Gordon v. City of New Orleans

363 So. 2d 235
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 12, 1978
Docket9253
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 363 So. 2d 235 (Gordon v. City of New Orleans) 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
Gordon v. City of New Orleans, 363 So. 2d 235 (La. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

363 So.2d 235 (1978)

Mrs. Dorothy Yarls Gordon, wife of/and James T. GORDON, Sr.
v.
CITY OF NEW ORLEANS, New Orleans Police Department, Donald Lagarde and Marcel David.

No. 9253.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

September 12, 1978.
Rehearing Denied October 25, 1978.

*236 Gertler & Gertler, M. H. Gertler, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Wayne G. Cresap, Asst. City Atty., and Philip S. Brooks, City Atty., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Before SAMUEL, REDMANN and STOULIG, JJ.

SAMUEL, Judge.

This is an action for wrongful death. Plaintiffs allege their son, a senior high school student, was negligently shot and killed by Donald Lagarde and Marcel David, officers of the New Orleans Police Department. Named as defendants are the City of New Orleans, the New Orleans Police Department, Lagarde and David. The defendants' answer denies liability and pleads self-defense on behalf of Lagarde and David. Charity Hospital of Louisiana at New Orleans intervened for medical services rendered to the decedent.

After a trial on the merits (the trial was held before the judge alone and not to a jury), there was judgment in favor of all defendants, dismissing plaintiffs' suit at their cost. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The undisputed facts are:

Shortly before 9 p. m. on February 15, 1975, three New Orleans police officers, Lagarde, David and Gordon Hagen, all dressed in plain clothes, were cruising in an unmarked police automobile on Dale Street in New Orleans. They were attempting to locate two persons, a man suspected of perpetrating an armed robbery and an informant who knew the suspect's whereabouts. While traveling at a speed of about 15-20 m. p. h. in a lakebound direction, they observed a group of about 10 to 12 males congregated on the sidewalk. Unknown to the officers, the group was engaged in a dice game. The police vehicle stopped in the middle of the street adjacent to the group of men. The vehicle was recognized by members of the group as a police car. One Ernest Brock, nicknamed "Yogi" by his friends, and decedent were members of the group. After the officers exited from the police car, gunfire broke out. (Who initiated the gunfire and who actually fired guns are issues of fact disputed by the parties.)

Prior to or during the gunfire almost all of the members of the dice-playing group dispersed. The decedent, however, remained on or near the sidewalk. During the gunfire, in which decedent did not participate, he was hit by a .38 caliber bullet fired by Lagarde.[1] David and Lagarde each fired two shots. Hagen did not fire any shots but witnessed most of the events leading to decedent's death. Decedent was transported to Charity Hospital by an emergency unit called to the scene by Lagarde. Later that night (at 11:30 p. m.), he died at the hospital from the bullet wound. Sometime after the gunfire ceased, Ernest Brock walked over to Lagarde and David unarmed. He was arrested and charged with the attempted murder of Lagarde, David and Hagen. Brock was not prosecuted for this charge.[2]

*237 The stage of the shooting incident was set in the following manner: On the date of the incident, the area of its occurrence was the 4300 block of Dale Street, a two-lane, bidirectional street, intersected by Warfield on the south or uptown end, and by Ransom on the north or lake end. The street was illuminated by street lights. An establishment called the Dreamland Lounge was located across the street from where the group was playing dice. A black Chevrolet was parked in front of the lounge and a brown Oldsmobile was parked at 4325-27 Dale Street, across the street from the lounge and adjacent to the dice game. The police car was parked approximately in the middle of the street between the black Chevrolet and the brown Oldsmobile. Other cars were parked along both sides of Dale Street.

There is contradicting evidence on the pertinent question presented, who initiated the gunfire. The trial judge resolved this question in favor of the defendants. He concluded that when the police vehicle stopped and the officers disembarked therefrom some gunshots were fired at them by "some individual from around the dice game area", that fire was returned by two of the officers, and thus the defendants were not negligent in causing the death of young Gordon.

On appeal defendants primarily rely on our settled jurisprudence that when the evidence is conflicting an appellate court should not disturb the trial court's ". . . reasonable evaluation of one set of witnesses as credible, and its consequent rejection of the testimony of the opposing set of witnesses . . ." Billiot v. Bourg, La., 338 So.2d 1148, 1152; Canter v. Koehring Company, La., 283 So.2d 716; Robertson v. Palmer, La.App., 74 So.2d 408. Ordinarily in the absence of manifest error we cannot disturb the trial judge's findings of fact. Echizenya v. Armenio, La.App., 354 So.2d 682.

However, in response, and this is their primary complaint on appeal, plaintiffs point to the fact that, despite timely objections thereto, the trial judge allowed the attorney for defendants to cross examine plaintiffs' witnesses regarding their prior arrests. Plaintiffs argue this was error and could have improperly affected the weight placed by the trial judge on the credibility of those witnesses.

We agree the ruling complained of was error. Although plaintiffs cite only criminal cases to support their contention, evidence of a witnesses' arrest record also is inadmissible in a civil action. Jacobs v. Landry, La.App., 82 So.2d 481. While we feel that in all probability the trial judge was not improperly influenced by testimony showing prior arrests of some of plaintiffs' witnesses, in an effort to be completely fair to the plaintiffs, we will consider the cross examination of their witnesses regarding prior arrests as consequential or prejudicial error. As a result of this consideration, we cannot give the usual weight to the trial court's findings of fact.

In Louisiana, as provided by both the Constitutions of 1974[3] and 1921,[4] the jurisdiction of appellate courts in civil cases is and has been expressly extended to the review of facts as well as law. These provisions are implemented by Code of Civil Procedure Article 2164, which in pertinent part provides: "The appellate court shall render any judgment which is just, legal, and proper upon the record on appeal."

Under these provisions our settled jurisprudence is that, even where the trial court has committed consequential or prejudicial error in the admission or refusal to admit evidence, or in instructing a jury, when the appellate court has all of the facts before it such error will not warrant remand and the appellate court must make its own independent conclusion as to the facts *238 as revealed in the record before it.[5] Accordingly, as the entire record is now before us, rather than remand this case for a new trial, we proceed to an independent consideration of the facts revealed in the record. In our review we completely disregard any testimony or other evidence concerning prior arrests of any of plaintiffs' witnesses.

An alleged eyewitness of the incident, Shirley Williams, testified to the most complete version of plaintiffs' several versions of what happened. He testified: The group of men were playing dice on the sidewalk across the street from the Dreamland Lounge when an unmarked police car stopped in the middle of the street, adjacent to the dice game.

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363 So. 2d 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1978.