Rousseau v. Texas & Pacific

4 La. App. 691, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 262
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 2, 1926
DocketNos. 9905 and 9924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 4 La. App. 691 (Rousseau v. Texas & Pacific) 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
Rousseau v. Texas & Pacific, 4 La. App. 691, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 262 (La. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CLAIBORNE, J.

This is a suit by the father and mother for damages for the malicious shooting and killing of their son in the Parish of St. Charles by an alleged employee of the defendants. The plaintiffs are colored people.

The petition and supplemental petition alleged that Ursin Rousseau was one of the children of plaintiffs; that on March 5, 1921, he was twenty-nine years of age; that on the night of that day at about 11 o’clock at Luling, La., he was maliciously and without cause, shot in the back by a railroad detective in the employ of defendants and at the time in the discharge of. the duties incident to his employment; that he was taken to the home of petitioners and there attended by a physician; that upon the advice of said physician, their said son was put into an automobile and carried to the Charity Hospital in New Orleans where he. died in great suffering the next morning at eight o’clock; that his body was brought back to the Parish of St. Charles and there buried; that at the time of his death he was earning $2.25 per day; that he contributed to petitioners’ support and every pay-day gave petitioners about three-fourths of his wages. The plaintiffs, claim:

1st Damages for suffering on account of the loss of their son..$12,000.00

2nd Damages for loss of support of their son__________________________________ 12,000.00

3rd Doctor’s fees..................$ 5.00

Undertaker ______________________ 106.00

Shipping body.................. 4.00

Burial _____________________ 17.00

- 132.00

Suffering by their son------------ 5,868.00

Total____________________ $30,000.00

The Texas & Pacific exception to the jurisdiction of the court ratione personae and materiae, and that the petition disclosed no cause of action, without disclosing why in either case.

The Missouri Pacific excepted that the citation served upon it at Monroe, more than 100 miles from the Parish of St. Charles, did not state the exact distance and was an absolute nullity, it not containing the correct stipulation as to the time allowed it to appear and answer, although the citation did state that one day more was allowed for every ten miles [693]*693that its residence was distant from the St. Charles Parish court house.

The attorney for the railroad certified “that the above and foregoing exception was filed in good faith and not solely for delay”.

The Texas & Pacific Railway denied each allegation of plaintiffs’ petition.

The answer is sworn to by its attorney as “true and correct”.

In answer to the supplemental petition the same Texas & Pacific Railway answered: “In the alternative, and in the alternative only, in the event that it be shown that the plaintiffs’ son was shot as and in the manner alleged in plaintiffs’ petition and his death ensued therefrom by any person riding at the time on one of the trains of this respondent and in the employ of this respondent or the joint employ of this respondent and any other railroad or carrier, that then and in that event, and in the alternative only, respondent shows that the act of such person in shooting plaintiffs’ son was without the scope of the employment of such person and was an act for which this respondent was in no wise responsible”.

The Missouri Pacific Railroad, denied each and every allegation of plaintiffs’ original and supplemental petitions and reiterated the answer copied above of the Texas & Pacific to the supplemental petition.

On October 30, 1923, the Texas & Pacific Railway filed a supplemental answer in which it alleged, “that on March 1, 1920, the possession, operation and control of said line of railroad and of all its property was resumed by the said court for the western district of Louisiana through the receivers appointed by said court, .to-wit: J. L. Lancaster and Charles L. Wallace,' and from the expiration of Federal control' until the present time,' said road has been operated exclusively by said receivers”. t ,

In a supplemental answer filed on the day of trial the Missouri Pacific Railroad, alleged that if the court should' find that the plaintiffs’ son was shot by any person in its employ then it averred “that the. shooting and' subsequent death of Ursin Rousseau, plaintiffs’ son, was due solely and entirely to the fault and actions of the said Ursin Rousseau which contributed to his shooting and subsequent death”.

All these answers are signed by attorneys of the defendants.

There was judgment rendered November 24, 1924, in favor of plaintiffs and against both the defendants in solido for $3000.00.

The defendants, have appealed.

The plaintiffs joined in the appeal and prayed for ,an increase of the judgment to $30,000.00.

.The transcript in this case is composed of 92 documents, over 200 pages of testimony, over 100 pages of briefs and citation of authorities that would fill a book case, and comes before us for the third time.

The judgment against the Texas & Pacific Railway is clearly erroneous.

The record contains an order dated December 1, 1919, appointing J. L. Lancaster and Charles L. Wallace receivers of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.

In the case of Harris vs. Texas & Pacific Railway, 2 La. App. 501, the court sustained an exception of no cause of action “because the railway company being in the hands o.f the receivers cannot be held lia[694]*694ble for the negligent acts of the receivers or their agents”, supporting their opinion by many authorities.

The marriage of the plaintiffs is established by abundant documentary and parol evidence as well as their parentage of Ursin Bousseau, alias Sambo.

The death of Ursin as a fact is also established by parol evidence and documentary evidence. The coroner’s inquest held on March 8, 1921, at Luling in the Parish of St. Charles reads as follows:

“Before me, Victor Lehmann, M. D., coroner for the said Parish of St. Charles, on the view of the body of Urbin Bousseau there lying dead.
“The jurors, whose names are hereunto subscribed, having been sworn to inquire on behalf of the state, upon their oath, do say, that: Ursin Rousseau came to his death as the result of a gun shot wound by a bullet from a gun or pistol in the hands of one H. T. Prudhomme, at Luling, La., at or about 10:30 p. m., on March 5, 1921, said bullet after penetrating the left side of the throat making its exit to the left side along or close to the spinal column. In testimony thereof, the coroner and the jurors of this Inquest have hereunto subscribed their names, the day and year above stated. Signed Jury, U. Mon-grue, Arnold Horn, Alfred Kinlair, Milo Lorio, Paul Friderick.
“V. Lehmann, M. D., Coroner.”

Also the certificate of death of the acting coroner for the Parish of St. Charles-, E. J. de Bergne of Ursin Rousseau’s cause of death: gun shot wound of abdomen. Homicide. Also the permit of John Callan, M. D., superintendent of Public Health for the removal for burial at Luling of the body of Ursin Rousseau. Cause of death: gunshot wound of abdomen. Homicide. Also certificate of death from Charity Hospital of Ursin Bousseau. Gunshot wound of abdomen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 La. App. 691, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rousseau-v-texas-pacific-lactapp-1926.