Perez v. Carbrey

22 So. 2d 76, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 352
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketNo. 18198.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 76 (Perez v. Carbrey) 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
Perez v. Carbrey, 22 So. 2d 76, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 352 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

This suit by Mrs. Amelia Dumaine Perez, widow of Horace Perez, results from the death of Perez. The facts are most unusual. The defendant, Thomas J. Carbrey, whose name often appears in the record as "Carbery", on Sunday, August 25th, 1940, seems to have made a rather general announcement of his asserted intention to commit suicide. He sent for plaintiff's husband, Horace Perez, a fraternal lodge brother, as he desired to consult him concerning his purpose and with reference to the settlement of his affairs which would later be necessary. Perez persuaded another Lodge brother, Matt Cain, to accompany him and they called upon Carbrey and spent some time in attempting to persuade him to abandon his plan of self-destruction. He was in possession of a pistol with which he was threatening to kill himself and he also had with him a bottle of liquor.

Becoming convinced that Carbrey was determined to persist in his announced intention, it was agreed between Cain and Perez that Perez would remain with Carbrey and attempt to prevent him from shooting himself while Cain would go in search of police officers in the hope that they could forcibly take the gun from Carbrey and restrain him until he should undergo a change in his attitude towards life.

Cain located two officers, James M. Dimitry and Alfred J. Dowling, who returned with him to the domicile of Carbrey. There Cain suggested that the officers should not make their presence known to Carbrey until he could be persuaded to leave the residence. Cain then entered the building and went towards the room in which Carbrey and Perez were still discussing the matter. The officers also entered the building, and as they did so, they heard the discharge of a pistol, apparently in the room in which Perez and Carbrey were.

Perez ran from the room into another where he could be seen by the two officers. They opened fire upon him and he died as a result of gunshot wounds *Page 77 inflicted by them. He may also have been struck by the shot which had just been fired previously in the room in which he and Carbrey had been.

Mrs. Perez alleges that her husband's death resulted from the actions of Carbrey and that he is legally liable therefor. She avers that he was struck by two bullets fired by each of the policemen and one by Carbrey. She then makes the following allegation:

"Petitioner shows that the shooting and wounding of deceased by said Carbery which precipitated the subsequent happenings resulting in the death of deceased was the proximate cause thereof and was due entirely and solely to defendant's deliberate and wanton act which act amounts to gross carelessness and criminal negligence resulting in nowise from carelessness or negligence on the part of deceased, culminating in petitioner being damaged * * *."

She prays for Judgment against Carbrey in the sum of $237,500.

The District Court rendered judgment dismissing definitively the claim of plaintiff against Carbrey for the death of Perez and dismissing as of "non-suit" her claim for his wounding. From this judgment Mrs. Perez has appealed.

[1] Carbrey has moved to dismiss the appeal for the reasons: "that said motion for a devolutive appeal does not indicate that the same was taken in open court and * * * no citation of appeal was directed to defendant."

The judgment was rendered on October 15th, 1943, and was signed on October 21st, 1943, and the motion for appeal was made on July 14th, 1944. In Jacobsen v. McGarry, 178 La. 79,150 So. 838 our Supreme Court said: "According to the rules of the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, the court's judicial year begins on the 1st day of October and ends on the 30th day of September. The term of the court runs from October 1st to July 15th, both inclusive, in each calendar year, * * *."

It thus appears that the motion for appeal was made at the term of court during which the judgment had been rendered.

It is conceded that when a motion for appeal is made in open court and at the same term of court in which the judgment appealed from was rendered, there is no necessity for the issuance of citation of appeal, but it is argued that there is nothing to show that the motion for appeal in this instance was made in open court. The answer to that argument is that where an appeal is taken by motion at the same term of court at which the judgment appealed from is rendered there is a presumption that the motion was made in open court. In McCann et al. v. Todd, 201 La. 953, 10 So.2d 769, 771, the Supreme Court said: "The jurisprudence of the courts of this state is uniform in holding that, where the record does not affirmatively show that the motion was presented in open court and the order signed thereby the judge granting the appeal, the fact that the court was in session and action on the motion was taken during the same term of court when the judgment was rendered, the presumption follows that the motion was made and the order was granted in open court. James v. City of New Orleans, 14 La. App. 311, 125 So. 464; Bishop-Wyatt Co. v. Latin-American Life Casualty Ins. Co., 12 La. App. 59, 125 So. 167; Marsh v. Avegno, 3 La. App. 294; Brown et al. v. Tauzin et al., La. App., 163 So. 764; Gardiner v. Erskine, 170 La. [212],127 So. 604, and Swain v. Globe Lumber Co., 144 La. 207, 80 So. 256."

There is in this record nothing to overcome the presumption that the motion was made in open court and therefore, since it was made at the same term of court in which the judgment was rendered, it necessarily follows that no citation of appeal was necessary. The motion to dismiss the appeal is, therefore, overruled.

[2, 3] When we come to consider the facts of the case and the question of whether from them there results liability in the defendant, we are impressed with the soundness of the reasons of the judge of the District Court, and, therefore, set them forth:

"The decedent, Perez, an innocent bystander, met his death at the hands of two policemen in the Carbery home. This is made manifest by a preponderance of the evidence offered on the trial of the suit. The policemen were free agents. It is shown to this Court from the evidence that on the day of the tragedy Carbery, the defendant, was not aware of the presence of the two officers in his home; their presence there was accounted *Page 78 for through the act of a Mr. Cain who summoned the police to the Carbery home.

"It is clear that the death of Mr. Perez was caused through the interposition of third persons, both of whom from the very nature and character of their employment should have exercised the utmost caution not to harm an innocent third person as Perez happened to be. Mr. Perez was on an errand of mercy to a man whom he regarded as his friend.

"The suit brought here by Mrs. Perez, the widow of the decedent, against Carbery is one for the death of Mr. Perez. Our Courts must be bound by the written law. The burden of proof is on the plaintiff to make her case reasonably certain. It is most probable that a shot was fired by Carbery prior to the tragedy, but probability cannot, under the law, set aside the strict exactions of legal requirements. Let the probability rise to the highest degree, it is nonetheless still probability.

"The same can be said for the fact that even though, admitted for the sake of argument that a shot had been fired by Carbery, and that this shot struck Mr. Perez in the leg, that is not the probable cause of his death.

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22 So. 2d 76, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perez-v-carbrey-lactapp-1945.