Dolhonde v. Lemoine

32 La. Ann. 251
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1880
DocketNo. 6326
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 La. Ann. 251 (Dolhonde v. Lemoine) 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
Dolhonde v. Lemoine, 32 La. Ann. 251 (La. 1880).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Manning, C. J.

Delphine Delhonde alleges that her husband, Eugene Lemoine, is an absentee, of whom she has been appointed cufatrix, and in that capacity sues for one fifth, of certain real estate in this city, said to be worth fifty thousand dollars, and for over two thousand dollars of' its rents. Her petition, alleging that her husband had been an absentee since 1860, was filed in court in. May 1872, and she was appointed his curatrix in the following month.

A suit for the recovery of the same property included in this suit was instituted in February 1873, and the plaintiff was nonsuited. This-action was commenced in November 1874.

. Eugene Lemoine, a native of ■ Prance, came here in 1836 when he was eighteen or twenty years old, and married the plaintiff in 1850. There was no issue of the marriage. He became insane in 1859, and was confined in the city insane asylum. After a few da,ys detention there, he was removed under order of court to the State Insane Asylum at Jackson on the application of the city attorney, supported -by the certificate of the city physician that he was affected with démence. The petition for his removal states his age to be about forty years. The judgment or order thereupon bears date May 31,1859.

On the 15th of the previous January, an order of the same kind had been made touching one Charles Bermel, alleged tobe affected with intermittent mania, and supposed to be about forty-five years old.

The superintendent of the city asylum certifies that Eugene Le-moine, a Frenchman, aged about forty-five years, was sent to the State insane asylum on June 8,1859. Lemoine’s former partner in business took him down to the steamboat at the wharf in this city en.route for that asylum in that month, and last saw him on the boat.

The records of the Jackson Asylum have the following entries :

No. 772. Ghas. Bermel, nativity France, address N. Orleans, date of admission January 30,1859.

No. 828. Eugene Lemoine alias Leopold Burmel, admitted June 9,, 1859. Discharged recovered, March 9, 1860.

In the discharge-book for 1859 also is this entry; — 828. aged 40 years, Eugene Lemoine, nativity Germany.

Lemoine’s former business partner communicated with the officers of the asylum after Lemoine’s arrival there, and sent money at differ[255]*255ent times ior his use. He was informed by them that Lemoine was getting on very well. He went up to the asylum to see him in 1859— he thinks it was the same year Lemoine was sent there — and he could nowhere be found. His description of his visit shall be given in his own words; — “'We'went around the whole place and hunted for him. We went from hill to hill, and the party who was in charge would ask me, whenever we would meet any of the inmates, if that was the man, and I would say no. After hunting as much as .we could and not finding him, I went to the office and looked into the book, and there I found his name as having been received. There was no farther record to be found. Then the superintendent said he might be hid in some corner, and if I would wait until dinner-time when the bell would be rung he had no doubt the man would come up. I waited until the bell rung, and we stood at the door, and every man that passed in I was asked if he was the man. I examined each one and he was not amongst them. After they were seated at the table I examined each man while seated, and he was not there.”

The management of the asylum at that time must have been of deplorable inefficiency. The superintendent was ignorant of the names of its inmates, and the negligent manner in which the records were kept shews the most culpable carelessness. Copious extracts from those records are in the transcript, introduced to shew a mass of blunders, and inaccuracies, and thus throw doubt upon the entries relative to-Lemoine and Bermel, and give colour to a theory that -these were one' and the same person.

The argument that the entry of the discharge of Eugene Lemoine alias Leopold Burmel as recovered, must be false as to Lemoine, because he was said by the physician to have that form of insanity called dementia, and dementia is incurable, loses force when we remember that the certificate of the physician was given only a few days after his attack, and quite too soon for any reliable opinion to be formed by any person of the precise kind of insanity into which it would develope.

Lemoine has never been seen or heard of since, save once in the autumn of 1863, and then only by one person, and that person his brother-in-law, Thiroux. The case hinges upon that event. Thiroux was at Mr. Gayarró’s house, five miles from Tangipahoa, at that time. Shortly after mid-day Thiroux was about entering the house, when he saw Lemoine walking back and forth between the house and kitchen, probably expecting, he says, to be called to dinner. He was walking with measured steps, his eyes fixed on his hands in which something not discernible was held. Thiroux had to enter a door, and when about entering, the eyes of the two men met while they were not more than four feet apart. Neither spoke. These two men were on friendly terms and [256]*256were allied by marriage. Thiroux saw the husband oí his wife’s sister the last time in 1859 at his house in this city when his insanity began. He knew that he had been sent to the Jackson Asylum, and had not returned to this city, and yet when he met him not a word was ex-■ehanged. “ In passing in front of him when our eyes met, he turned his back on me, whether intentionally or not, I can’t say. I then said to myself, if you are too proud to recognise me, I am too proud to recognise you.” Thiroux did not ask any one at the house if they knew Lemoine or had seen him — did not speak of him to anybody. “He wanted to preserve his Incognito and I did the same,” is the reason he gives for this strange conduct.

Pierre Dolhonde, a brother of the plaintiff, had a house at Tangi-pahoa in 1863, and says Thiroux staid with him then, and recollects Thiroux’ mentioning his having seen Lemoine, but this witness made no inquiry about him, notwithstanding he was the husband of his own sister.

The defendants’ counsel argues that Thiroux’ conduct indicates extraordinary callousness, or a morbid proneness to take offence at a matter which no man of ordinary judgment or intelligence would construe into a slight. That is true, and Dolhonde’s conduct is not less ■strange, for he must have presumed that his sister, the wife of this unfortunate individual, would have welcomed the tidings of her husband’s restoration to health and liberty. Pour years had passed since either of these men had seen the husband of one of their nearest relatives. Humanity alone would have suggested that both of them should look after one, whose condition when they last saw him should have attracted their sympathy, and who was in those times of war evidently roaming about purposeless. Their conduct is incomprehensible, but no attempt has been made to shew that either of them is not to be believed. 'The story that each one tells borders on the incredible, but -the only reason furnished us to disbelieve them is the unnaturalness of their conduct. But we all know there is no limit to the eccentricities of men.

The property in question came from Olivier Blineau, who died in this city August 17,1863, and bequeathed it to the children of his sister, of whom Eugene Lemoine was one. Hence the effort to shew that he was alive at that time.

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Related

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88 So. 791 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
32 La. Ann. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolhonde-v-lemoine-la-1880.