McVay v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc.

148 So. 67, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1788
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1933
DocketNo. 14337.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 148 So. 67 (McVay v. New Orleans Public Service, 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
McVay v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc., 148 So. 67, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1788 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit for damages. It is brought on behalf of a minor child by a mother separated by judgment of court from the father. Under that judgment the care and custody of the minor was awarded to the mother.

Defendant challenges the right of the mother to represent the minor in this suit since there is in the petition no allegation to the effect that the mother has qualified as tu-trix. In the court below the exception to the capacity of the mother was maintained and the suit was dismissed.

Plaintiff asserts that, where parents are separated by judgment of court, that one to whom custody of the minor or minors has been judicially awarded is the proper representative of the minor or minors in all judicial proceedings. As supporting this view, plaintiff cites Walder v. Walder, 159 La. 231, 105 So. 300, 301.

In that ease Mrs. Walder had previously obtained against her husband a judgment of separation from bed and board, and under that judgment she was awarded the custody and care of the minor children. Later she entered into an agreement with her husband which had for its object the amicable division of the community which had existed between them, and also in that agreement so far as the children were concerned she stipulated “to maintain, support,, and educate them, and forever relieve their father, Gus Walder, of any and every obligation to support them.”

Thereafter she petitioned for a decree of divorce, and to her petition attached a copy of the agreement. Thereupon the following decree was rendered: “It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that Mrs. S. II. Wal-der, plaintiff, assume the support, maintenance, and education of her minor children, and that defendant, Gus Walder, be and he is hereby forever relieved of any and all legal obligation to support said children.”

Later, finding herself unable to support and educate the children, she instituted suit on her own behalf and allegedly as “natural tutrix” of her minor children, and in that suit she sought the nullity of that portion of the above-quoted decree which relieved the father from all obligation to support the minor children.

On exception to the capacity to represent the minors, it was shown that she had never qualified as natural tutrix of the minors, and that, in fact, under the law as it then existed, she could not qualify. Nevertheless she was permitted by the Supreme Court to proceed with the suit both in her own behalf and as representative of the minors.

There are, however, certain facts which appear in that case which distinguish it from the case now under consideration.

First and foremost, the judgment which she was seeking to annul was, so far. as tho children were concerned, an absolute nullity from the time it was rendered because it was based on an agreement to which the children were not and could not be parties. The court said that no suit was in fact necessary to annul a judgment which at no time had ever had any weight or effect. In that opinion is found the following language: “ ⅜ * * Plaintiff might have ignored the decree 'as being absolutely null and void, in so far as the minors are concerned.”

In the second place, that suit (for nullity) was between the same parties who had been parties to the suit in which had been rendered the decree sought to be annulled. It would have been anomalous indeed for the court to have said that the party to a suit in which a decree had been rendered had no capacity to stand in judgment in a later suit to annul that decree.

In the third place, there was no substantial lump sum amount involved in that case, but merely the right to compel the father to contribute from time to time to the support of his children. Here, if there is liability in defendant there will be a judgment for a considerable amount, and, when that judgment is paid, it will be paid to the mother who, if she be not required to qualify as tutrix, will receive it and may expend it as she sees fit, and the minors will not be protected as minors are, at least theoretically, protected when the tutor or tutrix is required to formally qualify.

In the Walder Case the mother, under the laws of Louisiana as they then were, could not qualify. The court said: “It was impossible for plaintiff to have so qualified, ⅜ * * because at the time of the institution of this suit, which was prior to the passage of Acts 72 and 196 of 1924, neither the father nor mother could qualify as tutor to their children, while both were alive, although the father and mother were divorced.”

Since the mother could not qualify as tu-trix and since she was in fact intrusted with the custody of the children, the court was presented with the distressing situation in which minors entitled to rights could not seek them in court because there was no one with the legal authority to represent them.

Since 1924 those laws to which the court referred have been amended, and now the parent who has been awarded the custody of minor children is entitled to qualify as nat *69 Ural tutor or tutrix. We use the words “is entitled to qualify” advisedly.

There were three statutes passed in 1924 all bearing on this question. They are No. 72, No. 74, and No. 196.

The pertinent portion of each reads as follows:

No. 72. “The minor not emancipated is placed under the authority of a tutor after the dissolution of the marriage of his father and mother or the separation from bed and board of either one of them from the other.”

No. 74. “In all cases of separation and of divorce the children shall be placed under the care of the party who.shall have obtained the separation or divorce unless the judge shall, for the greater advantage of the children, order that some or all of them shall be entrusted to the care of the other party. The party under whose care a child or children is placed, or to whose care a child or children has been entrusted, shall of right become natural tutor or tutrix of said child or children to the same extent and with the same effect as if the other party had died.”

No. 198. “Upon divorce or judicial separation from bed and board of parents, the tutorship of each minor child belongs of right to the parent under whose care he or she has been placed or to whose care he or she has been entrusted.”

It is contended that these statutes relieve the parent in such ease from the further duty of qualifying as tutor or tutrix and, of course, if that be true, then plaintiff here is entitled to proceed with this suit without' qualifying as tutrix.

Act No. 72, which amended article 246 of the Civil Code, throws little light on the question of whether such parent becomes automatically tutor or tutrix without taking any steps to qualify, though, by requiring that the minors’ affairs in such unfortunate situations be administered by a tutor, it would seem, in the absence of other legislation, that the framers of the act intended to use the word “tutor” or “tutrix” in its usual sense and intended that such tutor or tutrix should qualify, as was and is required in all other cases of tutorship.

It will be noted that the language of Act No. 74 is slightly different from that of Act No. 196.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 67, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcvay-v-new-orleans-public-service-inc-lactapp-1933.