McGuire v. Louisiana Baptist Encampment, Inc.

199 So. 192
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1940
DocketNo. 2149.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 199 So. 192 (McGuire v. Louisiana Baptist Encampment, Inc.) 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
McGuire v. Louisiana Baptist Encampment, Inc., 199 So. 192 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

Plaintiffs bring this suit against the defendants, the Louisiana Baptist Encampment, Inc., a non-trading corporation, and its president, Rev. G. Kearney Keegan, m solido, to recover damages to the amount of $30,500, for the death of their son, Lawrence Lesley McGuire, who was drowned in Lake Ponchartrain on August 20, 1938, while attending an encampment of defendant corporation.

*193 Plaintiffs allege that the defendant corporation, through its president, was negligent and did not take the proper precautions for the safety of the campers attending the encampment, thus resulting in the death by drowning of their son.

Defendants filed exceptions of no cause or right of action. The lower court sustained their exceptions in so far as Rev. Keegan was concerned and dismissed their suit as against him but overruled the exceptions as to the defendant corporation.

The defendant corporation then answered, denying that it was negligent in any manner, and averred that proper supervision and means of safety for the campers were provided. This defendant further averred, in the alternative, that plaintiff’s son was guilty of contributory negligence in that at the time of drowning he was on a boat ride on which he had deliberately gone, even after he had been definitely refused permission by persons in authority to go on such boat rides.

The plaintiffs asked for and obtained a trial by jury, and, after such trial on the merits, a verdict was returned for the defendant corporation, and a judgment was signed by the trial judge dismissing plaintiff’s suit. Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgments sustaining the exceptions to Rev. Keegan and on the merits in favor of the defendant corporation.

The plaintiffs contend that their decision to send their children to the encampment was based upon the representations as set out by defendant corporation, its president, Rev. Keegan, and by Rev. Scharfen-stein. their local pastor, both orally and by means of pamphlets They allege that defendants were guilty of negligence in failing to provide adequate measures for the safety of their minor son and that this negligence was the proximate cause of the death of their son. The acts of omission and commission and the gross negligence charged in the petition consist of the following: “(a) In failing to have a lifeguard on duty when the children went in swimming, (b) In permitting the encampment grounds to be without proper supervision, (c) In permitting the son of petitioners to use or make it possible for him to use a skiff without proper supervision, (d) In not providing a roped-off area or safety zone for swimming, (e) In not having the grounds of the encampment patrolled to keep children from going out without permission, (f) In failing to avail themselves of the knowledge that a skiff was on the grounds and use the necessary precaution to keep the children and particularly petitioners’ son from using same, (g) In representing that the water was shallow, as above set forth.”

In support of the exception filed on behalf of Rev. Keegan, this defendant claims that an officer of a corporation is not responsible for torts of the corporation unless that officer is guilty of malfeasance. They claim that he is never personally liable where he is guilty of only acts of nonfeasance or omission. They claim that he is not even guilty of acts of nonfeasance, much less malfeasance.

Plaintiffs and defendants have treated the exceptions and the merits together in their discussion and we shall do likewise.

The McGuire boy, a little over 15 years old, was drowned when he and another boy, Jack Stark, took four young girls out on the lake in a skiff for a boat ride. Rev. Keegan, the day before the drowning of young McGuire, had given permission to one Calvin Bains to obtain a boat for the purpose of taking pictures of the encampment. Calvin Bains was accompanied by Jack Stark and Bobby Bains in obtaining the boat at Mandeville; after the boat was obtained, it was anchored, hidden from view of the campers, in a little bayou or cove some 50 to 150 feet from the entrance to the encampment grounds.

Early in the morning of the day of the drowning, before breakfast was served, Jack Stark and young McGuire, without securing permission from the encampment authorities, took this boat and went out on the lake for a boat ride and returned and anchored the boat in the same place. After their breakfast, they sought permission in the mid-forenoon to take out two girls for a ride in the boat. They asked permission of two or three persons and were refused; there is a conflict on this point as one of the girls testified that they did have permission to make this second trip from a third person who was asked, Mrs. Santo. However, Mrs. Santo denies that any such permission was granted by her and she is supported in her denial by at least two other witnesses. In any event, whether or not the party got permission to take this boat ride in the morning is of no great importance as nothing happened to the young people on that trip and they returned safely and again anchored the boat in the same place. The only purpose we can see that plaintiff had in showing that this trip was made with the *194 pei-mission of someone in authority in the encampment was to show the lack of precautions taken for the safety of these young people and probably to show that these two boys, Stark and McGuire, either got permission or assumed that there would be no objection to their taking a third trip in the boat in the afternoon.

In the afternoon of the same day, shortly after two o’clock, young Stark and McGuire got up a party of three or four girls, including McGuire’s sister, some two or three years younger than he, and these five or six young people, ranging in age from twelve or thirteen years to sixteen or seventeen years of age, without getting permission from anyone, went out of the encampment enclosure by stepping over or going through a wire fence not far from the place where the boat was anchored and got in the boat and went out on the lake for a ride. Young Stark and McGuire had on their bathing suits under their other clothes. While Stark could swim fairly well, young McGuire could swim very little.

After getting out into the lake, these two boys pulled off their top -clothing and got into the water close around the skiff two or three times. When the boat was out some distance from the shore — estimated from a quarter of a mile to more than a mile — the boys again got in the water which at that point was several feet deep. In some manner, young McGuire got too far away from the boat and could not hold onto the boat, was unable to swim back to the boat and was drowned. The body was not discovered until two or three days later.

There were from 500 to 700 campers attending the encampment, but on the day of the. accident most of these had gone to New Orleans on a sight-seeing trip, leaving 150 or so at the encampment. The day was known as a “Free Day” because there were no classes and the regular program was not carried out. The encampment is conducted for training and recreation among those of the Baptist faith who attend. The attendance is secured by articles printed in the Baptist paper, by pamphlets printed by the Booster’s Club, and by announcements by the pastors from the various church pulpits.

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Bluebook (online)
199 So. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguire-v-louisiana-baptist-encampment-inc-lactapp-1940.