Levesque v. Saba

402 So. 2d 266
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 1981
Docket11698
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 402 So. 2d 266 (Levesque v. Saba) 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
Levesque v. Saba, 402 So. 2d 266 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

402 So.2d 266 (1981)

Gaston LEVESQUE and Myrtle Levesque
v.
Milton R. SABA.

No. 11698.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 21, 1981.

*267 Kronlage, Dittmann & Maselli, New Orleans, Joseph Maselli, Jr., New Orleans, for Gaston Levesque, et al., plaintiff-appellee.

Raymond S. Childress, Metairie, for Milton R. Saba, defendant-appellant.

Thomas E. Loehn, New Orleans, for First of Georgia Underwriters Insurance Co., third party defendant-appellee.

Before SAMUEL, SCHOTT and GARRISON, JJ.

*268 SAMUEL, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Gaston Levesque, filed this wrongful death and survival suit against defendant, Milton R. Saba, for damages resulting from defendant's fatal shooting of their son on December 30, 1976.

Defendant answered, denying liability to plaintiffs, and filed a third party demand against the New Orleans Police Department and the City of New Orleans, alleging negligence of the police department in failing to locate the body of plaintiff's son in time to save his life. Defendant also filed a third party demand against First of Georgia Underwriter's Insurance Company, his home owner's liability insurer. Thereafter, plaintiffs added First of Georgia and the City of New Orleans as defendants.

The matter was tried to a jury, which found the defendant had used undue force in shooting the decedent. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs and against the defendant, Saba, in the amounts of $50,000 ($25,000 each) for loss of love and affection of their son, $3,500 for reimbursement of funeral expenses, and $5,000 for pain and suffering sustained by decedent prior to his death. In response to specific written interrogatories, the jury found defendant had intentionally shot decedent, thus excluding coverage under the policy, and judgment was rendered in favor of the original and third party defendant, First of Georgia. In addition, a directed verdict was granted by the judge in favor of the City of New Orleans and the New Orleans Police Department, dismissing those original and third party defendants.

The defendant, Saba, has appealed. In this court he contends: (1) The trial court erred in finding he had "used undue force in defending himself against the attack of the decedent" and in finding his actions "were `intentional' within the scope of the insurance policy issued to him" by First of Georgia; and, alternatively, (2) the award is excessive.

The record reflects the only eye witnesses to the shooting were defendant and decedent. Defendant testified:

He and decedent were shareholders in a corporation which owned a trailer park in Kenner, Louisiana. Serious disputes arose between them, foreclosure was filed by the holder of the mortgage on the trailer park, and the corporation was judicially dissolved. He received a telephone call from decedent, requesting that he meet decedent on December 30, 1976 in order to sign documents to completely wind up the liquidation. The intended meeting place was decedent's place of employment at the office of the Small Business Administration in a New Orleans building known as the Plaza Towers. He met decedent in the Small Business Administration's office on the 17th floor of the building and, for reasons not explained, the two proceeded in the elevator to the 19th floor, which he later learned was totally vacant.

As he and decedent exited the elevator on the 19th floor, decedent threatened to kill him and struck him several times. The first blow struck by decedent temporarily blinded him. He drew a pistol, which he had brought with him because he feared decedent, and shot three times in the direction from which the blows were coming. When he regained his eyesight, he saw decedent lying wounded on the floor, told decedent to ask God's forgiveness, and pushed the down button on the elevator to seek help.

He found himself in the lobby of the Plaza Tower without access to a telephone. He did not know why he did not stop at decedent's office on the 17th floor but, because his automobile was just outside the building, he got into it in order to reach a telephone at a service station near the office building. However, when he arrived at the anticipated location of the service station, it was no longer there.

At that moment he realized he was only a short distance from the office of an attorney who represented him in a personal injury suit, so he proceeded immediately to his attorney's office. He spoke to his attorney's associate, and an anonymous telephone call was placed by the attorney's secretary to the New Orleans Police Department *269 informing it that a shooting had taken place in the Plaza Tower office building. The telephone call was placed no more than five minutes after the shooting, but the exact location of the shooting was not given the police. When he left the 19th floor of the Plaza Tower decedent was conscious and in pain.

He was deathly afraid of the decedent, and that was the reason he brought the gun with him when he went to the Plaza Tower. He knew decedent lifted weights as a hobby, and was physically strong. Decedent had beaten him on at least one occasion, and had threatened bodily harm to the mortgage holder who foreclosed on the trailer park.

Plaintiffs offered the testimony of Joseph Miceli, a detective of the Homicide Division of the New Orleans Police Department who investigated the shooting. Miceli testified:

The first notification to the police department of a shooting at the Plaza Tower was received by the Police Department at 10:33 a. m., and was anonymous. Police went to the building, but because they were not given a definite location for the shooting, they did not discover decedent's body. At 1 p. m. that day Miceli was instructed to go to the office of defendant's attorney to investigate the shooting. He and the attorney went to the Plaza Tower building and eventually discovered decedent's body at 1:45 p. m. on the 19th floor.

He saw defendant on the same day between 2:30 and 3 o'clock in the afternoon. At that time defendant appeared to be nervous, but the only indication that he had been in a fight was a bruise on the inside of his lip. No other cuts or abrasions were visible to him, and the mug shot taken by the police on that day and introduced into evidence likewise indicates no evidence of trauma to defendant.

He did not observe powder burns on decedent's clothing and, based on his experience gained in investigating approximately 800 shooting deaths in nine years, a gun would have to be about 3 feet from the shooting victim to leave power burns on his clothing.

Defendant corroborated his testimony that he was beaten by decedent with the testimony of Gertrude Parker, a resident of the trailer park formerly owned by defendant and decedent. She testified defendant attempted to collect rent from her, and at that time decedent ran up to defendant and began striking him about the back in a forceful manner. Defendant did not attempt to fight back, but merely pleaded with decedent to refrain from hitting him and discuss the matter like gentlemen.

Defendant also called James A. Malinda, holder of the mortgage on the trailer park formerly owned by decedent and defendant. Malinda testified the mortgage payments were overdue, and he referred the matter to his attorney to institute foreclosure proceedings. Thereafter decedent telephoned him, called him and his wife vile names, and threatened both their lives if Malinda did not stop the foreclosure. He also testified that at the trial of those proceedings the decedent grabbed him in the restroom and threatened to kill him.

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Bluebook (online)
402 So. 2d 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levesque-v-saba-lactapp-1981.