Daley v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co.

62 So. 903, 133 La. 270, 1913 La. LEXIS 2036
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 26, 1913
DocketNo. 19,341
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 So. 903 (Daley v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daley v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co., 62 So. 903, 133 La. 270, 1913 La. LEXIS 2036 (La. 1913).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

Plaintiff’s son was run over and killed by one of the electric cars of the defendant company, and plaintiff sues in damages. One of the defenses is that plaintiff made a compromise by which she agreed to accept $500 in full settlement. Plaintiff does not deny that she agreed to this compromise, but contends that it is not binding upon her for the reason that she was so grief stricken and unnerved at the time she entered into it that she did not know what she was doing. The evidence shows conclusively that plaintiff knew perfectly well what she was doing, and that the compromise was her deliberate act. The facts are as follows:

Plaintiff is a widow and had been a widow for about 11 years at the time this compromise was made. 1-Iow old she was, the record does not show. She has six children, the youngest of whom is 16. Her son was 31, and unmarried. She and her son lived with one of her married daughters in New Orleans. She had been living here 1% years, and he “a couple of months or so.” He was very regular in his habits. On a 'Saturday night he failed to come home, which made plaintiff very uneasy. The next morning, at about 9 o’clock a policeman came to plaintiff’s daughter’s house and inquired of her if “Jim Daley lived there,” and, on plaintiff’s answering, “Yes,” said, “Well, he is dead,” and added that his body was at the Charity Hospital. Plaintiff went at once to the hospital and there saw the body.

“He was already shrouded, and so I could just see his face. I mean, he was laid out, 5ou know.”

She returned at once to her house. She says that an undertaker, McLoughlin, was there already and said to her that the remains were in his parlor and that Mr. McMahon (another undertaker) and nobody else could get them, and insisted upon her going with him to call upon the claims agent of the defendant company. That she went, but that it was not with any idea of making a compromise, but simply to see about her son’s having a decent funeral; it appearing to her but right that after having killed him the defendant company should bury him. That she did not even know the circumstances of the accident at that time. That the claims agent asked her who she was, and what she was, and where she came from, and, after having received her answers to these questions, got up and went out, and kept her waiting for about two hours until she was nearly worn out, and then came back, and went off again, and then came to her and made an offer of $250, plus the expenses of the funeral. That she was surprised because she was not looking for a settlement.

“Didn’t you say that $250 was not enough? A. I said to him: ‘Well, why not make it $500?’ He said, ‘No, I can’t do it, but if I do you will have to bury him.’ I said, ‘No, you make it $500 with the funeral.’ But he wouldn’t do it at all. So they all got around me and insisted upon it, and they even come to the chair that I was sitting in at the time; I wasn’t even able to sign no papers, and I didn’t know anything at all about it because I was in that state of mind. * * * They worried me nearly to death, and there was nothing else for me to do. Q. Just state to the jury how you came to sign that paper, Mrs. Daley? A. Well, the undertaker seemed to think that I ought to sign the paper; that I had to sign it; that it was something similar that was needed to have my son buried, you understand. Of course, I didn’t have any money of my own at the time, or I certainly wouldn’t have signed anything like this. I would have signed for one dollar if it would have buried my son because that is what I wanted to do, to give him a decent burial. My son was the only one that I thought of, and burying him properly. * * * I had to sign something to have my boy buried. I didn’t know at the time what I was doing; I didn’t care very much, just so I had him buried. * * * The claim agent told me I had to sign or do something to have my son buried. Q. You did affix your mark to the paper, didn’t you? A. [273]*273Yes, sir; and I could hardly do that. Q. What is that? A. I say, I could hardly do that, because I wanted my son buried, and I had just come from seeing my son, the way he was killed by the railroad company; and what I did, I did it simply so I could bury him. That was all that was in my mind. In fact, they almost told me as much that unless I did that, he wouldn’t be buried; that is the very reason why I did it.”

A friend of plaintiff’s, then the suitor, and later the husband, of her daughter, and the brother of this friend, seem to have followed plaintiff to the office of the claims agent, for they were present when the compromise was made and signed as witnesses to the instrument of compromise. They were not called to testify. The claims agent and the undertaker, and another witness who was present, testified that, while plaintiff was naturally grief stricken and cried at times, she was not so affected as not to be in a mental condition to know and appreciate what she was doing, and that absolutely no pressure or influence of any kind was exercised upon her. And, indeed, plaintiff’s own testimony, as above transcribed, shows that she understood perfectly well what she was doing and was in a mental condition to take care of her interest, since she bargained for a larger amount, and stood out a long time, and yielded in the end only because the claims agent would positively not allow more and she was very anxious to procure for her son a suitable burial.

The testimony of these other witnesses shows that the claims agent had not yet been furnished with the circumstances of the accident when plaintiff came to him, and that he so stated to her, but added that it was the rule of the defendant company to pay $250 in all cases of fatal accident, and that he would offer her that much in full settlement and that plaintiff wanted $500, plus the expenses of the funeral, and would at first accept no less, and that the agent after consulting the president of the company over the telephone. (which took some time) consented to give $500, and that plaintiff concluded to accept that amount, and that one of the blank forms for evidencing such compromises was filled out and signed; plaintiff not signing her name, but making her mark, for the reason that she did not have her spectacles and could not see, and moreover was nervous.

The undertaker testified that he lived two doors from plaintiff, and that, hearing of the death of the young man, he went over to her home to solicit the business of his funeral ; that plaintiff said she did not know what she was going to do as she was a poor woman and did not have any money; and that he then suggested to her to see the railroad people about it and offered to take her there; and that she accepted.

The document of compromise is an acknowledgment on the part of the plaintiff of having received $319 from the defendant company—

“in full compromise, payment, satisfaction, and discharge for ail claims and demand which I have against said companies, their employes or agents, for or on account of any damages, injury, expenses, or loss of whatever kind which have been sustained by me * * * by reason of the fatal accident to my son James W. Daley who was injured by cars Nos. 290 Carondelet line and 349 Henry Clay Ave. line on April 16, 1910, at about 9:15 p. m., corner Girod and Carondelet streets, and died at Charity Hospital about 4 o’clock a. m. April 17, 1910, or for any matter or thing growing out of same.”

On the back of the document is an agreement on the part of the defendant company to pay funeral expenses of the decedent, to the amount of $181, to J. G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 So. 903, 133 La. 270, 1913 La. LEXIS 2036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daley-v-new-orleans-ry-light-co-la-1913.