O'Brien v. Delta Air Corporations

178 So. 489, 188 La. 911, 1938 La. LEXIS 1137
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 10, 1938
DocketNo. 34524.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 178 So. 489 (O'Brien v. Delta Air Corporations) 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
O'Brien v. Delta Air Corporations, 178 So. 489, 188 La. 911, 1938 La. LEXIS 1137 (La. 1938).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The plaintiffs are appealing from a judgment dismissing their suit on an exception to the jurisdiction of the court, ratione person®. The defendant is a Louisiana corporation, having its domicile in the city of Monroe, in the parish of Ouachita. The corporation is a common carrier of passengers, by airplanes, traveling over the route between Charleston, S. G, and Dallas, Tex., and having a passenger station at the municipal airport in Shreveport, La. The plaintiffs are Mrs. Lorrain L. O’Brien and her minor son, Chris O’Brien, Jr., who was emancipated after the events which caused this lawsuit occurred. The suit is for damages alleged to have been suffered by Mrs. O’Brien, and for damages alleged to have been suffered by her son, as a result of the alleged refusal of the defendant to receive him as a passenger on one of the regular passenger planes of the corporation, at its station in Shreveport, on December 21, 1936, at midnight. The plaintiffs instituted the suit in Shreveport, instead of instituting it at the domicile of the defendant, on the theory that the alleged negligence on the part of the defendant, or failure of the defendant to perform an alleged obligation on its part, occurred in Shreveport, when the defendant refused to receive Chris O’Brien, Jr., as a passenger. Hence the plaintiffs contend that the venue, or parish in which the alleged events upon which the suit is founded took place, is the parish of Caddo ; and they claim the right to prosecute the suit in that parish, under the ninth paragraph of article 165 of the Code of Practice, which provides that, in any case where a-corporation does anything for which an action for damages lies, or fails to do anything for the failure to do which an action for damages lies, the corporation may be sued either in the parish where the damage is done or in the parish where the corporation has its domicile. The general rule, of course, as stated in article 162 of the Code of Practice, is that the only place in which a civil suit may be brought is in the parish in which the defendant is domiciled.

Inasmuch as no evidence was offered in support of the defendant’s exception to *915 the jurisdiction of the court, in this case, the question of jurisdiction depends upon the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition. City of Lafayette v. Wells Fargo & Co. Express, 129 La. 323, 56 So. 257; Vicknair v. Daily States Publishing Co., 144 La. 809, 81 So. 324. The plaintiffs allege that, on December 18, 1936, Mrs. O’Brien, for herself and on behalf of her minor son, entered into an agreement with an authorized agent representing both the Delta Air Corporation and a connecting line, the American Air Lines, Inc., for the round-trip transportation of her son, Chris O’Brien, Jr., from Shreveport, La., to Los Angeles, Cal., and return— the initial trip to begin on the schedule leaving Shreveport at midnight on December 21, 1936, and arriving in Los Angeles at 7:40 the next morning, December 22. They aver that Mrs. O’Brien, at the time of making the contract, paid the agent of the two carriers $151.60, which was the regular round-trip fare and was the price agreed upon for the transportation; and that, in consideration therefor, the agent for the two carriers then and there guaranteed Mrs. O’-Brien that her son would be received as a passenger on the plane of the Delta Air Corporation, scheduled to leave Shreveport at midnight on December 21, and would be thereby transported to Dallas, Tex., where he would be transferred to a plane of the American Air Lines, scheduled to leave Dallas that night and to arrive in Los Angeles the next morning at 7:40. The plaintiffs allege that there was an agreement between the two common carriers, by which the ticket agents or station agents of either carrier had authority to sell through tickets, or through transportation, over the other carrier’s line, to persons intending to travel on both of the connecting lines; and that the agent who sold the transportation to Mrs. O’Brien for her minor son had the authority to sell the transportation over both of the connecting lines, and to guarantee that the contract would be carried out. They aver that the contract was made in Los Angeles, where Mrs. O’Brien was spending the winter, while her son was at Centenary College, in Shreveport; and that she explained to the agent, before paying for the transportation, that it was important that she should be guaranteed that the contract would be carried out, so that her son would arrive in Los Angeles on the morning of December 22, 1936; and that the agent then and there, in the presence of Mrs. O’Brien, communicated with the- appropriate department of the American Airlines, Inc., and had the reservation on the plane which was scheduled to leave Shreveport at midnight on the 21st of December confirmed and guaranteed. The plaintiffs aver that the agent for the two carriers then assured Mrs. O’Brien that a ticket for the transportation would be forwarded by the American Airlines to the station of the Delta Air Corporation, at the Municipal Airport at Shreveport, and that an agent of the Delta Air Corporation would notify Chris O’Brien, Jr., to call for the ticket at the airport in Shreveport. They aver that Mrs. O’Brien herself wired her son, informing him of the arrangement which she had made, and notifying him to call for the ticket at the airport in Shreveport; and that he did call for the ticket at 4 o’clock in the afternoon on December 21, 1936, and called also at the ticket office of *917 the Delta Air Corporation in a hotel in Shreveport, and was told by the agents of the corporation that they had no ticket or reservation for him on the plane due in 'Shreveport at midnight that night. The plaintiffs aver that Chris O’Brien, Jr., made several requests for his ticket between 4 and ‘9 o’clock that evening, and hence that the agents of the corporation had ample time .and opportunity to communicate with the American Airlines, Inc., and to be assured of the arrangement which had been made for Chris O’Brien’s reservation. The plaintiffs aver that Chris O’Brien, Jr., finally went to the airport at 11:45 that night, to hoard the plane, and that the agents of the Delta Air Corporation refused to admit him on the plane, saying that they had no ticket or reservation for him. The plaintiffs aver that young O’Brien was accompanied by twenty fellow students from Centenary College, who came to hid him bon voyage; and that the defendant’s refusal to allow him to hoard the plane caused him great humiliation, disappointment, et cetera. The plaintiffs aver that Mrs. O’Brien was informed that night, about midnight or soon after midnight, that her son was not aboard the incoming plane of the American Airlines, and that she was thereby given great anxiety for the safety of her son, and became frantic and hysterical, and spent the remainder of the night in a high state of nervous suspense, et cetera. There is no occasion, however, at this time, to consider the nature or the elements of the damages claimed.

The principal reason given by the judge of the district court, for maintaining that the ninth paragraph of article 165 of the Code of Practice is not applicable to this case, is that, according to the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition, the damages claimed resulted not from a tort but from a tacit breach of contract; and that the breach consisted of the failure of the agent in Los Angeles to send the ticket to Shreveport, for delivery to Chris O’Brien, Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 489, 188 La. 911, 1938 La. LEXIS 1137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-delta-air-corporations-la-1938.