Milton v. T. J. Moss Tie Co.

20 So. 2d 570, 1944 La. App. LEXIS 51
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 1944
DocketNo. 6769.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 So. 2d 570 (Milton v. T. J. Moss Tie Co.) 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
Milton v. T. J. Moss Tie Co., 20 So. 2d 570, 1944 La. App. LEXIS 51 (La. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Plaintiff's husband, A.D. Milton, was killed by Willard Thomas, a fellow workman, on February 4, 1943, while they were in the discharge of their respective duties under contracts of employment with defendant, T. J. Moss Tie Company. She sues in her own behalf and as the mother of Orange and Flora D. Milton, aged, respectively, six and two years, issue of her marriage to the deceased, to recover workmen's compensation as in such case provided. The employer and the carrier of its compensation insurance, Consolidated Underwriters, are impleaded as defendants. The pleadings limit the controverted issues to two, viz:

1. That the accident (killing of the deceased) did not arise out of nor in the course of his employment; and,

2. In the alternative, that "his death * * * was the result of a fight or *Page 571 brawl in which he was the aggressor", and, therefore, recovery is barred under the provisions of paragraph 1 of Section 28 of the Employers' Liability Act, Act No. 20 of 1914, which reads as follows: "That no compensation shall be allowed for an injury caused (1) by the injured employee's wilful intention to injure himself or to injure another, * * *."

Plaintiff was awarded judgment for herself and children for a period of 300 weeks, at $11.37 per week. Defendants after unsuccessful effort to procure a new trial, appealed to this court.

The defendant employer operates a small sawmill in Bossier Parish, at which the deceased and his slayer were working at the time of the slaying. Only two persons of the more than one-half dozen at the scene of the tragedy gave testimony in the case. They are the slayer and a white man named Frank Clark. Their testimony is wholly contradictory and irreconcilable.

The record is barren of any testimony that to any extent, in our opinion, reveals the true cause of the homicide. The facts of each version of the slaying are such as to create the belief that there were pre-existing enmity and bad feeling between these two negroes. The killing is inexplicable on any other theory.

A brief time prior to the slaying the carriage of the mill got off of the tracks and T.J. Shaw, an employee, assisted by some laborers, was endeavoring to put the car back when the slaying occurred. Clark testified that his duty was to operate the edger which had temporarily stopped running. He was standing at one end of the edger, thirty feet from the killing when it occurred at the other end. It was the duty of the deceased and Thomas to keep slabs cleared away so as not to interfere with the edger's free running. Thomas, the slayer, used an axe to trim slabs.

Clark further testified that the deceased worked hard to keep the slabs out of the way and walked close to where Thomas was standing with an axe in his hand. This witness is hard of hearing. He did not hear any words, if any, passed between the men. He saw Thomas raise the axe and strike deceased on the left side of his head, severing the left car. The deceased fell forward to the ground. Death was almost instantaneous. Clark also testified that when he asked Thomas why he killed the man, his reply was that he "cussed" him. He further stated that when the deceased was struck he was facing Thomas with both arms by his side.

Thomas testified that after completion of stacking an accumulation of slabs and ties, he stepped across the roller bed, some twenty feet distant, and got a drink of water and when on his return he had gotten back to the edger table, the deceased addressed him and began to curse and verbally abuse him; that the deceased stepped backward, began to pull off his gloves and then advancing, declared he would cut his, Thomas', head off; that he was then "in hand reach of me * * *; I reached and got the axe and struck him." He says that the deceased had nothing in his hand but was "in the form of getting his knife". He explains this by saying: "By starting his hands in his pocket." He says he knew the deceased regularly carried a knife. He further stated that prior to this time he and the deceased had not had any trouble of any sort.

Whether or not the slaying of one fellow workman by another while in the performance of their duties can be classed as an accident, under any circumstances, arising out of the deceased's employment, has many times been tendered to different courts for decisions. The decisions, even those of the courts of Louisiana, are far from uniform on the subject.

This court in Phelps v. United Carbon Company, reported in 8 La. App. 128, denied compensation. The facts showed that bad feeling arising from family troubles, had existed between the deceased and his slayer, employees of defendant, prior to the killing, which happened while both were at work. The Supreme Court denied a writ of review in the case. This decision was virtually overruled by this court in the case of Keyhea v. Woodard-Walker Lumber Company, Inc., reported in 147 So. 830, decided some six years thereafter. The facts of the Keyhea case are quite similar to those found in the Phelps case. The Supreme Court denied a writ in the Keyhea case also. The Court of Appeal, First Circuit, in Millspaugh v. Opelousas Cotton Gin Company, Inc., 19 La. App. 78, 139 So. 666, ruled as we did in the Keyhea case.

In the case of Pickett et al. v. Southern Carbon Company, decided by this court, and reported in 7 La. App. 296, it was held, as reflected from the syllabus, that: "The *Page 572 allegations of petition of widow of dead employee that husband was murdered after he was called from his work by one not connected with defendant's business, do not show a cause of action under the Workmen's Compensation Act No. 20 of 1914 as amended, because there is no causal connection between deceased's employment and the injury he received which caused his death."

The Supreme Court in Conaway v. Marine Oil Company, Ltd.,162 La. 147, 110 So. 181, held: "Accidental shooting of foreman at gasoline station, by fellow employee, held not compensable as an accident 'arising out of and in course of employment,' under Employers' Liability Act (Act No. 20 of 1914), § 1, par. 2, and section 2, as re-enacted by Act No. 38 of 1918."

This court requested instructions from the Supreme Court in Ferguson v. Cady-McFarland Gravel Company, reported in156 La. 871, 101 So. 248, and was advised and it was held that: "A track employé who, while at work in a stooping position, was struck on the head with an iron instrument in the hands of a fellow employé, held injured by accident 'arising out of and in course of employment,' within Employers' Liability Act."

[1] This case, in principle, cannot be differentiated from that at bar. In its opinion, the Supreme Court approvingly referred to Dyer et al. v. Rapides Lumber Company, reported in154 La. 1091, 98 So. 677, and to Myers v. Louisiana Railway Navigation Company, reported in 140 La. 937, 74 So. 256.

In the Dyer case it was held that:

"Where an employé while making a fire in defendant's engine at night in an isolated locality, was shot and killed by unknown parties, held that the accident arose out of and in the course of his employment within the workmen's compensation statute.

"Where a workman is exposed to some risk manifestly necessitated by his employment, he is entitled to his compensation, unless it be also manifest that he would at the time of the occurrence have been equally exposed to the same risk outside of his employment."

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20 So. 2d 570, 1944 La. App. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milton-v-t-j-moss-tie-co-lactapp-1944.