accident. If, by its ruling, the court meant that because these were special or affirmative defenses, they should have been pleaded in the alternative, and that is the way we so construe it, we are in accord therewith and do not find that it has application here where the defendant was merely answering categorically the numbered articles of plaintiff’s petition in the order in which they came. In that case, a writ of review was applied for to the *400 Supreme Court which was denied. The remarks of the court in refusing the writ appear to us a bit significant:

“If the Court of Appeal was in error in construing the answer as an admission of agency, ‘says the Court’ the error was harmless since it found that the agency was established by evidence beyond the admission.
“On the facts found by the Court the judgment is correct.”

More recently again, the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit, had the same question before it for consideration in the case of James v. J. S. Williams & Son, Inc. (La. App.) 143 So. 84, 85, reported in Advance Sheet of September 8,1932. In referring to the pleadings, the court states that in one article of the petition, plaintiffs alleged the date of the accident and that Neita James, one of the plaintiffs, was struck down by an automobile owned by defendant and being operated by one of its employees acting within the scope of his employment. This allegation was de-. riied in defendant’s answer for want of information. In another article of the petition, plaintiffs alleged that the recklessness of the defendant, its driver and employee, was the direct proximate cause of the accident, which allegation the defendant specially denied.

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145 So. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnett-v-cockrill-lactapp-1933.