Green v. City of New Orleans

88 So. 2d 76
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1956
Docket20696
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 88 So. 2d 76 (Green 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
Green v. City of New Orleans, 88 So. 2d 76 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

88 So.2d 76 (1956)

Robert GREEN
v.
CITY OF NEW ORLEANS (Department of Public Health).

No. 20696.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

June 11, 1956.
Rehearing Denied June 27, 1956.
Writ of Certiorari Denied September 28, 1956.

*77 Burton G. Klein, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Henry B. Curtis and John F. Connolly, New Orleans, for City of New Orleans, defendant-appellee.

Frank J. Stich, Jr., New Orleans, curator ad hoc.

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Robert Green, a colored adoptive applicant, instituted this suit against the defendant, City of New Orleans, Bureau of Vital Statistics, endeavoring to obtain a writ of mandamus compelling the defendant to change the race, as revealed in the birth certificate of Jacqueline Ann Henley, age about four and a half years, from white to colored or to show cause why such change should not be made; plaintiff then requested that a curator ad hoc be appointed by the court to represent the interest of the minor child.

No answer appears in the record on behalf of the Bureau of Vital Statistics, however, Frank J. Stich, Jr., the curator ad hoc answered and generally denied the pertinent allegations of plaintiff's petition.

From a judgment in favor of defendant dismissing plaintiff's suit, he has prosecuted this appeal.

The chronological facts are relatively simple. On November 2nd, 1950, Ruby Henley Preuc[1], a white woman gave birth to a female child, Jacqueline Ann Henley[2] while confined in the Charity Hospital of New Orleans. Three weeks after the birth of the child Ruby Preuc brought it to the home of her sister, Mrs. Harold McBride. The identity of the child's father was never revealed to anyone by its mother and, therefore, he is, at present, unknown. On October 11, 1952, Ruby Preuc died of a brain tumor in the Home for Incurables, where she had been confined since shortly after the birth of her child. On August 1, 1952, Mrs. McBride visited the Department of Welfare and requested it to accept the child as she felt that it was a Negro and she could no longer permit her to remain in her home, since the neighbors were beginning to comment about the medium brown color of the child's skin. In order to facilitate this request proceedings were initiated wherein the child was declared abandoned by the Juvenile Court for the Parish of Orleans and, on October 1, 1952, it was placed in a Negro foster home where she has remained.

Plaintiff endeavored to adopt the child through the use of the facilities of the Department of Welfare, which approved his application, but an examination of the child's birth certificate disclosed an impediment in that she was registered as white in the Bureau of Vital Statistics, and that agency refused to change the designation of the race of the child to colored. Hence this suit.

*78 The only question posed for our consideration is one of fact and that is whether Jacqueline Ann Henley has been proven to be a member of the Negro race?

Plaintiff contends that the lower court erred in its judgment, for the reason that sufficient evidence was offered during the trial hereof to prove that the child was a Negro. On the other hand, the curator ad hoc insists that the evidence adduced at the trial was not sufficient to compel the Bureau of Vital Statistics to change the birth certificate of the child from white to that of a colored person.

We feel compelled to remark at the inception of this opinion that we were completely fascinated by the novel-like tenor of this record. The trial judge, apparently in order to afford the plaintiff the benefit of every doubt and an unimpeded opportunity to prove his case with that legal certainty which the law requires, most liberally relaxed the rules of evidence, therefore, much of the testimony that we shall refer to or quote hereinafter, insofar as plaintiff's case is concerned, will, we believe, be predicated, to a large extent, on hearsay, inferences and presumptions of fact.

Counsel for plaintiff in order to sustain his client's contention that sufficient evidence was adduced in the trial court to prove that the child was, at least, part Negro, points to the testimony of Herbert Stanton, a Negro laborer, who related that Ruby Preuc was employed as a barmaid in a Negro saloon, a fact which everyone seems to have conceded. He further asserted that he corresponded with Ruby Preuc when she was visiting her sister in Detroit, Michigan. A letter was offered in evidence written, during this time, by Stanton to Ruby Preuc and it contained such phrases as "but you know that I'll always love you"; "I wish you was home I miss you so" and "with love, Rock[3]." On Direct and cross examination he further related that he had never "gone out" with her nor had he been "intimate with her" and upon being interrogated "Did you ever meet her after work ?", he responded "* * * her boss used to bring her home * * * a white man."

Counsel conceded in oral argument that the testimony of Stanton and the letter were not offered to prove parentage, but merely to show Ruby Preuc's close association with Negroes.

Plaintiff offered in evidence the testimony of Mrs. Emma Smith,[4] who related that birth certificates were her special assignment and that it was she who had prepared the child's birth record. Upon being interrogated "The color and race of the father, do you ask that question?", she responded, "No, if she is a white mother. We do not ask if her husband is white, we take it for granted he is white." The certificate that Mrs. Smith prepares ultimately becomes the actual birth record and for that purpose it is forwarded to the Department of Public Health, a fact which was admitted by Mrs. Naomi Drake, Deputy Registrar of the Bureau of Vital Statistics for the City of New Orleans.

Mrs. Harold McBride, sister of Ruby Preuc, testified that three weeks after the birth of the baby, Ruby Preuc and the child came to her home, wherein Ruby resided until she was removed to the Home for Incurables, where she subsequently died. Sometime after Ruby Preuc was confined in the Home for Incurables and about two months before she died, Mrs. McBride visited the Department of Public Welfare and requested it to accept the child because "she didn't fit in my family, she was too dark. * * * I told Mrs. Oberholtzer[5] there had been remarks passed that the child possibly was a nigger." However, Mrs. McBride, both on direct and cross examination, related that she had never seen her sister consort with Negroes "outside of work" and that she did not actually know if the child was part Negro.

*79 Mrs. Catherine Oberholtzer testified that Mrs. McBride, when she visited her, stated that "she would like the agency to make plans for the child since she felt that she was a Negro and she could no longer keep her in the house; the child was growing darker day by day."

Charles Collins[6] testified that when Mrs. McBride visited his office she informed him that "* * * she lived in an all white neighborhood and that it would sooner or later be embarrassing * * * to have the child in her household. * * * because of its color."

The only expert witness offered to enlighten the court appeared on behalf of the plaintiff and it is on his testimony that plaintiff rests his case. Dr. Arden R. King stated that he was a professor of Anthropology at Tulane University and had done graduate work in physical anthropology and archeology.

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Bluebook (online)
88 So. 2d 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1956.