Matthews v. Gremillion

174 So. 703, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 253
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 1937
DocketNo. 5443.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 So. 703 (Matthews v. Gremillion) 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
Matthews v. Gremillion, 174 So. 703, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 253 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Defendant Mrs. Alice C. Gremillion, individually and as tutrix of her minor son, Field V. Gremillion, Jr., appealed from a judgment condemning her to pay to plaintiff the sum of $6,500 as damages resulting from a compound comminuted fracture of the femur bone of his left leg, caused by the kick of a mare, the property of said widow and heirs of the late Dr. F. V. Gremillion, deceased, which animal at the time of the injury was being ridden by said minor. The accident occurred on the morning of April 23, 1936, at a dipping vat near the town of Pineville, La.

The petition declares that plaintiff carried his mule to said vat for the purpose of having him dipped, as was then required by law, and on arriving there he discovered a large number of persons had preceded him with their stock and were in the act of dipping them or were awaiting an opportunity to do so; that as he was in no hurry to have his own mule dipped, he took a position some 30 yards from the vat’s inclosure to wait until the rush had ceased ; that after tarrying there for a while, he observed young Gremillion and another young man ride up on spirited saddle horses, who apparently had come there to have their mounts dipped, but instead of quietly waiting their turn near the vat, as all others were doing, they proceeded to ride up and down the road nearby and cause their horses to prance in and out among the waiting people; that in the course of these maneuvers, they rode very close to petitioner, so close once or twice that he feared they would run over him, but he held his position and mule, awaiting a favorable opportunity to dip him. He then alleges:

“Petitioner shows that finally one of the said boys, Field Gremillion, Jr., after riding back and forth among the people unneces *704 sarily, rode his horse directly up to petitioner and, as he neared petitioner, wheeled his horse around so that the horse’s heels were directly toward petitioner; that then the said Field Gremillion, Jr., either kicked or spurred the horse in the flank and the horse immediately kicked out behind him, striking petitioner’s 'left leg and knocking him to the ground.
“Petitioner shows that the acts of the said Field V. Gremillion, Jr., as herein-above set forth, constituted negligence which renders him liable to petitioner for the resulting injuries; that Mrs. Alice C. Gremillion, the mother of said minor, is likewise responsible to petitioner for the tortious act of her minor son who resides with her and is under her parental authority and control; that the sole and only cause of said injuries to petitioner was the negligent action of the said Field V. Gremillion, Jr., as above mentioned, and that petitioner did in no manner whatsoever contribute thereto.”

Defendant admits the ownership of the mare, as alleged, and that plaintiff was injured by a kick from her at the time and place set forth, when mounted by her said minor son. Liability for the results of the accident are denied, as well as the charges of negligence made against the said minor son. She further alleges that her said son and his cousin, Ben Gremillion, each mounted, drove a cow to said dipping vat early on the morning of April 23d for the purpose of having the three animals dipped, and after they were dipped, all were left hitched away from the inclosures so that the dip solution would drain from their bodies; that while waiting for their horses to dry, said Gremillion boys, at the request of some of the dippers, resaddled their horses and went in search of a cow of some third person which had escaped from the vat pen; that said cow was driven back and into the pen, and thereafter Field Gremillion turned his horse to return home “and that the said horse in passing from near the dipping vat gate to the graveled road which leads to Pineville, for some unaccountable and unforeseen reason, as he passed by where the plaintiff stood, kicked out and struck plaintiff’s left leg with his rear foot.”

It is further alleged that the unfortunate accident was the result of an unforeseeable occurrence and act on the part of said horse and, “insofar as these defendants are concerned, could not by any reasonable act on their part have been avoided.”

In the alternative, it is alleged that plaintiff was negligent in standing too close to the gate of the dipping vat pen and in not keeping the proper lookout and moving or protecting himself from animals going into and out of said pen; that he stood approximately between said gate and the only public road which leads to or by said vat, which is approximately 50 yards from the entrance gate .of the vat pen; and that his negligence in these respects contributed to the accident and bars recovery by him.

Appellee prays for an increase in the judgment to $10,300, while appellants, in the alternative, urge us to reduce same to $2,000.

Appellants’ ingenuous counsel propounds correctly the paramount question in the case:

“Since there is no evidence in this record other than that the horse involved was a gentle and peaceable animal and had never been known to kick of attempt to injure anyone previously, the only possible ground upqn which the plaintiff could hope to recover any damages here is that young Gre-million at the time, or just preceding the time this horse kicked Mr. Matthews, was riding or handling the horse in an unreasonable, imprudent and negligent manner, and that some act of Mr. Gremillion at that time was the" moving proximate cause of the horse suddenly and unexpectedly kicking out as it did and injuring Mr. Matthews.”

The record abundantly establishes the qualities of the mare to have been as they are described in this quotation from counsels’ brief. Notwithstanding this, a horse possessing such tractable qualities may be so handled and directed by its rider as to degenerate into an agency for harm and injury, although left to its own volition it would willfully do no harm to persons. In such circumstances, the general rule applicable to vicious animals has no relevancy. Counsel of both sides extensively discuss and quote from decisions involving this principle.

The dipping vat and attached pens are 50 yards from and parallel to a graveled highway leading from Pineville to Marks-ville. Dipped stock are detained for a few minutes in the east pen to allow the solution to drip and run back into the vat. Stock intended to be dipped are driven into the next pen to the west through a gate on its east side into which pen opens the chute leading into the vat on the north side of the pen. Many hundred head of cattle and horses *705 were dipped every fourteen days at this vat while the federal and state crusade to rid the country of the Texas fever tick was in progress. Early on the morning of the accident, Field V. Gremillion, Jr., and his cousin, Ben Gremillion, each rode a horse owned by the widow and heirs of Dr. Gremillion, to the vat. These were dipped promptly on arrival and then led outside of the enclosure to dry. After the lapse of a few minutes, some one announced that a yearling had escaped from the vat pen, and the two Gremil-lions at once resaddled their horses and went in search of the refractory animal. She was soon found and driven hastily back toward the pen.

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 703, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-gremillion-lactapp-1937.