Reed v. Warren

136 So. 59, 172 La. 1082, 1931 La. LEXIS 1811
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 22, 1931
DocketNo. 31182.
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 136 So. 59 (Reed v. Warren) 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
Reed v. Warren, 136 So. 59, 172 La. 1082, 1931 La. LEXIS 1811 (La. 1931).

Opinion

O’NIEDL, O. J.

The question in this case is whether several persons having a right of action for damages against one who inflicted personal injuries causing the death of another must be made parties to one suit for damages, or may bring as many suits as there are persons entitled to the right of action. The cause of action alleged in this case is that, through the negligence of the defendant, Philip M. Warren, Mrs. Arabella Stevenson Reed, mother of the plaintiff, and Miss Sarah Jennie Reed, a sister of the plaintiff, were •run over and killed by an automobile driven by the defendant. It is alleged that Miss *1086 Reed died very soon after she was injured, and that Mrs. Reed died about eight hours afterwards. The surviving relations who have a right of action for damages for the •injury and death of Mrs. Reed are her five sons and daughters, all being of the age of majority. Each one of them brought a separate suit, alleging the same facts and claiming .the same amount of damages. Each plaintiff claimed $5,000 damages for the pain and suffering which Mrs. Reed had endured, $5,000 for the loss of her companionship and affection, and $100.45 for expenses incurred; and each plaintiff claimed $5,000 for the loss of the companionship and affection of Miss Reed, and $87.85 for expenses incurred in consequence of the fatal injuries inflicted upon her. The defendant, in the present suit, filed an exception of no cause or right of action for damages for the death of Miss Reed, and an exception of want of the necessary parties to the suit for damages for the injuries suffered by Mrs. Reed and for her death. The district judge sustained both exceptions, maintaining that the right of action for damages for the death of Miss Reed belonged only to her mother and abated at the latter’s death, and that all of the surviving sons and daughters of Mrs. Reed were necessary parties to the action for damages for the personal injuries inflicted upon her and causing her death. The plaintiff was allowed twenty days in which to make his brothers and sisters parties to the suit. He appealed to the Court of Appeal, but, in that court, conceded that the judgment sustaining the exception of no cause or right of action for damages for the death of Miss Reed was in accord with the ruling of this court in Kernel’ v. Trans-Mississippi Terminal R. Co., 158 La. 853, 104 So. 740. In that case it was decided that, according to article 2315 of the Civil Code, as amended by Act No. 159 of 1918, the mother’s right of action for damages for. fatal injuries inflicted upon her son abated at her death, notwithstanding she had brought suit for the damages, and notwithstanding the surviving brother and sisters of her deceased ,json 'had brought their suit, after their mother’s death, within the year after their brother’s death. The Court of Appeal, therefore, in the present case, affirmed the judgment sustaining the exception of no cause or right of action for damages for the death of Miss Reed. That decision is not complained of, and is final. The Court of Appeal, however, reversed the judgment of the district court on the exception of want of necessary parties to this suit for damages for the injuries which caused the death of Mrs. Reed — held that the brothers and sisters of the plaintiff were not necessary parties to the suit — and remanded the case for further proceedings consistent with the court’s ruling. The case is before us on a writ of review issued at the instance of the defendant.

The case depends upon the construction to be put upon the provisions of article 2315 of the Civil Code, which, by the several amendments of the article, give a right of action for damages for the death of a person, in addition to the right of action in favor of certain surviving relations for damages for personal injuries suffered by a person who thereafter died. Under the article as originally enacted, which was article 16 of title 4, book 3 of the Digest of 1808, and which became article 2294 of the Civil Code of 1825, an action for damages for personal injuries abated on the death of the person injured. Hubgh v. N. O. & C. R. R. Co., 6 La. Ann. 498, 54 Am. Dec. 565. The article then merely declared: “Every act whatever of man, that causes damage to another, *1088 obliges him, by whose fault it happened, to repair it.” By Act No. 223 of 1855, the article was amended by the addition thereto: “The right of this action shall survive in cases of death in favor of the minor children and widow of the deceased or either of them, and in default of these in favor of the surviving father and mother or either of them, for the space of one year from the death.” As thus amended the article was adopted as article 2315 of the Civil Code in the revision of 1870. Even then, the article gave a right of action, to the survivors mentioned, for only such suffering as the injured person had endured, and gave no right of action for any loss or injury suffered by a surviving relation, by the death of a person fatally injured. Earhart v. N. O. & C. R. R. Co., 17 La. Ann. 243; McCubbin, Tutor, v. Hastings, 27 La. Ann. 713; Vredenburg v. Behan, 33 La. Ann. 627; Walton v. Booth, 34 La. Ann. 913; Van Amburg v. V., S. & P. Ry. Co., 37 La. Ann. 650, 55 Am. Rep. 517.

It was by Act No. 71 of 1884 that the article was amended so as to give to the survivors therein mentioned a right of action for the damages suffered by them by the death of the person fatally injured through the fault of another. The amendment consisted of the adding of this sentence: “The survivors above mentioned may also recover the damages sustained by them by the death of the parent or child, or husband or wife, as the case may be.” By Act No. 120,, of 1908, the article was amended so as to extend the right of action to the brothers and sisters, or either of them, in the event that none of the relations already mentioned in the article survived the injured person. The amendment contained the proviso that, should the deceased leave a widow and minor children, the right of action would accrue to both the widow and minor children, and that the right of action would not accrue to major children except where there was neither a widow or minor child of the deceased. In the concluding sentence of the amendment, providing that the survivors above mentioned might recover also the damages suffered by them, the Legislature repeated the error which had been made in the act of 1884, of including the words “or husband.” This was observed in Flash v. Louisiana Western Railroad Co., 137 La. 352, 68 So, 636, L. R. A. 1916E, 112; where it was decided that the husband had no right of action for damages for the death of his wife, hilled by a railroad train, the husband being not one of “the survivors above mentioned” in the statute. Thereafter, by Act No. 159 of 1918, the Legislature amended the article so as to give the surviving husband the same right of action that was theretofore given to the widow in case of the death of the spouse injured by the fault of another. That being the latest amendment of article 2315 of the Code, it reads now as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 59, 172 La. 1082, 1931 La. LEXIS 1811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-warren-la-1931.