Gates v. Bisso Ferry Co.

172 So. 829, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 132
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1937
DocketNo. 16399.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 172 So. 829 (Gates v. Bisso Ferry Co.) 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
Gates v. Bisso Ferry Co., 172 So. 829, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 132 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

This is a suit by Mrs. Irene Bernius, widow of Charles Gates, on her own behalf and as natural tutrix of her two minor children against Bisso Ferry Company, Inc., Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, Limited, its insurer, and Edwin, Alexander, and Joseph Bisso, individually, and in solido for damages for the death of her husband resulting from the alleged wrongful acts of the defendants.

Her petition alleges, in substance, as follows :

That, on November 9, 1933, Bisso Ferry Company, Inc., owned and operated the steam ferry boat Edwin N. Bisso, as a common carrier of passengers, across the Mississippi river between the head of Jackson avenue in the city of New Orleans and the city of Gretna, La., in accordance with certain franchises granted to it by the city of New Orleans and the city of Gretna; that on said date plaintiff's husband, *831 Charles Gates, boarded this ferry boat at Gretna, La., as a passenger for carriage to the New Orleans side of the Mississippi river and that he was received as such by the defendant Bisso Ferry Company, Inc.

She avers that, at the time her husband boarded said ferry boat, he was so intoxicated that he was physically and mentally irresponsible and incapable of taking care of himself; that his helpless condition was apparent to the employees of Bisso Ferry Company; that he was unattended by any person; and that the operator’s servants and employees, knowing of her husband’s condition, should have taken particular care of him, but that they failed in all respects to look after him and provide for his safety. It is charged that after the boat had completed its journey across the river, the employees of the operators permitted her husband to remain on the boat and make other trips thereon without doing anything to safeguard and protect him as a passenger; that, during one of said trips, while her husband was still x passenger and in an inebriated state, he fell over the side of said boat into the Mississippi river and was drowned; that, prior to the time when her husband fell into the river, defendants’ employees did not safeguard against his falling and after he fell they failed to make any effort to save him; and that these employees had seen her husband in a drunken stupor situated on a bench directly opposite the passenger gate or passageway on the starboard side of said boat and allowed him to remain in such position unwatched, unattended, and unrestrained from walking to the edge of the boat. It is further averred that the drowning of plaintiff’s husband was due solely and entirely to the negligence of the operators of the boat in failing to provide for his safety under the then existing circumstances, which were apparent to them, and that her husband’s intoxicated condition imposed upon said operators the duty of administering special care and attention to him so as to prevent him from being injured.

The petition further charges that Edwin, Joseph, and Alexander Bisso are also responsible for-the death of plaintiff’s husband because they, by notarial act, bound themselves in solido to the city of New Orleans and the city of Gretna for the faithful performance'by the Bisso Ferry Company, Inc., of its franchises and contracts with those cities, and that they have breached their contract in failing to provide for the safe carriage of plaintiff’s husband.

Judgment is prayed for against all defendants in the sum of $30,260.

The defendants appeared and filed an exception of no cause or right of action and also an exception of misjoinder of parties defendants and of causes of action. The exception of no cause of action was overruled as to Bisso Ferry Company, Inc., and its insurer, but was sustained as to Edwin, Joseph, and Alexander' Bisso. The exception of misjoinder of parties defendant and causes of action was likewise sustained as to the Bisso brothers, but the trial court refused to dismiss the suit as to all defendants.

Reserving the benefit of their exceptions, which had been overruled, the Bisso Ferry Company, Inc., and its insurer answered the petition and denied any liability in the premises.

The case then proceeded to trial before a jury. After hearing the evidence, a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against Bisso Ferry Company, Inc., in the sum of $6,000 and against Ocean Accident & Guarantee Company, Limited, the ferry company’s insurer, in the sum of $5,000 (which is the limit of liability on the insurance policy). A judgment was entered on the verdict and both defendants cast therein have appealed suspensively to this court.

At the outset, appellants complain of the action of the lower court in that it failed to dismiss the suit as to all defendants, when maintaining the exception of mis-joinder as to the Messrs. Bisso, and they cite Babineaux v. Miller, 5 La.App.(lst Cir.) 605, wherein it was said that “in a case of this character defendant is not bound to compel plaintiff to elect, and may ask the court to dismiss, and the court is even without power to discriminate in such a case by dismissing as to one party rather than another, but must dismiss as to all.” Our attention is also called to the following expression of the. Supreme Court in Davidson v. Frost-Johnson Lumber Company, 126 La. 542, 52 So. 759:

“Where an exception of misjoinder of defendants is sustained, the court cannot discriminate by dismissing the suit as to one defendant, rather than another, but must, ordinarily, dismiss it as to all.”

See, also, McGee v. Collins, 156 La. 291, 100 So. 430, 34 A.L.R. 336.

*832 Counsel for appellee counters with the case of Dubuisson v. Long,. 175 La. 564, 143 So. 494, 496, wherein it was held that parties properly joined cannot complain of the improper joinder of others. In other words, “that an exception of misjoinder of parties defendant is personal to him who is improperly joined and is not open to those who are properly joined.” The application of this later authority to this case is said to effect the necessary conclusion that the only parties improperly joined in this proceeding being the Bissos, who are not now before the court, the present defendants are without interest to urge the exception' of misjoinder.

In Gill v. City of Lake Charles, 119 La. 17, 43 So. 897, it was stated that our Code of Practice makes no provision for the determination of the proper joinder of parties plaintiff or defendant and that there is nothing in the Spanish or French systems of procedure prevailing at the time of the adoption of our Code to guide us in the matter and that, therefore, we must look to the common law from which system our Code of Practice was largely derived. In Dubuisson v. Long, supra, the observations of the court in Gill v. City of Lake Charles are reaffirmed and a review of the common-law authorities undertaken, as a result of which it is asserted that the majority view supports the proposition that the objection of misjoinder of parties defendants is open only to a defendant who has been improperly joined. The two Louisiana cases previously decided by the Supreme Court and relied upon by appellants, McGee v. Collins and Davidson v. Frost-Johnson Lumber Company, supra, are distinguished by it in Dubuisson v. Long upon the ground that the exception of misjoinder in those cases was made on behalf of the parties who were not properly joined.

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

Related

Portier v. Thrifty Way Pharmacy
476 So. 2d 1132 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1985)
Johnson v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc.
139 So. 2d 7 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
Henderson v. Taylor
315 S.W.2d 777 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1958)
Swilley v. Economy Cab Co. of Jacksonville
46 So. 2d 173 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1950)
Callaway v. Hart
146 F.2d 103 (Fifth Circuit, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 So. 829, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-bisso-ferry-co-lactapp-1937.