Evans v. Central Surety Ins. Corporation

10 So. 2d 406
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1942
DocketNo. 2457.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 10 So. 2d 406 (Evans v. Central Surety Ins. Corporation) 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
Evans v. Central Surety Ins. Corporation, 10 So. 2d 406 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

The plaintiff brought this suit against the above defendant as the carrier of workmen's compensation insurance for the Teche Lines, Inc., to recover the sum of $6,000 as compensation for herself and her two minor children on account of the death of her husband and the father of the minors, the compensation to be paid *Page 407 in 300 weekly installments of $20 each, plus $250 for funeral expenses. It is alleged that the said deceased was employed by the Teche Lines, Inc., as a traveling auditor and traffic representative whose duty it was to check the various stations of the bus company and make daily reports of the condition of these stations as a result of his inspection and investigation; that he was furnished an automobile by his employer in which to make the various points required of him in his itinerary of inspection, and all of his expenses were paid while on these trips; that said deceased, on May 26, 1938, made his inspection of certain bus stations from Independence down to New Orleans and proceeded to the office of his employer in New Orleans by means of the automobile furnished him for his work and discussed with his superiors traffic and other matters relative to his employer's business; that the deceased and Mr. Paul S. Hennessey, General Traffic Manager, and Mr. William Caldwell, Chief Clerk, got in the car furnished the deceased as aforesaid, and the three drove out the Gentilly Road with the intention of eating supper at some "eating place" and there to continue the discussion of the employer's business; that the deceased had not made out his daily report and had not finished his day's work; that, on the way out to supper, the car in which they were riding ran into an open draw bridge over the Industrial Canal and before the car could be stopped, it plunged into the canal, instantly killing Evans.

The defendant filed an exception to the jurisdiction of the court ratione personae, together with an exception of vagueness, and with reservation of these exceptions, filed an answer wherein the principal issue in the case was raised, that is that the deceased was not performing services arising out of his employment, or incidental thereto, at the time of his accidental death.

Both exceptions were overruled by the court, and after a trial, the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff as prayed for in her petition. The defendant has appealed, and re-urges the exception to the jurisdiction of the court, but has abandoned the exception of vagueness.

The exception to the jurisdiction of the court is based on the ground that, as the accident happened in the Parish of Orleans and the employer is domiciled in that parish, the court of East Baton Rouge Parish had no jurisdiction over the defendant insurance company in that parish, although it has a domicile in that parish for the purposes of jurisdiction by reason of being a foreign insurance company doing business in this State. Counsel concede that the question raised by this exception has been decided adversely to their contention in the recent case of Mack v. W. Horace Williams Co. et al., 200 La. 1042, 9 So.2d 406. But they contend that the Supreme Court in deciding that case did not take into consideration Section 39 of Act 20 of 1914, as amended by Act No. 38 of 1918, which provides that the word "court" wherever used in the act shall mean the court having jurisdiction over the employer in a civil action; that the Court of East Baton Rouge Parish had no jurisdiction over the employer of the deceased Evans in this case, and for that reason has no jurisdiction over the employer's insurance carrier.

As counsel frankly admit that this same point was presented to the Supreme Court in the Mack case, they practically concede that we have no alternative but to follow the ruling in the Mack case and affirm the ruling of the trial judge in overruling the exception in this case. We agree that there is nothing else for us to do but affirm the action of the trial judge in overruling this exception.

There is not a great deal of dispute as to the facts in the case. Evans drove into the bus station of the Teche Lines late in the afternoon on the day of the fatal accident after he had made one of his daily inspections of stations. Hennessey met Evans at the bus station by chance around 6:00 o'clock P.M., and they went to the office of the company on Rampart Street where Hennessey worked in his office for an hour or so. Evans sat on the outside of Hennessey's private office while the latter finished some work he had to do, it having been agreed that these two, together with Caldwell, the chief clerk, would go out to the lakefront for a seafood supper. While waiting for Hennessey just outside the latter's private office, Evans called the Monteleone Hotel and made reservations for the night. At this time Evans had not made out his report of his day's work, these reports frequently being made by him in his hotel room when he was away from home (Evans lived in Baton Rouge).

Evans would come into New Orleans about once a week and discuss with the auditor's office and the traffic manager matters *Page 408 relating to the company's business. His reports were sent in daily as he made these inspections on the road, and it seems that these periodic trips were made to New Orleans for the purpose of going into more details with reference to any matters that Evans found while on his itineraries. In addition to furnishing Evans with a car and the expense of its operation, he was also paid all of his expenses for lodging and meals while away from home. It seems that he was also given the privilege of using this car for pleasure — or at least no serious objection seems to have been made by the bus company for him to use the car for that purpose. On a previous trip to New Orleans, Evans and Caldwell, together with another employee of the bus company, had arranged to go out to Pontchatrain Beach to get a seafood supper, but when it developed that the other employee could not go, Hennessey was invited to go in his place. No business of the company was discussed between Hennessey and Evans either at the bus station or while the latter was waiting for the former to finish his work at the office.

The place where these three men were to take their seafood lunch together out at Pontchatrain Beach is some six or seven miles from the office of the company and is in an opposite direction from the office to that of the hotel at which Evans was to stay that night and at which he presumably was to make out his report for the day. It is shown that at other times when Evans and Hennessey were together in a social capacity away from the office, they frequently talked over matters pertaining to the business of their employer.

The three parties left the office of the company around seven o'clock in the car driven by Evans. On their way out, they stopped on Broad Street where Evans and Caldwell got a drink. All three sat in the front seat of the car, with Evans driving, and they proceeded out Gentilly Road at a rapid rate of speed. On reaching the Danziger Bridge, they found the drawbridge being opened, but Evans apparently thought that he could make it across before the bridge was raised, and he pulled his car to the left to pass other cars parked ahead of him and proceeded across the bridge. His car ran up the elevated drawbridge and plunged into the canal where Evans and Caldwell were killed.

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Bluebook (online)
10 So. 2d 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-central-surety-ins-corporation-lactapp-1942.