Roy v. Mutual Rice Co. of Louisiana

143 So. 668
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
DocketNo. 1004.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 143 So. 668 (Roy v. Mutual Rice Co. of Louisiana) 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
Roy v. Mutual Rice Co. of Louisiana, 143 So. 668 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

While plaintiff was working in the rice mill of defendant company, his foot and lower part of his leg were caught on a revolving shaft and were badly mangled and crushed.

He alleges that while performing the duties for which he was employed he had climbed a ladder leading to a narrow platform to disentangle a belt that operated on a glucose machine, when his foot was caught, which resulted in the injury above stated.

Under the foregoing allegations he is claiming $10,150 damages for his injuries and sufferings under article 2315, Civil Oode, and the general damage laws of the state. He avers also that as he was only sixteen years and nine months old on October 4, 1929, when he was injured, being then under the age of eighteen years, and not having elected to come under the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act of 1914, and the amendments thereto, that its provisions have no force or effect over his complaint.

In the alternative, he alleges that should the court hold that his demand is controlled by the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act, that he be awarded compensation under that act. He accordingly prays for judgment for $10,150 for damages under Civ. Code, art. 2315, and in the alternative for compensation under the Employers’ Liability Act (Act No. 20 of 1914 as amended).

In this court defendant company, as it had the right to do, filed an exception alleging that plaintiff had no cause of action, either under the general tort law of Louisiana embodied in article 2315, Civil Code, or under the Employers’ Liability Act of 1914, as variously amended.

In his petition plaintiff alleges that he was married at the time he was injured.

Civil Code, art. 376, reads as follows:

“The emancipated minor who is engaged in trade, is considered as having arrived at the *669 age of majority, for all the acts which have any relation to such trade.”

In referring to the provisions of that article, counsel for defendant say in their brief as follows:

‘‘Our law has, therefore, emancipated minors who are married from all disability with reference to contracting for all acts having any relation to the trade in which the minor is engaged. Therefore, the plaintiff in this case, on the day he was employed by defendant, had the power to contract for himself with reference to his employment. Such being the case, the provisions of the compensation law, section 3, sub-section 3 was applicable and it must be presumed that the contract of employment was made subject to the provisions of the compensation law.”

As plaintiff was married at the time of his employment and injury, the contention of counsel is that he had been liberated from all the disabilities of minority; that his demand had to be prosecuted under the Compensation Law, and could not be injected in this suit under the general damage laws of this state.

Their contention is, however, that plaintiff in his petition has not followed the requirements of the compensation statute, and that no legitimate judgment could be rendered on the pleadings filed by him so as to give him compensation, should he be entitled thereto.

These contentions of counsel for defendant cannot, however, have any effect, unless it appears that plaintiff, who was an emancipated minor by marriage, was, in'rendering his services, engaged in a trade and that his acts had “relation to such trade.”

Counsel for defendant in their brief, in giving the definition of a trade, say:

“The business of a particular mechanic; hence boys are said to be but apprentices to learn a trade; as the trade of a carpenter,shoemaker and the like.”

The foregoing definition is in line with the usual definition of what a trade is, and to which we find it unnecessary to refer. In this case it is shown that plaintiff was employed on the first floor of the defendant’s mill. Mr. Lafleur, the assistant miller under whom he was working, says that the instructions he gave plaintiff for “his worn were to oil and sweep, to mix the glucose and to take care of the chicken feed.” Evidently, oiling the machinery, sweeping the floor of the mill, mixing glucose, and taking care of chicken feed required no special training, and fell within the duties of a common laborer. Plaintiff was therefore engaged in no trade and was doing no act in relation to a trade when the accident happened, was not liberated from the disabilities affecting minors, under article 376, Civil Code, which compelled him to bring his action for compensation under the Employers’ Liability Act, as contended for 'by counsel for defendant company.

He had no cause of action under that statute for having failed to make the proper election, as is alleged in article 6" of his petition, and so admitted by defendant in its answer to that article.

The brief of counsel for defendant is directed altogether ifi support of their contention that, if plaintiff had any right of action, it should have been brought under the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act, and makes no reference to the exception that he has no cause of action under article 2315, Civil Code.

We find no reason why plaintiff should not have a cause of action under the provisions of that article, upon which judgment was rendered in his favor by the district judge.

The exception that plaintiff has no cause of action under article 2315, Civil Code, is therefore overruled.

Merits.

Plaintiff applied for work at defendant’s mill to Mr. Istre, who was then head miller there. Istre first refused to employ him, stating he was too young. Thereafter, after saying that he was married, Lafleur, the assistant miller, gave him employment on the first floor of the mill. At the time of his employment plaintiff was about sixteen years and six months, although he stated then that he was seventeen years old.

The fact that he was married did not make him any older, and evidently he seemed quite young to his employer, who, at first, refused to employ him because of his youth. Plaintiff, as far as the record discloses, at that time, had never worked in a mill, had had no experience in handling machinery, was quite immature, and entirely inexperienced in the line of work to which he was assigned.

Plaintiff testifies that as part of his work, Lafleur, under whom he was working, had given him a glove with which he was instructed to put on the pulley.

Arabee, who had preceded plaintiff in the work required on the first floor of the mill where plaintiff had been assigned, testifies-that he had also been instructed to put the belt on and to take it off from the pulley and to use a glove for that purpose. It is showi* by witnesses for defendant that putting a belt on a pulley by hand is quite easy to do and is not dangerous.

Lafleur denies that he had given the leather glove to plaintiff and had shown him how to-put it on the pulley. As this operation was-simple and involved no danger, we do not see any reason why we should doubt that plaintiff had been directed to place the belt on the- *670

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Related

Landreneau v. Perron
174 So. 140 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)
Roy v. Mutual Rice Co. of Louisiana, Inc.
149 So. 508 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-mutual-rice-co-of-louisiana-lactapp-1932.