Saint v. Irion

116 So. 549, 165 La. 1035, 1928 La. LEXIS 1821
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 12, 1928
DocketNo. 28804.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 116 So. 549 (Saint v. Irion) 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
Saint v. Irion, 116 So. 549, 165 La. 1035, 1928 La. LEXIS 1821 (La. 1928).

Opinions

LAND, J.

On the 14th day of August, 1925, the late Governor Fuqua appointed the defendant, Dr. Valentine K. Irion, Commissioner of Conservation of the state, to fill an unexpired term of office.

On the 11th day of October, 1926, Governor Fuqua died and was succeeded by Lieutenant Governor O. H. Simpson.

The present suit was filed on November 23, 1926, by the Attorney General upon the written request of the Goverhor, who specified the charges to be preferred against the defendant as Commissioner of Conservation.

This proceeding is instituted under section 6 of article 9 of the Constitution of 1921, for the removal of defendant from office for some of the causes enumerated in section 1 of that article.

The petition of ouster contains 110 articles and 24 specific charges, all of which were dismissed by the trial judge with the exception of five charges, which were sustained. Under these charges defendant was forthwith removed from the office of Commissioner of Conservation, and debarred by the judgment of the lower court from ever holding office under the state of Louisiana. Defendant has appealed.

The charges upon which the judgment of dismissal is predicated are:

(1) Buying ducks.

(2) Having whisky on the department’s boats.

(3) Entertaining defendant’s friends on these boats.

(4) Charging personal auto expenses to the department.

(5) Carrying a “deadhead” on the pay rolls of the department.

We shall first consider and dispose of these chaiges.

1. Charge as to Buying Ducks.

Defendant was tried in the district court of Jefferson parish early in February, 1927, on the above charge of buying ducks, and was acquitted by Judge Rivarde with the following comment:.

“The court has listened very carefully throughout this case. At one time it appeared that it would be a big case, for it would have been a serious thing for the Commissioner of Conservation to violate the Conservation Law. There is no evidence put in that Dr. Irion ever bought any ducks. . I don’t see anything at all in this case. Somebody is trying to use this court to bolster up something else.- They are trying to wash some linen here.” Transcript, vol. Ill, p. 826.

On the trial of this case in the civil district court, Emile R. Senac, port captain in charge of maintenance of the conservation department fleet, and the state’s chief duck witness, admitted, under cross-examination, that his testimony given in the district court of Jefferson parish before Judge Rivarde was the same as that given by this witness in the present case. To quote the exact language of the witness:

“Q. Did you or did you not testify there, as you have on the stand today, concerning the purchase of ducks?
*1041 “A. As near as I possibly could; yes, sir.” Transcript, vol. II, bottom page 462, top page 463.

Harry Mason, a cook of the crew of the conservation boat Rainbow, who was under the immediate orders of Senac as port captain, is the other star witness for the state. He also appeared on behalf of the prosecution on the trial of defendant in the district court of Jefferson parish. Transcript, vol. II, bottom page 538, top page 539.

Defendant selected Earhardt, a conservation agent, to accompany him on the duck hunt, as defendant desired to make some inspections of trapping lands in that section.

It was Senac, however, who suggested that he would get Mason to go along and serve defendant on the trip as cook. Transcript, vol. Y, p. 1549.

It was Mason, the man selected by Senac, who reported the purchase of ducks by the defendant to the attorney assisting in the prosecution of, this case. It was Mason who made an affidavit as to this purchase. And it was Mason who appeared as a state’s witness and general corroborator of Senac, the chief duck witness for the state, both in the trial in Judge Rivarde’s court and in the trial in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans. Transcript, vol. II, p. 566.

The present ouster suit had been instituted about 30 days at the time of the duck hunt. The conviction of defendant in Judge Rivarde’s court was a matter of most vital importance in order to bolster the pending suit for the removal of the defendant from office. In fact, it was of such moment that, notwithstanding the acquittal of defendant, the same charge has been preferred against him a second time, and by amended petition filed in this case.

After hearing the state witnesses, Senac and Mason, and the defendant and his witness, George Lucas, a young business man, Judge Rivarde, in discharging the defendant, remarked with apparent condemnation of the prosecution;

“I don’t see anything at all in this case. Somebody is trying to bolster up something else. They are .trying to wash some linen here.”

That Judge Rivarde did not accept Senac and Mason as credible witnesses is plainly shown by his comment on their testimony: “There is no evidence put in that Dr. Irion ever bought any ducks.”

After a thorough review and consideration of the testimony in this case, we have reached the same conclusion.

The whole duck case, in a nutshell, is nothing more nor less than a deliberate attempt to distort a tip paid by defendant to some caretakers into a purchase by him of eight ducks, which were given to the hunting party by the caretakers.

The true testimony in the case shows that three caretakers on the Johness game preserve on Bayou Dupont in Jefferson parish had rendered some service to defendant and his party in extending to them, without a written and customary permit from Mr. Allen Johness, the courtesy and privilege of hunting on his private grounds. Defendant had been frequently invited to hunt there by Mr. Johness, but had failed to obtain from him the necessary permit. Transcript, vol. V, pp. 1550, 1551.

At the request of defendant, a tip of $6 was paid these caretakers by Senac, who defrayed all the expenses of the trip and who was reimbursed later by defendant and George Lucas, the guest of defendant on the hunt.

We fail to see any room for just criticism of defendant for the payment of this tip. Had the caretakers refused the party admission to the game preserve, the hunt would have been a failure and a keen disappointment to defendant and his guest, if not to the entire party. The caretakers had rendered to . defendant a real service.

It is true that Senac and Mason testify that *1043 the ducks were purchased outright upon the order of the defendant. This testimony, however, is flatly contradicted by defendant and Lucas, who, in our opinion, are trustworthy witnesses. Transcript, vol. V, pp. 1552, 1553; Tr. vol. Ill, pp. 718, 719.

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Bluebook (online)
116 So. 549, 165 La. 1035, 1928 La. LEXIS 1821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saint-v-irion-la-1928.