Esnault v. Richard

53 So. 2d 494, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 808
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1951
DocketNo. 3410
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 So. 2d 494 (Esnault v. Richard) 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
Esnault v. Richard, 53 So. 2d 494, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 808 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

On July 21, 1949, Oliver Esnault, Jr., a colored man, was shot and killed by the defendant, Oscar J. Richard, and his wife filed this suit for damages alleging that the defendant wrongfully, unlawfully, wil-fully and wantonly killed her said husband; that the said killing was without provocation or justification, and that petitioner’s said husband was in no way at fault.

The defense to the suit is set up in defendant’s answer as follows:

“7. On several occasions during a period of approximately six or seven months prior to July 21, 1949, said Oliver Esnault, Jr., had threatened to kill respondent.
“8. ' During the early part of , the year 1939, on one occasion while respondent was leaving his place of business he was physi- ■ cally attacked by Oliver Esnault, Jr., and another, and respondent was compelled to defend himself with a walking stick or cane which he was then carrying because of an" injury he had sustained when he was kicked by a horse, and he. was compelled on that occasion to call for help and it was. only when help arrived that Oliver Esnault, Jr. and the other individual who had-attacked respondent, fled.
“9. The night said Oliver Esnault, Jr., and another attacked respondent as above alleged, when they fled the said Oliver Esnault, Jr., called out that he would be back.
“10. Approximately two weeks before July 21, 1949, Oliver Esnault, Jr." sent word to respondent that he, said Esnault, was going to kill respondent if it was the last thing he did.
“11. Shortly before the shooting the night of approximately July 21,1949, Oliver Esnault, Jr. called out and shouted on more than one occasion that he was going to kill respondent before daylight the next morning, and on one or more occasions pointed to respondent and said, in substance, that he was going to kill respondent before day, and at the same time said Oliver Esnault, Jr. used very obscene and filthy language in referring to respondent, using words so vulgar that respondent prefers not to mention them in this pleading.
“12. Fearing for -his life,- in view of the many threats made by Oliver Esnault, Jr., and in view of the fact that the said Esnault had previously attacked' him, and had sent word that he was' going to kill him, respondent in self-defense shot Oliver Es-nault, Jr.
“13. The said Oliver Esnault, Jr. charged out of the door'of a'nearby place of business, advancing in’ an aggressive manner on respondent, with his right hand behind him and in such a position that respondent feared and believed that Oliver Esnault, Jr. was reaching for a gun or pistol or some type of weapon with which to attempt to kill respondent, and because ■he was then and there in fear of his life or great bodily harm, acting in self-defense, respondent shot Oliver Esnault, Jr.
“14. Respondent therefore alleges that the shooting was justified, and that he acted only because he was.in fear -for his life.
“15. Alternatively, by virtue of the facts above alleged, respondent ¿specially pleads that the shooting was provoked by the said Oliver Esnault, Jr. himself, by insults,, abuse, threats an.d other conduct calculated to arouse resentment and fear on the part of. respondent.
“■16. Respondent alleges that by virtue of the facts above alleged, Oliver Esnault, Jr. could "not have recovered'damages from-defendant had he lived, and therefore his alleged widow, whose rights are no greater than those which Oliver Esnault, Jr. would have had, had he lived cannot recover anything whatsoever from your respondent.”

The case was tried and the District Júdge rendered judgment in favor of the defendant, rejecting the claim of the plaintiff with reasons dictated immediately after the trial in open court as follows-:

“This suit arises from a killing in which the husband of'the plaintiff'was killed by the defendant in the neighborhood of the location of defendant’s place of business.
“The issue presented is, in my opinion, simply a question of fact' arid from all the testimony' of the- witnesses, -I have reached the conclusion that Mr. Richard, who, to the Court’s personal knowledge, is not a belligerent person, did what any reasonable [496]*496man would have done under the same circumstances and only unfortunately killed the deceased after having first been in an altercation with the deceased some two weeks prior to the date of the killing and after a very dangerous threat had been made by the deceased, who, according to some of the witnesses that testified in the case, was a man who, when drunk, gave vent to his violence. It was further shown on the night of the killing the deceased had been drinking. It is also significant that this matter was brought to the attention of the Grand Jury and that body of men saw fit to bring in a No True Bill.
“I, therefore, am of the opinion that the defendant’s actions were justified under the conditions, and for these reasons judgment is rendered and will be signe'd dismissing plaintiff’s suit at her cost.”

There is very little dispute with regard to the facts, although plaintiff does make the following statement with regard to the facts in its brief:

“ * * * At the outset, plaintiff would like to preclude substantially all argument concerning the facts of this case by simply stating that for the purposes of this appeal, she intends to make out her case primarily on a supposition of fact similar with the fact situation that defendant sought to prove on the trial of this case. The plaintiff’s purpose in so doing is to facilitate a careful analysis by this Court of the serious legal question raised, and the plaintiff does not waive but specifically reserves her rights under any evidence produced on her behalf.”
“Briefly stating then substantially the fact situation as sought to be proved by the defendant, we find this situation:”

After this statement, we find the facts set- forth in the plaintiff’s brief substantially as proven on the trial of the case and as contended by the defendant.

The testimony reveals that the defendant operated a saloon for colored patrons on the corner of Orange and South 13th Street in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and had been operating a business at that same location for more than twenty years. First he had a market, then a grocery business, and 'in 1935 or 1936 he went into the saloon business there. There is no evidence of any disturbances at the defendant’s place other than those which involved petitioner’s husband. In all of these the deceased was clearly in the wrong. It is shown that prior to any ill feeling on the part of the deceased toward the defendant that he had worked for the defendant, and the first time the deceased caused any trouble he was drunk after having spent all day in the defendant’s saloon, and after spending all his money he sought to buy a pint of whiskey on credit. The defendant refused to sell him any whiskey on credit and offered to send him home in a taxi, to which the deceased replied: “Hell, no, I don’t want no taxi; I want whiskey.” Richard told him that he did not sell whiskey on credit and wouldn’t even sell “my brother a pint of whiskey.

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 2d 494, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esnault-v-richard-lactapp-1951.