Honeycutt v. Bass

187 So. 848, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 172
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1939
DocketNo. 5888.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 187 So. 848 (Honeycutt v. Bass) 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
Honeycutt v. Bass, 187 So. 848, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 172 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

Exceptions of no cause and no right of action, filed herein by all defendants, were sustained and plaintiff perfected this appeal.

The purpose of the suit is to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been inflicted on plaintiff by fellow prisoners while he was an inmate of a jail. It is directed against the Marshal and Deputy Marshal of Winnfield, Louisiana, and the surety on the former’s bond.

The pertinent allegations of the petition are substantially as hereinafter stated.

While visiting in the Town of Winn-field, Winn Parish, Louisiana, on February 14, 1936, plaintiff, a resident of Grant Parish, Louisiana, was arrested by Herbert W. Bass and Oscar Barton, who are, respectively, “the duly elected, qualified and acting Marshal and Deputy Marshal of the Town of Winnfield, Louisiana, and were such for several months prior to February, 1936.” The charge lodged against him was that of being drunk. He was incarcerated in the parish jail, situated in that town, because the town jail was then undergoing repairs.

About 4 o’clock of the afternoon of the following day, while he and two negro prisoners were in the run-around or open part of the jail, located on the ground floor, the said Marshal Bass and Deputy Marshal Barton brought in one Benny Bratton and placed him in a cell adjoining the run-around; but they “carelessly, negligently and willfully failed to lock said Bratton in the cell, leaving your petitioner and the other prisoners free to be attacked and assaulted by said Bratton.” The latter was violently drunk and in a belligerent mood; “that said Bratton, your petitioner is informed, had just been arrested by said Marshal and Deputy Marshal for drunkenness and fighting; that at the time of said Bratton’s incarceration said marshal and deputy knew that said prisoner Bratton was in a dangerous condition and would if possible continue to fight and assault any person in reach if not restrained by being locked up in a cell of said jail, until the effects of alcoholism had passed away; that there were objects lying about on the lower floor of the said jail, of which said marshal and deputy had knowledge, which objects were bottles, pieces of iron, large sections of galvanized pipe, which said objects in the hands of one bent on mischief became deadly weapons, and could do great bodily harm and cause death.”

On the same afternoon, one Joe Massey was placed in jail by Deputy Marshal Barton. He “was likewise drunk and in. a belligerent mood, and in a condition wherein said Barton knew that he would likely launch an assault on any one he could reach.” Massey was not locked in a cell but was placed in the run-around. When Massey learned that Bratton was in jail and that his cell door was unlocked, he “entered into a conspiracy with said Bratton to assault your petitioner and the other prisoners' who were in the aforesaid run-around, and unprotected from such assault.”

Bratton and Massey then attacked and assaulted the aforementioned negro prisoners and plaintiff. “Without warning, provocation or for any justifiable reason whatever, said Bratton struck your petitioner a terrible blow in the face with an iron pipe or similar weapon, which said blow broke petitioner’s cheek bone on the right side of his face, and crushed it inward into his face.”

The “injury resulted because Marshal Bass and Deputy Marshal Barton placed said Bratton and Massey in jail in a drunken condition without locking them in a cell; that their failure to lock them in a cell was the grossest and most inex *850 cusable negligence; that they were likewise grossly negligent in permitting pieces of iron, galvanized pipe and bottles to lay about on the floor of said jail, which could be used as weapons.”

The National Surety Corporation issued a bond, “assuring and guaranteeing the well and faithful performance of said Herbert W. Bass in his duties and responsibilities as Marshal of the Town of Winnfield, Louisiana.”

Plaintiff prays for a solidary damage award as satisfaction for his injuries, against the said marshal, the deputy marshal and the surety, the claim against the first two named defendants being for $5,000, while that against the latter is for $1000.

It is elementary that the factual allegations of a petition must be accepted as true, and are controlling, for the purpose of disposing of an exception of no cause of action. With this principle of law in mind we shall first give consideration to the claim urged against the surety, remembering that the alleged wrongdoing of the marshal and deputy marshal was committed while they were acting in the capacity of peace officers.

The bond in question is made a part of the petition and a certified copy of it is in the record. We find therefrom that Herbert W. Bass, as principal, and the National Surety Corporation “are held and firmly bound unto Town of Winn-field, Louisiana, in the penalty of $1000.-00 * * The general condition of the obligation is declared to be “that if the said principal shall well and truly perform all the duties of his said office or position, and shall pay over and account for all funds coming into his hands by virtue of his said office or position as required by law, then this obligation shall be null and void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and virtue.” In addition to the foregoing, four certain expressed and particular conditions are stated in the instrument, the first of which relates to the surety’s right to cancel the bond on giving a designated notice to the Town of Winnfield, Louisiana, while the others pertain to the performance of civil duties and functions by the principal.

Our study of the instrument convinces us that the obligation provided protection only to the Town of Winnfield. The named municipality is the sole obligee mentioned therein.

The Supreme Court in Martin v. Magee et al., 179 La. 913, 155 So. 433, 434, decided in the year 1934, gave consideration to an issue somewhat similar to the one under consideration. In the opinion of that case, Chief Justice O’Niell states: “We are not aware of any decision rendered by this court on the question presented in this case. In other jurisdictions the rule is that no individual has a right of action on an official bond given by a police officer in favor of the municipality, for damages for injuries suffered at the hands of the officer while in the discharge of his official duties.”

He then quotes, and inferentially favors, the following statement found in 19 A.L.R. 73: “The majority of the few decisions upon the question of the right of an individual to maintain an action upon the bond of a peace officer running to the public, and conditioned upon the faithful performance of his duties as a guardian of the law, are to the effect that such an action cannot be maintained by a stranger to the contract, such as an individual member of the public, to recover damages or penalty for injuries sustained by him at the hands of the officer; at least, in the absence of legislation expressly giving him a right of action on the bond.”

In view of the referred to authority, and as no legislation authorizing the institution of a suit by an individual on such a bond has come to our attention, we hold that the exceptions filed by the defendant surety company were correctly sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 848, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honeycutt-v-bass-lactapp-1939.