Gulf Refining Co. v. Atchison

196 F.2d 258
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 1952
Docket13558
StatusPublished

This text of 196 F.2d 258 (Gulf Refining Co. v. Atchison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Refining Co. v. Atchison, 196 F.2d 258 (5th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

RUSSELL, Circuit Judge.

Appellees, Mabel Atchinson and her 'husband, Bosco Franicevich, brought this action against appellant and American Employer’s Insurance Company to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by them as a result of an altercation perpetrated by Jack Grammar, an employee of appellant,- and 'Charles Conetti and Louis Mistich, deputy sheriffs of Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. American Employer’s Insurance Company was *259 subsequently dismissed as a party defendant, Atchison v. Gulf Refining Company, 5 Cir., 174 F.2d 476, and the case proceeded to trial against appellant. The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict for appellees and judgment was entered accordingly. Appellant prosecutes this appeal contending that the verdict and judgment are contrary to the evidence and the law.

The facts supporting the plaintiff’s case, which the verdict evidences the jury accepted and believed, disclose that on the evening of July 29, 1947, Bosco Franicevich was sitting on the front porch of his combination residence, grocery store and bar, located in Ostrica, Louisiana, when he noted the approach of appellant’s truck traveling over a roadway which passed immediately in front of his building. 1 Franicevich, complaining that appellant’s trucks were destroying his property, his steps and his porch, stepped from his porch and instructed the driver of the truck to stop the truck and to refrain from passing over the right-of-way. The driver contacted Grammer, appellant’s Superintendent of Transportation, who was in a nearby building, and told him that the truck had been stopped. Grammer telephoned the local sheriff’s office, and in response to his call two deputy sheriffs, one armed with ■a pistol and the other armed with a machine gun and a pistol, arrived at the scene about 45 minutes later. When the deputies arrived, Bosco Franicevich was inside the building. One of the deputies walked up to the door of the building and asked him why he stopped the truck. When he replied, the deputy said, “Bosco, this truck is going through, regardless. They’ve got to go through.” Whereupon, the truck was allowed to pass, the two deputies and Grammer escorting it down the roadway to a levee. The three men then returned to the building.

During this time Bosco Franicevich remained in his barroom, standing near a window. As the three men approached the building he heard Grammer say to the two deputies, “Best thing to get him out, then shoot him.” He was then ordered to come out of the building. At that time the two deputies and Grammer were standing outside the door of the barroom and all of them were armed, Grammer having been given a pistol by one of the deputies. Grammer was urging that they, “Get him; Shoot him. Get him.”

At the time the initial events transpired Mabel Franicevich was lying across a bed in the back room. Her attention was attracted by the conversations and she got up and went into the barroom. Mark Franicevich, appellees’ 11 year old son, was in the room and was pleading with his father not to go outside. There was a further exchange of- conversation among the parties which reached its climax when Conetti shouted for Bosco to come out, stating, “Move your wife and kid out of the way or we’ll let you have it through the door.”

At this point, Dominick Massa, a friend of appellees who had witnessed the entire transaction and who was standing outside the building, interceded. As the witness expressed himself, “When I see they maybe start to shoot, I figured they might shoot me, too; best thing to try to talk them out of it.” He said, “That man never done anything bad what I see, no reason to> shoot the man. If you want to, go get him.” When one of the men expressed fear that Bosco might be armed, Massa agreed to enter the room first and allow them to follow him. This was accomplished without event. Thereafter the matter of the movement of trucks across the right-of-way was discussed and the three men departed.

At the time these events transpired Mabel Franicevich had been in a state of pregnancy for four or five months. After the altercation was over she had a severe headache and pains across her back; she went to bed, but slept very little. About noon the next day, July 30, 1947, she began hemorrhaging, and at approximately 3:00 *260 or 3:30 A.M., July 31, 1947, she suffered a miscarriage. From that time until November 5, 1947, the hemorrhaging continued despite the medical treatment she received. On the latter date an abdominal total hysterectomy and 'appendectomy was performed on her.

Appellant contends that the trial Court erred in denying its motion to direct a verdict at the close of the evidence, in denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and in failing to grant its alternative motion for a new trial. In support of these contentions, -'appellant relies upon the following propositions:

“Louisiana law does not allow damages resulting from shock caused by concern for another;
“Louisiana law does not allow one who provokes a difficulty to recover damages for injuries resulting from such difficulty;
“Issues or counts tendered in a complaint unsupported by substantial evidence should not be submitted to the jury over defendant’s objections.”

As a predicate for its first proposition, appellant construes the complaint to allege that the physical injuries suffered by Mrs. Franicevich with the resultant pain and suffering were caused solely by her concern over the safety of her 'husband. The evidence clearly discloses, however, that Mrs. Franicevich was as much a victim of the assault as her husband.was. * She was in the room with him facing the weapons held in the hands of the men standing outside the door. ' She was frightened and emotionally disturbed by the events which transpired and screamed and pleaded with her husband not to go outside. Conetti’s instruction to, “Move your wife and kid out of the way or we’ll let you have it through the door” was as much a threat against Mrs. Franicevich as it was against her husband. The tempo of the affair is illustrated by Massa’s statement that he feared that he would be shot and the testimony of Brown, who was in the barroom at the time, to the effect that he thought there was going to 'be shooting.

It is further contended by appellant that the evidence does not support appellees’ allegation that the miscarriage and subsequent loss of ability to have children had any causal connection with the altercation. The trial court properly submitted this issue to the jury with instruction, requested by appellant, that if it should find from the evidence that the miscarriage and subsequent operation performed on Mrs. Franicevich resulted from a pre-existing condition and was not connected with the events complained of, then it should find for the appellant. The evidence disclosed that Mrs. Franicevich was suffering from a condition which made her more susceptible to a miscarriage and one which might have ultimately caused her to undergo surgery. This fact, however, does not preclude her from recovering damages for injuries resulting from the acts complained of, since a tortfeasor must take his victims as he finds them. Valence v.

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50 So. 2d 847 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1951)
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Ogden v. Thomas
41 So. 2d 717 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1949)
Atchison v. Gulf Refining Co.
174 F.2d 476 (Fifth Circuit, 1949)
Lewis v. Holmes
61 L.R.A. 274 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1903)
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53 So. 2d 510 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
196 F.2d 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-refining-co-v-atchison-ca5-1952.