Francois v. Maison Blanche Realty Co.

63 So. 880, 134 La. 215, 1913 La. LEXIS 2201
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1913
DocketNo. 19,520
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 63 So. 880 (Francois v. Maison Blanche Realty Co.) 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
Francois v. Maison Blanche Realty Co., 63 So. 880, 134 La. 215, 1913 La. LEXIS 2201 (La. 1913).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sus[217]*217tained by the plaintiff while working for the defendants. The petition alleges, in substance, that on August 20, 1910, he was employed by the defendants to knock off plaster from the ceiling of the Maison Blanche Building, and in order to do so it was necessary for him to stand on a scaffold, which had been erected by the defendants; that after working on the scaffold about an hour, it broke and fell under the combined weight of himself and several other workmen; that the scaffold fell because it was constructed of inferior materials and the parts thereof were insecurely nailed and improperly braced; that the structure was erected in a thoroughly unworkmanlike manner, and that as the direct result of Ms fall he sustained a fracture of his right ankle, with a rupture of the ligaments, and a severe strain, producing a permanent injury to his right foot to such an extent as to disable the plaintiff from walking without crutches; and that plaintiff’s back was severely wrenched and bruised.

Plaintiff sued for actual and punitive damages to the amount of $7,202.47, with interest and costs.

The petition further alleges that, on August 26, 1910, the plaintiff, while still suffering intensely from his injuries, signed the following writing, presented by some representative of the Maison Blanche Company, to wit:

“New Orleans, August 26th, 1910.
“For and in consideration of $10.00 weekly until able to take position, for injury sustained, I hereby accept the same for payment and settlement in full of any claim or claims of any nature whatsoever, that-I may have against the Maison Blanche Company, in connection with accident resulting to my ankles and back.
“I fully understand and accept the above payment to me by the Maison Blanche Company as a mere matter of courtesy and that the Maison Blanche is in no wise responsible for the accident or the payment above referred to.
“[•Signed] Firdeon Francois.
“332 Villere St.”

The petition alleges that the Maison Blanche Company paid the plaintiff $10 per week for 15 weeks, and then refused to make any further payment, and that the plaintiff, prior to the filing of suit, tendered to said defendant the sum of $150, in manner and form provided by law, and that the Maison Blanche Company refused to accept said tender.

The petition alleges that said writing should be declared of no effect, because not signed by the Maison Blanche Company, and not binding on it because based merely on “courtesy,” because the plaintiff, at the time, was suffering so intensely that he did not have the capacity to enter into a contract, and lastly, in the alternative, that the Maison Blanche Company had broken the contract by refusing to continue the payments.

For answer, the Maison Blanche Realty Company pleaded the general issue.

The Maison Blanche Company after pleading the general issue, and after averring that if the plaintiff herein was at all injured, he was so injured through his own fault and negligence, or through that of a fellow servant, pleaded as follows, to wit:

“Respondent further avers that the plaintiff herein is estopped from alleging the liability of this respondent, because of the execution by him of the agreement of compromise and settlement set out in plaintiff’s petition and all the allegations thereof, and especially plaintiff’s admission wherein the plaintiff especially acknowledged and admitted that this respondent was in no wise responsible for the accident by which the alleged injuries were suffered.”

The jury by a vote of 9 to 3 found the following verdict, to wit:

“We, the jury, find for the plaintiff in the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00).”

Judgment was rendered against both defendants, but as rendered was never signed, because of the discontinuance of the suit as to the Maison Blanche Realty Company. The judgment as signed was against the Maison Blanche Company alone, and the defendant has appealed. Plaintiff has an[219]*219swered the appeal, and prayed that the amount of the verdict and judgment he increased to the sum demanded in the petition.

[1, 2] The so-called agreement of compromise is sui generis. The Maison Blanche Company did not sign the instrument. The text of the so-called agreement does not bind that company to make the weekly payments referred to in the first paragraph, and the second paragraph makes it clear that the Maison Blanche Company made the payment of $10 “as a mere matter of courtesy.” Money paid as a matter of courtesy cannot be considered otherwise than as a gratuity. As the Maison Blanche did not bind itself to pay the consideration expressed in the instrument, it is obvious that there was no contract of compromise between the parties. Such a contract must be reduced into writing. Civil Code, 3071. It must be complete in itself, and nothing left to be established by parol proof. Lampkins v. Railroad Co., 42 La. Ann. 997, 8 South. 530.

The instrument on its face is an ex parte writing, which does not bind the Maison Blanche Company, and as against the plaintiff, shows that he received $10 paid by said company as “a mere matter of courtesy.” If the instrument had recited the payment of a specific sum of money in full satisfaction of all of plaintiff’s claims against the defendant for injuries sustained by reason of the accident in question, such recitals, doubtless, would estop the plaintiff to deny that such claims had been compromised and settled. But where, as in this case, one party proposed a compromise calling for weekly payments for an indefinite period, and the other party did not sign the instrument, the agreement remains inchoate and ineffective. The instrument in question was prepared by the defendant company and the second paragraph shows that the company did not intend to obligate itself to make the weekly payments. The first payment was made “as a mere matter of courtesy,” and it is to be presumed that subsequent payments were of the same character. The evidence shows that the weekly payments were discontinued before the plaintiff was able to take the position of porter in the Maison Blanche store, which he filled at the time of the accident.

[6] The contention of the defendant that the plaintiff is estopped by the admission that the Maison Blanche Company was in no wise responsible for the accident is without merit. Such admission was made with a view to a compromise and forms part of the inchoate agreement of compromise hereinbefore set forth.

On the Merits.

[3] We make the following extract from defendants’ brief:

“It will appear abundantly from the evidence of all parties that the plaintiff, together with others, was employed to knock off the plastering from the ceiling in the store of the Maison Blanche Company, located on the lake corner of Canal and Dauphine streets, in this city; that the ceiling is very high, about 30 feet, and so that the workmen could reach it, a platform had been erected about seven feet below the ceiling. On this platform the men stood, and with' short crowbars, or other like tools, knocked down the plastering.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 880, 134 La. 215, 1913 La. LEXIS 2201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francois-v-maison-blanche-realty-co-la-1913.