Delisle v. Bourriague

105 La. 77
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
DocketNo. 13,484
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 105 La. 77 (Delisle v. Bourriague) 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
Delisle v. Bourriague, 105 La. 77 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J".

Defendant asks for a review of the judgment and for its reversal.

The suit was brought by the plaintiff in the district court in his own name and on behalf of his minor children for damages arising from the death of his wife and the mother of his children, who died from the effects of injury inflicted by defendant’s dogs. Plaintiff averred in his petition in the district court that his wife was requested by the defendant, who was their next-door, neighbor, to come into her back yard and cut some wood; that the petitioner’s wife being indebted to defendant and wishing to be obliging, after receiving defendant’s assurance that she would be protected against the dogs, entered the yard and while chopping defendant’s wood in the presence of defendant she was attacked by her dogs, was maimed and torn almost to pieces, causing wounds of which she died a short time after the attack.

- Defendant filed an exception setting forth that plaintiff’s petition disclosed no right or cause of action; that the children of plaintiff are not named therein; and that it contains no prayer for relief in so far as the minors are concerned.

This exception was heard in the district court and maintained, but [79]*79the court reserved to plaintiff the right to amend his petition. Some time afterward, plaintiff filed a supplement and amendment in the district court, in accordance with the right reserved to him when defendant’s exception was sustained. To the supplement and amendment plaintiff filed another exception reiterating that plaintiff had no right or cause of action and that thereby plaintiff was substituting another plaintiff entirely, and raising issues not raised in the original petition and which were not consistent with the first demand. This exception was referred to the merits and just prior to deciding on the merits it was overruled. The defendant filed the plea of general denial in answer to plaintiff’s demand.

The judge of the district court pronounced judgment for plaintiff in 'the sum of two thousand dollars. On appeal before the Court of Appeal, the judgment of the district court was affirmed. Here the defendant reiterates that the plaintiff has no right or cause of action and sets up that the original petition filed was the individual petition of Albert Helisle, stating that the death of his wife, the result of the bite of dogs, was caused by the defendant’s fault; that he lost the companionship and assistance of his wife; that he has to pay large medical bills and funeral expenses, and that he has lost considerable time m attending to his injured wife’s wounds prior to her death. In our view, plaintiff did not, by the amendment, substitute another plaintiff. His children were originally parties to the suit, as their father alleged that it was brought in behalf of his minor children. He was not their tutor at the time, none the less he sought to make them parties by alleging as before stated. After he had qualified as tutor he not improperly was permitted to avail himself of the right which had been reserved to him as tutor to become the party plaintiff. Whatever right these minors had, they were entitled to them at the time suit was brought. As they were not properly before the court, allegations setting forth their claim were admissible by way of amendment and supplement. They were not parties' strangers to the suit, but parties in whose behalf plaintiff had sought to set up a claim and failed to some extent because of his omission to set forth the names of these minors. He was also permitted by way of amendment to aver more fully his cause of action whether individually or for his minor children, and more specifically the items’ of damages sustained, and in the case of his failure thus to allege, his suit was ordered to be dismissed.

These exceptions did not tend to defeat the action. They only re[80]*80tarded its progress. In cases on appeal, this court will consider that granting permission to amend is less likely to do an injustice than its refusal. This court has also held' that amendment should be allowed when it prevents a multiplicity of suits.

The amendment was granted contradictorily with the defendant. The court ordered the defendant to be cited, and we judge that the suit was placed at issue after legal service had been made. The deficiency in the allegations of the cause of action not sufficiently set forth may be supplied when the amendment and supplement is permitted contradictorily with all parties concerned.

As relates to the two: an absolute dismissal or permitting one to amend contradictorily with those he sues, the difference is inconsiderable and can well be considered on an application to review proceedings as coming within the rule de minimis non curat lex.

This brings us to defendant’s ground of defense, that the minors have no cause of action. Originally the article of the Civil Code relating to damages growing out of offences or gmsi-offences was quite restricted in its scope in so far as related to the heirs of the one injured. Interpreting this article (2313 as originally written) the court held that the right of action was not heritable. In course of time, this article was amended in order to prevent the right from perishing in case of the death of the one originally injured. By the first amendment, the right was inherited, in case of death, by the minor children and widow of the deceased, and if there were no minor children or widow, then by the surviving mother and father. This amendment was interpreted by a decision of this court as not embracing within its terms the husband, but instead the father and mother. Walton vs. Booth, 34 Ann. 914. This decision had been handed down a comparatively short time when Statute 71 of 1884 was enacted, by which the right was made to survive by the use of the following language. The survivors above mentioned may also recover the damages “sustained by them by the death of the parent or child or husband or wife as the case may be.”

In Chivers vs. Rogers, 50 Ann. 57, this court decided that the right of action for the recovery of damages to an injured person who dies subsequent to receiving the injuries survives only in favor of the beneficiaries designated in the statute of 1884. Here, the minors who sue are expressly designated (they are the children of a mother deceased who suffered personal injuries), and it is not for us to determine that [81]*81they shall not recover in the face of the plain provision of the statute designating them.

Defendant’s insistence is that where the injuries are suffered by a married woman, inasmuch as the right of action in her lifetime is the asset of the community, not the personal property of the injured spouse, this community right of action is extinguished by the death of the injured wife. We do not take it that this is the inference to be drawn from the language of the statute, which expressly, provides that this right shall pass to the heirs. The language of the statute is imperative; the damage, in case of the death of the parent injured, shall pass to her minor children, and if she left no minor children, then in favor of her surviving father and mother.

We understand that, in order to avoid the extinguishment of the right, a right of action is given to the heir as just stated. Although without legislation, the wife has no personal claim, separate from the community, by legislation the right of action for her personal injury may be made to survive in the name of the forced heirs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 La. 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delisle-v-bourriague-la-1901.