Jones v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.

51 So. 582, 125 La. 542, 1910 La. LEXIS 509
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 14, 1910
DocketNo. 17,937
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 51 So. 582 (Jones v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Texas & P. Ry. Co., 51 So. 582, 125 La. 542, 1910 La. LEXIS 509 (La. 1910).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

Plaintiff sues in. damages for the value of two of his mules, alleged to have been negligently run over and killed by a locomotive of the defendant company. One of the mules died immediately. The other survived two months. Both the district court and the Court of Appeal found defendant responsible, and fixed the value of the mules at $300, or $150 apiece. The suit was filed more than one year after the accident, but less than one year after the death of the mule which survived. Defendant pleaded the prescription of one year, and both courts sustained it as to the first mule, and overruled it as to' the second. Only the latter ruling is here for review.

The facts are that the mule died as a result of the accident, but that the serious nature of his injuries was not known until revealed by his death. I-Ie was not even lamed, although he manifested a disinclination or disability to move faster than in a walk. He was struck on the hip, receiving a wound supposed to be a mere flesh wound. He was treated for a few days for this wound, and was then led to pasture, two miles away, and there left to get well. Instead of getting well, he died. The question is as to whether the prescription runs from the time of the accident, or only from the death of the mule.

Article 3537, Civ. Code, provides that the prescription “runs from the day the damages were sustained.” In the cases of Mestier v. Railroad Co., 16 La. Ann. 354, De Lizardi v. N. O. Banking Co., 25 La. Ann. 416, Hotard v. Railroad Co., 36 La. Ann. 450, Heath v. Railroad Co., 37 La. Ann. 728, and numerous others to be found in our Reports, it was held that the prescription runs from the day the damages were sustained, not. from the day of the wrongful act. The reason is that, in order that there should be a cause of action for damages ex delicto, two things must concur: First, a wrongful act; and, secondly, a loss or prejudice resulting from the wrongful act. The wrongful act itself does not suffice. It must be followed by a loss or prejudice. It is the combination of the two which gives rise to the cause of action ; and as the damage cannot precede, but must needs come after, the wrongful act, the prescription runs from it, and not from the wrongful act. And, of course, until a cause of action has come into existence, prescription cannot run on it. Laurent, vol. 32, No. 20; Hernandez v. Montgomery, 2 Mart. (N. S.) 422, 433; Gueno v. Soumastre, 1 La. Ann. 44.

Defendant’s learned counsel argue that in the instant case the damage must be considered to have been sustained at the time of the accident, because the mule never recovered, but from that time was of no value. The answer is that, while the damage was, as a matter of fact, sustained at that time, for the value of the mules was totally destroyed from that moment, it was not sustained, as a matter of law, until the death of the mule, because the fact of its having been sustained was not until then susceptible of ascertainment. In law, things which are [545]*545not susceptible of ascertainment are considered as not existing. “De non apparentibus et non existentibus eadem est ratio.” Until by the death of the mule- the damage had been revealed, or, to use the legal term, had been made certain, plaintiff had no cause of action' for it. Until then, it was at best uncertain, contingent, speculative; and nothing is better settled in the law of damages than that a damage of that character does not give rise to a cause of action. 8 A. & E. E. of L, 608, and Louisiana decisions there cited.

A damage can be considered to have been sustained, within the meaning of article 3537, supra, only when it has manifested itself with sufficient certainty to be susceptible of proof in a court of justice.

“Although the action has accrued (soit ouverte), so long as it cannot be usefully prosecuted, prescription does not run. The reason is that prescription is founded on the negligence of the creditor; and a creditor cannot be held to have been negligent in bringing his suit, so long as it was not possible for him to bring it usefully.” Pothier, Prescription, No. 37.

Had plaintiff brought this suit before the death of the mule, a complete defense would have been that, for all that was known, the mule was as valuable as ever, barring the flesh wound, which would, doubtless, soon be healed. Until the fatal nature of the mule’s injury revealed itself, therefore, plaintiff had no cause of action, and prescription did not run.

That a damage thus hidden, or not developed, does not in legal contemplation exist, finds abundant illustration in the numerous cases in France where parties, after having recovered in a first suit the damages then known to have been suffered from the tort, were permitted to recover in a second suit the damages subsequently appearing, whose existence could not be known at the time of the first suit.. See Carpentier and Du Saint, Repertoire de Juris. Vo. Chose Jugee, Nos. 439, 440, 442; Vo. Chemin de Fer, Nos. 4315, 4316, from which we translate as follows:

“The rule by which a cause subsequent to the judgment justifies a new suit has given occasion to a number of interesting decisions in" the matter of damages. Thus it has been decided that a person who has obtained damages for wounds caused by an accident, can thereafter demand damages because of the aggravation of the effects of the same accident [citing a number .of decisions]. Two suits for damages caused by the same tort will at times present but one and the same question for decision, and at times will present two different questions. At first blush, the two suits would appear to be always founded upon the same cause, the tort; but it is entirely possible that they should be founded upon two different causes. The cause of the right to damages does not consist alone in the wrongful act with which the defendant is charged, but also in the loss or prejudice which has resulted from the act. The reunion of these two circumstances is necessary in order that there should be an offense or quasi offense. Now the aggravation of the prejudice is a new circumstance or event, which constitutes a new cause such as may serve as the basis for a second suit. However it has to be considered whether, in estimating the damages in the first suit, the court has not taken into consideration this possible aggravation and fixed the damages accordingly.”

Prom the note to the decision of the Court of Cassation in the case of Chemin de Per’ du Midi c. Paraire, Journal du Palais, 1877, p. 281, we translate as follows:

“The rule to which we have just referred must be judiciously applied. Due care must be taken not to confound the future and uncertain prejudice which cannot serve as the basis for judgment, and the damage which, although destined to be suffered only in the future, does none the less exhibit in the present a degree of certainty and actuality which justifies its being made the basis of judgment.”

In other words, in order that prescription should run, it is not required that the loss should have been already suffered, but only that the fact that it is going to be suffered, or is. sure to result, should be sufficiently certain to serve as a basis for a claim of damages in court.

There is nothing contrary to this in the case of Griffin v. Drainage Co., 110 La. 840, 34 South. 799. The point there decided was that, where the injury to a house from an [547]

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 582, 125 La. 542, 1910 La. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-texas-p-ry-co-la-1910.