Norton v. Crescent City Ice Mfg. Co.

150 So. 855, 178 La. 135, 1933 La. LEXIS 1825
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 30, 1933
DocketNo. 32372.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 150 So. 855 (Norton v. Crescent City Ice Mfg. Co.) 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
Norton v. Crescent City Ice Mfg. Co., 150 So. 855, 178 La. 135, 1933 La. LEXIS 1825 (La. 1933).

Opinions

ROGERS, Justice.

William S. Norton was injured by a truck owned by the Crescent City Ice Manufacturing Company, Inc., on August 8, 1930, and died as a result of his injuries on August 10,. 1930.

Subsequently, decedent’s six major children, admittedly his sole heirs, brought suit against the Crescent City Ice Manufacturing Company, Inc., to recover $31,000, in the proportion of one-sixth to each, for the damages their deceased father could have recovered if he had survived his injuries. In the prayer of their petition, plaintiffs reserved their rights to institute one or several suits against the defendant to recover the damages sustained by them by the death of their parent.

The defendant, by way of exception, objected to plaintiffs’ reservation of their rights to' subsequently file one or more suits for the recovery of damages suffered directly by them by reason of their father’s death. The exception was overruled by the judge of the district court to whom the case was originally allotted, but, due to the illness of that judge, the case was re-allotted to another judge of the same court, after which, on defendant’s application, a new trial of the exception was granted. On the second hearing of the exception, the trial judge announced that defendant’s objection was well founded and that he would permit defendant to file a rule to compel plaintiffs to elect whether they would withdraw their reservation and abandon all their rights to subsequently sue on their direct claims for damages, or whether they would amend their petition so as to include their direct claims in their present suit. Plaintiffs then filed a motion to withdraw their reservation, at the same time informing the court and .defendant that they intended to file their additional suit or suits as originally contemplated.

Because of plaintiffs’ action, the rule to elect was not presented, but, in lieu thereof, defendant filed a supplemental answer in which, after denying liability, defendant prayed, in the event it should be found liable, that plaintiffs’ recovery be limited to the claim set forth in their petition, and that plaintiffs be enjoined from ever asserting, in this or in any other suit, any claim for their direct losses growing out of the death of their father.

On the merits, judgment was rendered ir plaintiffs’ favor for $3,000, as the .amount to which the deceased, himself, would be entitled had he survived his injuries. The judgment also permanently enjoined plaintiffs from su *139 ing defendant on any claims for their direct losses.

Plaintiffs appealed, asking that the injunction be recalled and that the amount of the judgment in their favor be increased. Defendant answered the appeal, praying for a reduction in the amount of the judgment.

The Court of Appeal approved the $3,000 award to plaintiffs, but annulled the judgment in its entirety and remanded the ease in order to permit plaintiffs to amend their pleadings so as to assert any and all claims arising out of the death of their father which they might have. A writ of certiorari has brought the case here.

This court, reversing the Court of Appeal -for the Parish of Orleans, held in the case of Reed v. Warren, 18 La. App. 31, 132 So. 250, Id., 172 La. 1082, 136 So. 59, that under article 2315 of the Civil Code, as amended by Act No. 159 of 1918, when the right of action is vested' in two or more survivors of the deceased injured person, the defendant in the suit has the right to require that all parties having the right of action shall be made parties to a single suit.- This is so, as explained by the court, and as summarized in the syllabus to the opinion published in the state report, “because the right of action for damages suffered by the injured person is for a sum of money in which, if there áre two or more survivors entitled to the right of action, each has an equal interest, and, although the amounts which the survivors are entitled to for the loss of the companionship and affection of the deceased may be unequal, defendant should not thereby be subjected to the annoyance and expense of defending numerous lawsuits, all founded upon the same cause of action and do-pendent upon the same relevant facts and the same defenses, since the damages are claimed for one tort, the killing of one person, and there is only one cause of action.”

While this court did not expressly hold in Reed v. Warren that the transmitted claim and the direct claim must be asserted in the same suit, that question not being presented for determination, the Court of Appeal, in this case, held that the decision manifested the views of the Supreme Court on the question, and definitely settled the jurisprudence of the state, to the effect that “in such a situation as was presented by the death of Norton, only one suit may be brought and that by all the survivors and that that suit must include both the claim transmitted to the survivors by the death of the deceased and the respective claims of each survivor for his or her direct losses.”

And the Court of Appeal remarked in its opinion herein that, if the case of Reed v. Warren had been decided by the Supreme Court at the -time plaintiffs were called upon to elect in the district court, plaintiffs could have no fault to find with the court’s ruling in which they were, in effect, required to choose whether they would present all their claims or only their transmitted claims in this suit.

However, the Court of- Appeal considered that the existing jurisprudence on the controverted question was as it had declared it to be in Reed v.- Warren; and that, notwithstanding its decision had been reversed on writ of certiorari by the Supreme Court, the plaintiffs believed the decision set forth the law on the subject, and the question'present *141 ed was, not whether plaintiffs’ action in refusing to elect was justified by the law as it was later announced by the Supreme Court, but whether it was justified by the jurisprudence as they found it.

The case of Eichorn v. New Orleans & C. R. Light & Power Co., 112 La. 236, 36 So. 335, 104 Am. St. Rep. 437, is referred to in the original opinion of the Court of Appeal (146 So. 753), and the case of Robideaux v. Hebert, 118 La. 1089, 43 So. 887, 889, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 632, is referred to in the per curiam refusing a rehearing ([La. App.] 147 So. 385), as authorizing the refusal by plaintiffs to amend their pleadings so as to include therein all their claims for damages arising out of the injury and death of their father.

And the Court of Appeal concluded that the decision of this court in Reed v. Warren should not be given retrospective effect, and that, in the exercise of its equity powers, it should remand the case in order to permit plaintiffs to amend their pleadings so as to present for judicial determination all their claims against defendant, which the court by its judgment proceeded to do.

It is clear that plaintiffs in filing their suit were not influenced by the rule announced by the Court of Appeal in Reed v. Warren. Plaintiffs’ suit was filed on November 3, 1930; whereas the decision of the Court of Appeal in Reed v. Warren was not rendered until January 19, 1931. It may be true, plaintiffs had the decision in mind on May 8, 1931, when they were called on to elect, but the decision was not final and controlling because at that time the case was pending on review before this court under a writ issued on March 30, 1931. Salittes v. Southern Pub.

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 855, 178 La. 135, 1933 La. LEXIS 1825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-crescent-city-ice-mfg-co-la-1933.