Burris v. City of New Orleans

86 So. 2d 549
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 1956
Docket20599
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 86 So. 2d 549 (Burris v. City of New Orleans) 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
Burris v. City of New Orleans, 86 So. 2d 549 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

86 So.2d 549 (1956)

Rayford BURRIS, Father, and Eva Burris, Mother,
v.
The CITY OF NEW ORLEANS and The Travelers Insurance Company.

No. 20599.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

April 2, 1956.
Rehearing Denied April 23, 1956.
Writ of Certiorari Denied June 11, 1956.

*550 A. P. Tureaud and A. M. Trudeau, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Henry B. Curtis, City Atty. and Alvin J. Liska, Asst. City and Trial Atty., New Orleans, for City of New Orleans, defendant-appellee.

F. C. Johnson, Jr., Porteous & Johnson, New Orleans, for Delta By-Products, Inc., defendant and appellee.

*551 JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Rayford Burris and Eva Burris are the parents of Rayford Burris, Jr., who, according to the allegations of the original and supplemental petitions, was drowned in a pool of water which was allowed to exist in an area maintained by the City of New Orleans as a garbage dump.

Plaintiffs allege that their four year old son was attracted to the spot, which was easily accessible from his home, by the fact that in the pool there was "an abundant collection of sticks, timbers and small logs, and an uncountable number of seagulls incessantly lining its banks." They charge that the City of New Orleans was negligent "in permitting an unnecessary and unused pond of water to exist in such manner and locality so as to readily attract the playpursuing eyes of a child of little Rayford's age."

In their original petition they pray for judgment against the City of New Orleans and against the Travelers Insurance Company in the sum of $25,000. In their supplemental petitions they allege that the Letellier-Phillips Paper Company is the vendee of the salvage privilege which was purchased from the City, and that, under that salvage contract, that company was sold the right "to salvage the aforementioned Agriculture Street Dump," and they further allege that that company assigned its said salvage rights to Delta By-Products Incorporated, and they pray for solidary judgment in the sum of $25,000 against the City of New Orleans, Letellier-Phillips Paper Company and Delta By-Products Incorporated.

All of the defendants filed exceptions of no cause of action. These exceptions were maintained and there were judgments dismissing the suits as against all defendants. Plaintiffs appealed from the judgments which dismissed the suits as against the City of New Orleans and as against the Delta By-Products Incorporated. There was no appeal from the judgment dismissing the suit as against Letellier-Phillips Paper Company.

When the exception filed by Delta By-Products Incorporated was heard in the District Court, by joint agreement, there was offered in evidence a copy of the contract by which the City of New Orleans sold the salvage rights to Letellier-Phillips Paper Company.

There is not in any of the petitions any allegation, nor is there in the said salvage contract one word which would indicate that Letellier-Phillips Paper Company or its assignee, Delta By-Products Incorporated, had or could have had any responsibility whatsoever for the condition of the said dump. According to the petition all that was granted in the said contract was the right to salvage "materials." There is no charge that Delta By-Products Incorporated did or could have done anything which had the slightest causal connection with the unfortunate drowning of the son of plaintiffs. The exceptions filed by that company were properly maintained.

The exceptions filed by the City of New Orleans are based on the well established principle that a municipality cannot be held liable ex delicto for damages resulting from the exercise by it of a governmental function. The principal upon which the City relies is stated in Manguno v. City of New Orleans, La.App., 155 So. 41. There, stating that the question presented was "* * * whether or not the operation of the garbage incinerator plants and their auxiliaries by the city is a governmental or a proprietary function, * * *", we held that the collection and disposal of garbage by the City of New Orleans is a governmental function.

The latest expression of our Supreme Court on non-liability of a municipality for damages sustained as a result of the exercise by it of a governmental function may be found in Barber Laboratories, Inc., v. City of New Orleans, 227 La. 104, 78 So.2d 525.

Counsel for plaintiffs do not seriously contend that ordinarily, where there is no charge made for the operation of a garbage department, that operation is a governmental *552 and not a proprietary function of the City government and that consequently there is usually no liability in the City for the results of negligence in the operation of such a department. But counsel say that that principle, which may ordinarily be applied where the City is engaged in the carrying out of a governmental function, has no application here for either or both of two reasons: First, they say that under certain statutes the City of New Orleans no longer has the right to operate a garbage dump, and that therefore it cannot be permitted to contend that in the operation of such a dump, which plaintiffs say is not permitted by law, the City is engaged in carrying out a governmental function; and second, they say that even if there is governmental immunity where a municipality is engaged in the exercise of a governmental function, that immunity is lost where the function is carried out in such a way as to create a nuisance and the nuisance itself causes damage. And counsel say that here a nuisance was created and hence the governmental immunity no longer existed.

The first of these contentions, that our state laws no longer permit the City of New Orleans to operate a garbage dump, is founded on the idea that, because of the provisions of LSA-R.S. 33:4168, such dumps are now prohibited within corporate limits. The first paragraph of that section reads as follows:

"A municipality of over three hundred thousand population which has established garbage plants or incinerators under the provisions of this Subpart shall not maintain or allow within its corporate limits any garbage or refuse disposal dumps or maintain or allow any burning dumps or dump heaps."

However, that section does not stand alone. It is to be found in Sec. 4161 et seq., in Sub-Part A of Part I of the cited LSA-Revised Statute which covers the "Ownership, Operation, and Financing" of Public Utilities. It is our opinion, and it was the opinion of the District Judge, that the prohibition against garbage dumps has application only where a municipality either has issued bonds for the construction of a garbage plant or incinerator, or makes a charge which is devoted to the establishment and operation of such a garbage department, that a municipality is then not permitted to operate a garbage dump which would be in competition with the incinerator or with the operation of the department for which a charge is made or for the establishment of which bonds were issued.

The other sections of this title of the Revised Statutes seem to us to contemplate this result. This is pointed out by the District Judge in his reasons:

"The Revised Statutes only prohibit the operation of open garbage dumps or fills when they are in competition with similar facilities for which the City makes a charge when such facilities have been financed by bonds to be serviced and funded from taxes imposed against owners of real estate."

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Bluebook (online)
86 So. 2d 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burris-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1956.