Dickerson v. Dickerson

2 So. 2d 643, 197 La. 907, 1941 La. LEXIS 1093
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 28, 1941
DocketNo. 35960.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 So. 2d 643 (Dickerson v. Dickerson) 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
Dickerson v. Dickerson, 2 So. 2d 643, 197 La. 907, 1941 La. LEXIS 1093 (La. 1941).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Plaintiff and defendant are brothers. The suit is one for the recovery of damages for alleged slander, for the cancellation of a “scrubber oil contract,” and for intercepting a letter with a check and requiring plaintiff to sign a bill of sale in order to obtain the check.

Defendant in his answer denied plaintiff’s allegation of slander, averred that the scrubber oil contract was subj ect to cancellation by either party, on ten days’ written notice, averred that the check was contained in an envelope addressed to an oil company and represented the purchase of oil under the scrubber oil contract, and that plaintiff voluntarily signed the bill of sale in consideration of his indebtedness to the oil company.

The case was tried on the merits and resulted in. a judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demand. Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.

Plaintiff alleges that on fourteen different occasions and in the presence of various persons, during the summer of 1938, defendant slandered him by accusing him of stealing cattle from the H-D Ranch, situated in the Parish of Winn, and belonging to defendant. According to plaintiff’s petition, the first accusation was made on June 12, 1938, in defendant’s office in Shreveport, Louisiana, in the presence of Robert P. Hunter, an attorney. Mr. Hunter denied that any such accusation had been made in his presence.

Plaintiff alleges that on the 20th of June, 1938, defendant told M. M. Dickerson, their father, at defendant’s residence in Caddo Parish, that defendant was going to put plaintiff in the penitentiary for stealing cattle off his ranch and was going to give Emma Beal, another employee of defendant, a $10,000 check to testify that plaintiff had stolen cattle from the defendant, and that defendant also told M. M. Dickerson to get plaintiff to plead guilty to stealing cattle, for the purpose of showing a loss in defendant’s income tax and cancel-ling oil-drilling contracts with the plaintiff.

As shown by the record, M. M. Dickerson was 78 years of age at the time he testified. From 1924 to 1925, defendant had contributed to his support, and during the first of the year of 1938, he was living at defendant’s home. He testified that on or about June 20, 1938, he was sitting in the yard of defendant’s home and' that the defendant came out of the house with a *911 glass of liquor in his hand and said, “Dad, I got that sorry son of yours and I am going to send him to the penitentiary” for stealing cattle; that defendant also stated that he was “going to throw a ten thousand dollar check down in front” of a man named Beal to testify that plaintiff had stolen his cattle; that defendant requested him to get plaintiff to plead guilty to stealing cattle, and that “he can go to the penitentiary and stay a year or two, two or three years, and maybe I can get him out.” When asked if defendant gave any other reason for his desire to send plaintiff to the penitentiary, the witness answered, “no,” except that “he (plaintiff) wasn’t any good; no account.” In response to questions propounded by plaintiff’s counsel, the witness testified that about the third or fourth of June, he was in the garden of defendant “getting some Irish potatoes,” and defendant came out to him and said, “I got him; got that sorry son of yours, and I am going to send him to the penitentiary” for stealing cattle. These dates and the alleged conversation of plaintiff’s witness and the defendant are not set forth in the petition. f

The witness further testified that on June 13, 1938, he went to the ranch in Winn Parish to promote public relations and that plaintiff had been made manager of the ranch operations at that time. It is inconceivable that on June 3 or 4, 1938, defendant made the statement attributed to him by his father and ten days later appointed plaintiff as manager of his ranch. If the witness erred with respect to this alleged conversation, it is fair to assume that he erred with respect to the other conversation which he claimed took place on June 20, 1938. The testimony of the witness was not corroborated and defendant denied all the statements attributed to him. The trial judge was not impressed by the testimony of this witness, nor are we.

Plaintiff alleges that about June 20, 1938, in the presence of Melvin Crawford, defendant accused him of stealing cattle. Crawford testified that during the year 1938, he had only one conversation with the defendant at defendant’s office; that he could not fix the exact time and did not remember just what was said, except that he knew nothing was said to him about plaintiff stealing defendant’s cattle. Defendant denied that he made any such statement to Crawford.

Plaintiff alleges that during the month of July, 1938, defendant accused him, in the presence of various persons, at various times, of stealing his cattle. They were E. L. Kelley, Ben Lemoine, Desoto Howell, H. L. Dickerson, Elige Franks and Jim Franks, James I. Smith, F. L. Dickerson, W. A. Lester, and Elmer Jones.

Kelley, who was employed as ranch foreman, was discharged by defendant in the latter part of September, 1938. He testified that in a conversation with him, defendant stated plaintiff had been stealing his cattle. However, his testimony is vague and uncertain and is not corroborated by any other witness. Defendant denied that he made the statement to Kelley. Lemoine denied that the defendant, in his presence, had accused plaintiff of stealing cattle. Desoto Howell was also employed by defend *913 ant and discharged by him. He testified by deposition that on one occasion, in his presence, defendant accused plaintiff of stealing his cattle and that Robert P. Hunter was present. Both Hunter and the defendant denied that defendant had made any such statement.

H. L. Dickerson testified by • deposition and also on the trial of the case. He testified that one night he was at defendant’s house, but did not remember the date, and that defendant told him plaintiff was ruining him by stealing his cattle and that he was going to send plaintiff to the penitentiary. The witness stated that Robert P. Hunter was at the ranch, but was not in the room at the time of the alleged statement. The witness testified that he had not informed plaintiff of the statement and that he did not know how plaintiff found out about the accusation. The testimony of this witness is inconsistent in several important respects. Hunter testified that on July 8, 1938, he went to Winnfield with defendant to attend a banquet given in his honor by the rotary club of that town, and that H: L. Dickerson came to the ranch house on the next morning; that the witness was with defendant all the time at the ranch except during his visit to Desoto Howell; and that to his knowledge defendant did not have any private conversation with H. L. Dickerson. The latter said that the accusation was made at the time Hunter was at the ranch and Hunter’s testimony shows that the conversation mentioned by the witness did not and could not have taken place. Defendant testified that he saw Dickerson the day following the banquet, but denied having any private conversation with him and expressly denied that at that or any other time he had accused plaintiff of stealing his cattle. Plaintiff alleged that defendant, both at the ranch house and at the fishing camp near the ranch, told Elige Franks and Jim Franks that plaintiff had stolen $30,000 worth of cattle from him.

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Bluebook (online)
2 So. 2d 643, 197 La. 907, 1941 La. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerson-v-dickerson-la-1941.