New Orleans Brewing Co. v. Cahall

178 So. 339, 188 La. 749, 115 A.L.R. 231, 1937 La. LEXIS 1315
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 29, 1937
DocketNo. 34612.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 178 So. 339 (New Orleans Brewing Co. v. Cahall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Orleans Brewing Co. v. Cahall, 178 So. 339, 188 La. 749, 115 A.L.R. 231, 1937 La. LEXIS 1315 (La. 1937).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

The respondent is a corporation domiciled in the city of New Orleans, parish of Orleans, and the relator is also a resident of that city and parish.

On the 26th day of June, 1937, while the relator was operating an automobile in Hancock county, Miss., near 'the city of Bay St. Louis, his automobile was sideswiped by a truck, and his left arm was so badly mangled, that amputation below the shoulder became necessary.

As the accident happened in Hancock county, Miss., relator employed a local firm of attorneys, who, after investigation into the facts of the case, brought an action in tort, on the 10th day of August, 1937, in the circuit court of Hancock county, a court of law, against respondent, New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc., Joe Todaro, the alleged driver of the truck, and A. Trapani, the alleged distributing agent of the brewing company in Hancock county.

The basis of the complaint against the New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc., was that Joe Todaro and A. Trapani,, both of whom are residents of the city of Bay St. Louis, while acting as agents and employees of the brewing company, and while driving a truck used in its business, and actually transporting beer belonging to that company, negligently collided with an automobile operated by relator, causing him to lose his arm.

A further allegation was contained in relator’s declaration that New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc., does business in the state of Mississippi; that A. Trapani is its distributing agent in Hancock county, of that state, upon whom service of process may be had under the laws of the state of Mississippi providing for such process; and that such service was made under the provisions of sections 4166 and 4167 of the Mississippi Code of 1930.

To relator’s declaration, the two defendants residing in Hancock county according to the Mississippi practice, filed pleas of the general issue, which deny all the" allegations of the declaration.

New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc., appeared and filed pleas to the jurisdiction of the circuit court of Hancock county, based upon the allegations that this company was not engaged in business in Hancock county, *753 did not own the truck in question, and that neither Todaro nor Trapani was its agent or employee, and that, therefore, service of process upon Trapani did not have the effect of conferring upon the circuit court of Hancock county jurisdiction over the defendant, New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc.

The brewing company also filed a plea in abatement, setting out in this plea the issuance of a temporary restraining order against relator’s suit on September 11, 1937, by the Civil district court for the parish of Orleans. A hearing on the plea to the jurisdiction and on the plea in abatement had been set by the circuit court o.f Hancock county for Monday, September 27, 1937.

The temporary restraining order issued by the Civil district court for the parish of Orleans was continued in force until September 17, 1937, when relator was ordered to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue, as prayed for by respondent brewing company.

On September 17, 1937, relator moved to dissolve the restraining order, on the ground that the petition disclosed no cause or right of action. This exception was overruled. The rule nisi was then tried, and, after hearing had, was made ábsolute, and a preliminary injunction was issued against the further prosecution by relator of his suit in the circuit court of Hancock county, Miss., on September 24, 1937, three days before the plea to the jurisdiction, and the plea in abatement, filed by the brewing company, had been set, for hearing in that court.

(1) Respondent company strenuously contends that it was the duty of relator to have brought his action in tort in the Civil district court for the parish of Orleans, at the domicile of that company, and charges that the purpose of relator’s resort to the circuit court of Hancock county was to perpetrate a fraud upon the courts of this state, the competent and proper jurisdiction, and to annoy, inconvenience, and harass that company and subject it to great and unnecessary expenses incident to the trial.

These contentions of the brewing company, in our opinion, are not well founded.

There is no testimony in the record to show that relator gave instructions to his attorneys as to the forum where the suit should be brought. The accident occurred in Hancock county, Miss., within the jurisdiction of the circuit court of that county. The two defendants, joined in plaintiff’s suit as joint tort-feasors with respondent company, reside in that county. Plaintiff’s arm was amputated at the infirmary in the city of Bay St. Louis in that county, and all of relator’s witnesses reside in the city of Bay St. Louis in Hancock county, Miss.

Relator’s witnesses are: Dr. M. J. Wolfe, Bay St. Louis, attending physician; Mrs. C. E. Craft, superintendent King’s Daughters’ Hospital, Bay St. Louis; Miss Thelma Ellis, nurse, who assisted in amputation of arm, Bay St. Louis; Sheriff Claud Monti, who made investigation, Bay St. Louis; Constable Gerald Price, who made investigation, Bay St. Louis; P. E. Porter, garage operator, who brought Cahall’s car in after accident; A. Trapani, one of the defendants, who lives in Bay St. Louis; Jos Todaro, one of the defendants, who lives *755 in Bay St. Louis; Graham Jordy, former agent of New Orleans Brewing Company, who lives in Bay St. Louis.

The only witnesses for respondent company that appeared at the trial of the rule ni-si in the Civil district court for the parish of Orleans were: August Groustedt, president of the New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc.; Edgar J. Derbes, secretary of the New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc.; Fred A. Gerstner, sales manager of the New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc.

Not one of the witnesses of relator, above named, was present at the trial of the rule nisi, because of lack of compulsory process to compel their attendance; the only witnesses present being the relator and his attorney.

(2) New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc., complains, in article IS of its petition for injunction, that if the case is tried in Mississippi, that company will be subjected to the inconvenience and expense of bringing its witnesses to Bay St. Louis, and of keeping them there during the trial; that it cannot compel its witnesses from the parish of Orleans to attend a trial in Mississippi by any compulsory process, and, therefore, may be obliged to take the depositions .of some of its witnesses for use in the trial in Mississippi, which is not only expensive and inconvenient, but is also unsatisfactory and disadvantageous in the trial of important litigation.

The granting of the preliminary injunction in this case by the Civil district court for the parish of Orleans also compels relator to be subjected to the same, if not a greater, expense and inconvenience, if he is forced to sue New Orleans Brewing Company, Inc., at its domicile in the city of New Orleans, parish of Orleans.

As said by this court in Missouri Pac. Ry. Co. v. Harden, 158 La. 889, at page 896, 105 So. 2, 5:

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 339, 188 La. 749, 115 A.L.R. 231, 1937 La. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-brewing-co-v-cahall-la-1937.