Dufrene v. Rodrigue

38 So. 2d 511, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 393
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1949
DocketNo. 3071.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 511 (Dufrene v. Rodrigue) 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
Dufrene v. Rodrigue, 38 So. 2d 511, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 393 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Plaintiff has filed this suit against Dr. Charles J. Barker, as Sheriff, and who was sheriff at the date the cause of action is alleged to have arisen; and against Emile Rodrigue and Emile Toups, who were deputy sheriffs under Dr. Barker on that date, and has also joined the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, the Sheriff's official insurer.

Plaintiff alleged that on the night of September 16th, 1947, about 9:30 P.M., he passed the home of Mrs. Edgar Toups in Lockport, Louisiana; that he noticed a man in the rear of the Toups' yard and he entered the side gate of the Toups' property to ascertain who was lurking in this rear side yard, and that when he had entered the yard a distance of about six feet, defendants Rodrigue and Toups rushed from behind a tree in the yard and grabbed plaintiff and advised him that he was being arrested as a "peeping tom." Plaintiff alleged that he protested the arrest and denied the charge, whereupon both Rodrigue and Toups began to beat him about the head and body with a black jack and *Page 512 lead pipe; that they struck him about fifteen times and, as a result of the blows, plaintiff's left eye ball was crushed and ruptured and he received numerous contusions about the head and had three false teeth knocked out. He alleged that he was then placed in an automobile, owned and driven by Junior Toups, and driven to Thibodeaux, Louisiana, parish seat of Lafourche Parish, by the two deputies in order that he might be placed in jail; that on the trip to Thibodeaux he lost much blood and was in great pain and fear, and requested medical attention which was refused with threats by the said deputies, Toups and Rodrigue; that the deputies were in the act of placing plaintiff in jail when Edward J. Bourgeois, Chief Deputy Sheriff, saw plaintiff's bloody condition and took plaintiff from the custody of Toups and Rodrigue and took him to St. Joseph's Hospital in Thibodeaux, Louisiana, where he was immediately hospitalized and, on doctor's orders, was transferred by ambulance next day to Charity Hospital in New Orleans, where his left eye was removed and in which hospital he remained sixteen days recovering from the injuries received from Deputy Sheriffs Toups and Rodrigue. He further alleged that he was at all times submissive to arrest and that blows were unnecessarily inflicted on plaintiff by the deputies, who were acting in their official capacity in making and maintaining the arrest; that the deputy sheriffs had been advised that on the night previous to the arrest someone had been prowling in the yard of Mrs. Edgar Toups, mother of the Deputy Sheriff Emile Toups, and the two deputies had concealed themselves in the yard prior to the time plaintiff entered for the purpose of apprehending any trespasser; that the deputies had been authorized by the Sheriff, Charles J. Barker, to so conceal themselves and make any arrest of any outsider entering the yard.

Plaintiff prayed for damages in the amount of $15,224.50 which was the amount itemized by him as due for the loss of his eye and teeth, pain and suffering and other injuries received by him, together with expenses incurred on account of same.

A joint answer was filed by all the defendants in which they admitted that Rodrigue and Toups were Deputy Sheriffs of Lafourche Parish at the time of the arrest; that they concealed themselves in the yard to make any needed arrest with the approval of Sheriff Barker, and that all their acts were in connection with the arrest while in their official capacity as Deputy Sheriffs. They further answered that plaintiff came on the premises of Mrs. Edgar Toups illegally and started toward a lighted window in the house, whereupon the two deputy sheriff's arose and shouted at plaintiff to "Stop — you are under arrest;" that when said defendant Emile Toups was within arm's length of plaintiff to place him under arrest, plaintiff "ferociously and madmanlike resisted arrest; plaintiff, without just cause or provocation, and without uttering a single word, then and there began to swing both of his arms and hands at this said defendant; struck this said defendant a number of times with his hands and closed fists and with all of the brutal physical force at his command; scratched said defendant on his left arm and thereby caused it to bleed; plaintiff then and there proceeded to also physically fight off in every physical fashion at his command all efforts of this said defendant to subdue him, plaintiff, in said defendant's attempt to place him, plaintiff, under arrest, during all of which time your said defendant was attempting to hold plaintiff so that your other defendant, Emile Rodrigue, might place hand-cuffs upon plaintiff, and when plaintiff was so resisting, as aforesaid, the efforts of the said Emile Toups to so place him under arrest, and while plaintiff was striking your said defendant, Emile Toups, and scratching him as aforesaid, and while so refusing to submit to arrest, in an effort to subdue plaintiff to there place him under arrest, and in an effort to defend himself against, and to repel the said illegal and unprovoked assaults and batteries being then and there committed upon defendant, Emile Toups, by plaintiff, as aforesaid, defendant, Emile Toups, did, for such purposes, strike plaintiff twice about his body but not on his head or face, with a rubber billy which did not and could not commit the injuries complained of by plaintiff, the said Emile Toups at all times using no more force than was necessary to effect *Page 513 such purposes; that said rubber billy was of standard regulation and make, such as is used by law enforcement officers everywhere, and used and effective only for the purpose of stunning any law violator resisting arrest and for the purpose of merely subduing any law violator who might physically resist actual arrest, as plaintiff was then and there doing; that said two blows neither injured nor stunned plaintiff;"

"That all the while your defendant, Emile Toups was attempting to subject plaintiff to arrest and to defend himself against plaintiff's assaults, as aforesaid, your other defendant, Emile Rodrigue, was attempting to place hand-cuffs on plaintiff; that, while this said defendant, Emile Rodrigue, was attempting to so place hand-cuffs on plaintiff for the purpose of terminating his said resistance to arrest and to physically bring about his arrest, he, plaintiff, also struck defendant, Emile Rodrigue, about the body and face, including a blow in his mouth which cut the said Emile Rodrigue's lips and mouth, causing his said mouth to bleed as a result of such blow;"

Defendants allege that plaintiff received his injuries when he, "fell to the ground on such rear gate chain to which was attached the said cement block weight, plaintiff falling to the ground face downward on said chain and cement block, * * *" and that: "such injuries were suffered by plaintiff when he fell to the ground at the rear gate of the said residence premises of the said Mrs. Edgar Toups in the manner herein above recited, where his face struck the rear gate chain and cement block while resisting arrest, all as aforesaid, causing to himself, plaintiff, the injuries about which he here complains, as a result of striking his face on said chain and cement block weight."

Defendants further aver that at no time did they or either of them use upon plaintiff any more force than was reasonably and absolutely necessary to bring about his arrest and to defend themselves against plaintiff's assaults and batteries.

The case was duly tried and the District Court for the oral reasons dictated, which are in the record, rendered judgment in favor of the defendants dismissing plaintiff's suit at his costs. From this adverse judgment, the plaintiff has appealed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCormick v. Edwards
479 F. Supp. 295 (M.D. Louisiana, 1979)
Gates v. Hanover Insurance Company
218 So. 2d 648 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
Polizzi v. Trist
154 So. 2d 84 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Theriot v. Gianelloni
121 So. 2d 275 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)
Jackson v. Steen
92 So. 2d 280 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1957)
Robertson v. Palmer
55 So. 2d 68 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 511, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dufrene-v-rodrigue-lactapp-1949.