Kline v. Dawson

89 So. 2d 385, 230 La. 901
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 29, 1956
Docket42789
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 89 So. 2d 385 (Kline v. Dawson) 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
Kline v. Dawson, 89 So. 2d 385, 230 La. 901 (La. 1956).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

This is a suit for workmen’s compensation arising out of an accident occurring on April 19, 1954, in which plaintiff suffered serious personal injuries in the performance of his duties as a caterpillar tractor operator for his brother, Joseph Kline, who was engaged in the logging business. It is undisputed that his employment was hazardous and that his brother, as his immediate employer, would be liable to him for compensation. However, this action, as will hereafter be explained, is directed against, among others, Central Surety & Insurance Corporation, the workmen’s compensation carrier of the C. W. Dawson Lumber Company, a commercial partnership operating a sawmill in New Roads, Louisiana. The theory of plaintiff’s cause of action is that the lumber company hired his brother to haul certain logs which it had purchased from Victor Negocia (or Nicosia) to its sawmill at New Roads, and that, therefore, his brother was either an employee of the lumber company (with authority to hire plaintiff to assist him) or an independent contractor, the lumber company being liable for workmen’s compensation under R.S. 23:1061 in the latter instance.

The main defense of the insurance company and the other defendants on the merits is that the C. W. Dawson Lumber Company is not liable because no relationship of either employer and employee or of hirer and independent contractor existed between it and plaintiff’s brother, Joseph Kline, and that it merely purchased the logs from Joseph Kline, to be delivered by him at its mill in New Roads.

After hearing the evidence, the judge sustained the position of the defendants and *907 dismissed the suit. 1 On appeal, the Court of Appeal for the First Circuit, by a two-to-one decision, reached the same conclusion as the district judge but amended the judgment appealed from by dismissing the suit on its merits rather than on an exception of no right of action. See Kline v. Dawson, La.App., 84 So.2d 76. We granted certiorari and the case has been submitted for decision.

Upon the date of its submission, counsel for defendants moved to dismiss the writ of review on the ground that no brief had been filed in this Court on behalf of plaintiff. This motion is without substance for the reason, among others, that plaintiff filed a brief in support of his cause shortly after the case was submitted for decision. Nevertheless, counsel for defendants insist, in a supplemental brief, that the case is governed by Rule X and not by Section 3 of Rule XIII of the Rules of this Court, largely because plaintiff has been designated by his counsel in the brief filed on his behalf as “appellant”, and that, therefore, plaintiff’s brief was submitted too late to meet the necessary requirements.

This contention is groundless. The case is before this court on a writ of review and not on appeal. Section 3 of Rule XIII of the Rules of this Court is therefore applicable. It provides:

“When a writ of certiorari or review, or alternative writ of mandamus or prohibition, etc., or rule nisi, has been granted, the case shall be assigned for submission on the return day fixed by the court, without oral argument, and on such printed briefs as the parties see fit to file.”

Thus, although it was highly desirable and in conformity with good practice that plaintiff file a brief in support of his cause, he was not obliged to do so. White v. Sharp, 220 La. 928, 57 So.2d 898, cited by counsel for defendants, is not apposite. That case was before this court on appeal and had been assigned for oral argument. Hence, the procedure for its disposition was that provided by Section 6 of Rule X of the Rules of Court.

Before we consider plaintiff’s claim on its merits, we find it necessary to dispose of certain exceptions filed by some of the defendants in limine which are reurged in this court by their counsel. In plaintiff’s original petition, judgment was sought only against C. W. Dawson, doing business as *909 C. W. Dawson Lumber Company. C. W. Dawson filed an exception of no cause or right of action to this petition, alleging that he was not doing business as C. W. Dawson Lumber Company and that C. W. Dawson Lumber Company was a legal entity, entirely separate and apart from him. Before this exception was tried, plaintiff filed a supplemental petition in which he named as defendants C. W. Dawson, Robert C. Dawson, Jr., J. Wilbur Dawson and Vallery W. Dawson, “business partners doing business under the partnership name of C. W. Dawson Lumber Company”, and also Central Surety & Insurance Corporation, alleged to be the compensation insurer of the aforementioned defendants, either individually or in combination. C. W. Dawson and Robert C. Dawson, Jr., excepted to this supplemental petition, asserting that neither was a partner in the partnership known as C. W. Dawson Lumber Company. And, joined by J. Wilbur Dawson and Vallery W. Dawson, they further excepted on the ground that, since plaintiff had not sued and cited the partnership known as C. W. Dawson Lumber Company, no right or cause of action had been stated against the individual partners of the concern. Meanwhile, all named defendants filed answers to the petition reserving their rights under the pleadings.

When the case was called for trial, the exceptions were argued orally. No action was required on C. W. Dawson’s exceptions to the original petition in view of plaintiff’s allegation in his supplemental petition that C. W. Dawson Lumber Company was a partnership. However, as to the exceptions filed by the four Dawsons, the trial judge ruled that, as C. W. Dawson Lumber Company had been named in the original petition, although not sued or cited as a partnership, its individual members could properly be made parties to the suit. The exceptions filed by C, W. Dawson and Robert C. Dawson, Jr., predicated on the proposition that they were not members of the partnership, were referred to the merits but, after the case had been partially heard, pláintiff voluntarily dismissed the suit as against them.

After the case had been concluded on the merits and the suit dismissed, plaintiff took a devolutive appeal against C. W. Dawson Lumber Company, Robert C. Dawson, J. Wilbur Daivson, Vallery W. Dawson and Central Surety & Insurance Corporation. The latter answered the appeal, asking that the judgment be amended by rejecting plaintiff’s demand on the merits. J. Wilbur Dawson and Vallery W. Dawson also answered, contending that the judgment should be amended by sustaining the exception of no cause of action previously filed by them or, alternatively, by the rejection of plaintiff’s demand on the merits. In view of its conclusion that plaintiff had no case on the merits against C. W. Dawson Lumber Company, the Court of Appeal found it unnecessary to consider the multiple pleadings and *911 the exceptions filed thereto. Following the adverse judgment of the Court of Appeal, plaintiff applied for a rehearing, which was refused by the court, and then he made timely application to this Court for the writ, which was granted.

Counsel for defendants are initially contending that, since plaintiff in his application for a rehearing prayed for a judgment against “C. W.

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 2d 385, 230 La. 901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-dawson-la-1956.