McKellar v. Mason

159 So. 2d 700
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 1964
Docket1178
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 159 So. 2d 700 (McKellar v. Mason) 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
McKellar v. Mason, 159 So. 2d 700 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

159 So.2d 700 (1964)

Marvin W. McKELLAR, Sr., Individually and for Michael McKellar,
v.
Wallace H. MASON and Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Company.

No. 1178.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

January 6, 1964.
Rehearing Denied February 3, 1964.

Steven R. Plotkin and H. Charles Korn, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Sam Monk Zelden and Max Zelden, New Orleans, for Wallace H. Mason, defendant-appellee.

Hammett, Leake & Hammett, H. L. Hammett, New Orleans, for Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Co., defendant-appellee.

Before REGAN, SAMUEL and TURNER, JJ.

HENRY F. TURNER, Judge pro tem.

This suit in tort for personal injuries and related items of damage was filed by the plaintiff for himself and for the use and benefit of his minor son who was shot by the defendant, Mason. The defendants are Mason and his liability insurer. Both defendants deny liability on the grounds that the shooting was accidental and in self defense. The insurer also denies liability on the additional grounds that Mason's act in shooting was excluded under the provisions of its policy. There was judgment in the trial court in favor of the defendants *701 dismissing plaintiff's suit. Plaintiff has appealed.

At the time the incident occurred, Michael McKellar was 14 years of age and more than 5 feet 6 inches in height. He and his friend, Leo Schnell, one year younger and about the same height, had scaled a fence at the rear of Mason's property on Saturday, March 30, 1957, and stolen four or more homing pigeons from a coop in the back yard. The following Sunday, March 31, 1957, shortly before 7:15 p. m., a dark, rainy night, the two boys, both wearing dark raincoats, attempted to steal more of Mason's pigeons. Mason fired a 20 gauge shotgun three times from a second floor window of his home. Young Schnell was struck by No. 6 shot. He climbed the fence and left. McKellar was struck in the back by 00 buckshot. His injuries are so serious that he will be a paraplegic for the remainder of his life. The other shot struck a neighbor's garage on the neighbor's side of the rear fence.

After the shooting Mason telephoned the police. They advised him not to go into the yard. A patrolman, Charles Bird, and his partner arrived on the scene shortly thereafter. Bird received the call on the police radio at about 7:15 p. m. and was at the scene five minutes later. Drawing his gun and going into the yard to investigate, he found the McKellar boy lying on the ground approximately 4 feet from the rear of the back fence, 4 feet from the pigeon coop and 30 feet from the house. The boy was taken to a hospital in a police crash truck and Mason gave Bird a 20 gauge semi-automatic Remington shotgun and three empty cartridges, the gun and cartridges Mason had used in the shooting.

A detailed description of the premises involved becomes important. Mason, aged 64 at the time of the incident, and his wife, also in her 60's, lived in a two-story double house at 1711 Pauline Street in the City of New Orleans. The house contained a basement garage opening on Pauline Street and five-room living quarters on the second floor. The other half of the double was exactly the same and both upper residences could be reached by means of one set of steps in the center front. In addition to the garage doors on Pauline Street there were two other doors on the basement level of Mason's half of the house. One was at the back and the other was in the center of the side of the house. Inside the basement itself there was one set of stairs leading to the living quarters. At the top of these stairs was a door closing off the living quarters from the basement. The house was approximately 50 feet wide and 70 feet long, and there was a side yard 120 feet in depth. The width of the side yard was approximately 50 feet.

Mr. Mason raised racing homing pigeons as a hobby. He customarily kept a flock of between 35 and 40 birds, which he testified had a value of from $20.00 to $250.00 each. To house these pigeons he had built a metal coop with a trap door on the top and an entrance door on the right side facing the house. The pigeon coop was about 16 feet long, 10 feet wide and 7 feet high. It was located diagonally away from the house in the far rear corner of the back yard close to the rear and side fences. The yard was enclosed by a wire mesh fence, commonly referred to as a "Page" fence, 7 feet in height on the rear line, that part of the fence the boys had scaled in entering the yard, and 4 feet in height on the side lines.

The two boys testified that they had stolen several pigeons the previous night and on the night of the shooting had climbed the back fence and entered the yard for the purpose of stealing more pigeons. According to their testimony, they decided to leave when they saw that the pigeon coop was locked. They were several feet from the back fence going towards it when Schnell was struck by one of the shots, the first. McKellar was two or three steps behind Schnell, and he was hit by the buckshot. Both boys testified they did not hear anyone "hollow" to them before the shots were fired.

*702 Mason testified as follows: He did not know that any of his pigeons had been stolen on the previous Saturday night. On the night of the shooting he and his wife were in the front room watching television. He went to the rear of his home to close windows when it began to rain hard. After he had closed the back window of the rear room, a bedroom, he proceeded to close a side window in that room. In doing so he saw three figures with raincoats and slicker hats walking shoulder to shoulder coming from the back of the yard. He became frightened and got his gun, the shotgun, which he kept in the corner of the bedroom. It had been loaded since the close of the deer hunting season approximately three months previously. The three shotgun cartridges with which the gun was loaded were marked No. 6, but at least one was loaded with 00 buckshot (actually there appears to be little or no question that two of the shells were loaded with buckshot). During or before the deer season, he had reloaded several of the cartridges containing No. 6 shot with 00 buckshot. He called to the men to halt when they were at the pigeon house. They disappeared from his view, and he thought they were running towards the house. He was frightened for the life and the safety of his wife and himself because the basement doors were open and one of those doors was only 18 feet from the pigeon coop. He thought the men entered the house through a basement door. He fired three shots into the ground without intending to hit anyone. On two or three previous occasions some of his pigeons had been stolen. For the purpose of emphasis, we quote the testimony in which he stresses his fear:

"I became so frightened when I called them to halt and I didn't see them halt, I saw them disappear, I thought they were coming to my home, my basement doors were open, I was terribly frightened for the life of my wife and myself, I wasn't worried about my property. I didn't know what they were going to do to us so I called them to halt, when they didn't halt and disappeared I didn't know where they were. I started to shoot, they looked like they come this way and I shot that way, I didn't want to hit anybody."

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 2d 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckellar-v-mason-lactapp-1964.