Grantham v. Smith

132 So. 805, 18 La. App. 519, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 295
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1931
DocketNos. 770 and 771
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 132 So. 805 (Grantham v. Smith) 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
Grantham v. Smith, 132 So. 805, 18 La. App. 519, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 295 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

These two cases were consolidated below for trial; judgment was rendered separately in each case according to agreement of counsel.

They will be so considered and disposed of in this court, in one opinion, which will be sufficient to deal with all the issues presented.

Mrs. Jennie Lorance is suing for herself, individually, and' for' her minor daughter, Alphonsine Lorance, and Louis Grantham, dative tutor of Wm. Louis Grantham, for his ward.

Judgment was rendered in favor of Mrs. Jennie Lorance, individually, for $345.50, with legal interest, and on behalf of her minor daughter, Alphonsine, for $3,000, with legal interest, aggregating $3,345.50 in solido against the defendants W. R. Smith, Mrs. W. R. Smith, Randolph Morgan, and R. J. Kendall.

In the other case judgment was rendered in favor of Louis Grantham, dative tutor of Wm. Louis Grantham, in solido against the above-named defendants for $3,000, also with legal interest from judicial demand.

The defendants appeal.

The demand in the two cases is for damages caused by a collision between, a Ford roadster and a Chevrolet coupe, which occurred on the state highway midway between Covington and Mandeville, .near the Pontchatalawa bridge, at about 9:45 p. m., January 19, 1929.

In the collision, Adelia Manent, mother of the minor, Wm. Louis Grantham, was killed, and Alphonsine Lorance, minor [521]*521daughter of Mrs. Jennie Lorance, was severely injured.

Clark Morgan, minor son of Randolph Morgan, was driving the Ford roadster at the time of the accident from Covington to Mandeville, and R. J. Kendall was going to Covington from Mandeville in his Chevrolet coupe. In the Ford, though a two-seat car, there were four occupants, the driver, Clark Morgan, Walter Smith, minor son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Smith, Adelia Manent, who lost her life, and Alphonsine Lorance, minor daughter of Mrs. Jennie Lorance, who suffered serious injuries, as before stated.

Mrs. Jennie Lorance filed a motion in the district court of St. Tammany parish, where she resides, alleging that, since her marriage to Ernest Lorance, about fourteen years before, he had left her, and that during that time she had been supporting herself and her minor child, Alphonsine; that her husband Ernest Lorance, had refused to pay .the hospital bill of her daughter which resulted from the injury, and had refused to bring suit for the damages claimed by her in this suit or to join her in such suit, on behalf of her said minor child, a ward of this state. She prayed for the appointment by the court of some one to bring and prosecute the suit, whereupon she was appointed and directed by the court to institute these proceedings on behalf of her minor daughter. It was alleged by Mrs. Jennie Lorance that prescription had about run on the cause of action of her child, and that she was asking for the relief demanded, that suit might be immediately filed for the preservation of the rights of her daughter, Alphonsine.

Acting on that appointment, Mrs. Lorance filed the suit, and was met by an exception in limine by the defendants in which it is urged that she was without right or capacity to represent her minor child in this suit, and had disclosed no authority to bring and prosecute this suit, and that the minor was without authority or capacity to institute and maintain the suit, and to stand in judgment.

The defendant R. J. Kendall filed an exception of no right or cause of action before answering, and likewise the other defendants.

The exceptions were referred to the merits; later the court rendered judgment in solido against all the defendants, thus overruling the exceptions.

The authority of Mrs. Lorance .to bring the suit for her minor presents the first Question for determination.

A child remains under the authority of his father and mother until his majority or emancipation.

In case of difference between the parents, the authority of the father prevails. C. C. art. 216.

The father is, during the marriage, administrator of the estate of his minor children, and the mother in the case of his interdiction or absence during said interdiction or absence. C. C. art. 221, as amended by Act No. 197 of 1924.

During marriage, the father is clothed with the functions of the tutor in respect to the property of his child, etc. Dauterive v. Shaw, 47 La. Ann. 882, 17 So. 345.

Minors, persons- interdicted or absent, cannot sue except through the intervention or with the assistance of their tutor or curator. C. P. art. 108.

[522]*522During marriage the father is administrator of the estate of his minor children and is authorized to sue on behalf of a minor son for personal injuries, without the assistance of his wife. Scarborough v. Louisiana Ry. & Nav. Co., 145 La. 323, 82 So. 286.

It is clear from the allegations of the motion by Mrs. Jennie Lorance for authorization to bring this suit, above referred to, that her husband was not absent either temporarily or permanently, and was not an interdict so as to give her the administration of the estate of her minor daughter, as provided for under the provisions of article 221, C. C., as. amended.

The father of the minor, being clothed during marriage with the functions of the tutor, was therefore the proper party to bring this suit, as a minor cannot sue except through the intervention or with the assistance of his tutor. C. P. art. 108.

The contention of counsel for Mrs. Lorance is that she had the authority to institute this suit under the ex parte appointment of the court directing her to inaugurate these proceedings.

It will be observed that the articles of the Civil Code conferring on the father the administration of the estate during marriage, and providing that his authority in case of difference with his wife shall prevail, are found under the title of the Code which treats of paternal authority.

In speaking of that authority, “la puissance paternell,” Marcadé remarks that it includes the rights of the father to administer the estate of his. minor, and to direct matters affecting his education. Marcadé, vol. 2, p. 160. On page 161, same volume, he says:

“Le droit d’aminister peut etre retiré au pére; maís par qui et pour quelles causes? C’est la toute la question. Or nous disons que le pére ne peut si le voir arracher que par l’autorité de la justice et quand il est jugé vraiment incapable ou indigne de l’exercer; nous disons que la donation qui confére l’adminis.tration á un autre que le pére est une insulte que la justice seule a le droit de prononcer.”

In the foregoing excerpt .that • author says, in substance, that this authority of the father in reference to the administration of the estate of his. minor may be. taken away from him only by the authority of justice, and after he has been pronounced incapable and unworthy of his trust, and that the gift conferring such power of administration to another would be an insult to the father that a judge alone has .the right to pronounce.

In this case there was no decree or order of the court showing that the husband, Ernest Lorance, was either incapable o,r unworthy of administering the estate of his minor child, and, under the reasoning oí Marcadé, above reproduced, the district judge had no power to authorize plaintiff, his wife, .to institute this suit by an ex parte order.'

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 805, 18 La. App. 519, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grantham-v-smith-lactapp-1931.