Sandoz v. Veazie

106 La. 202
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 13,698
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 106 La. 202 (Sandoz v. Veazie) 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
Sandoz v. Veazie, 106 La. 202 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Monroe, J.

This is an action in damages for an alleged malicious prosecution. The answer is a general denial.

The case presented by the record is, substantially, as follows, to-wit:

Plaintiff and defendant are natives of the parish of St. Landry, and residents of the town of Opelousas, the former being the tax collector [203]*203of the town and the latter a member of the bar. At the time of the occurrences out of which this litigation has arisen, the plaintiff was about thirty, and the defendant about fifty years of age. The plaintiff had a wife and three children, the youngest being an infant, barely four weeks old, whilst the household of the defendant consisted of his wife, two daughters (the elder of whom was about sixteen years of age), and Eddie Hudspeth, about twenty years old, who was staying at defendant’s house in order to attend school.

There appear to have been no social relations between the two men, or their families, but the defendant had lived for fifteen years upon a farm adjoining that upon which the plaintiff was reared; had known the latter from his childhood; and had, always, been on perfectly friendly terms with him. Upon the morning of Friday, May 12th, 1899, Miss Celie Dejean, also about sixteen years old, came from her home, some five miles out of town, to pay a visit of a few days to her friend, Miss Ludie Veazie, the elder of the defendant’s two unmarried daughters, and, upon that evening, the entire family went, in separate parties, to an entertainment, given at the Opera House for the benefit of the public schools, and consisting of an amateur dramatic performance, with refreshments, followed by dancing, the two girls being escorted by JohnHarmonson,a distant cousin of Miss Veazie, and Eddie Dejean, a brother of Miss Dejean, Mrs. Veazie, who had charge of the refreshment table, taking her younger daughter with her, and the defendant taking Edd:e Hudspeth. As soon as the dramatic performance was over, the defendant and young Hudspeth returned home, and, after an improvised supper, the latter went to the house of Mrs. G. W. Hudspeth, near by, where, for the time being, he was sleeping for that lady’s protection, and the defendant began his preparations for bed. About that time, the two girls returned, with their escorts, but the latter remained but a few moments, and, upon their departure, the girls retired, only, however, within a very little while, to arouse the defendant, who had fallen asleep, by the most piercing shrieks of distress and calls for aid.

It may be stated that the defendant’s house, as we infer from the testimony, though no witness has described it, is a cottage, situated upon the northwest corner of two intersecting streets, and facing to the South. It has galleries, front and rear, and a yard, or lawn. There are, as we understand it, four rooms and a hall, down stairs, and two rooms upstairs, each of which latter has a dormer window upon its [204]*204North and South sides, respectively, and, possibly, a window in the gable end of the cottage. There is some lattice about the rear of the house, by means of which it is comparatively easy to reach the roof and to effect ffn entrance, or exit, into, and out of, the upstairs rooms, through the dormer windows upon the North side, and the exit may, also, be effected by jumping from the roof of the back gallery, or back rooms, down stairs, which is said to be about nine feet from the ground. The defendant occupied the front room down stairs, upon the East side, whilst the two girls occupied the room upon the same side of the house, upstairs. This room has, to some extent, the benefit of the street electric light at the corner, the rays from which enter, obliquely, through the front, or South, dormer window. Upon hearing the alarm, as heretofore stated, the defendant sprang up and called loudly for assistance, which brought into the house three negroes, named Smith, Jones and Beauchamp, who happened to be passing, and they accompanied or followed him upstairs. He found the door of the girls’ room fastened upon the inside, and there was some delay in unfastening it, and a further delay, resulting from the fact that the knob of which the defendant had taken hold, came out, with the shaft attached, and was dropped upon the floor of the unlighted landing, outside the door. In the meantime, the indications of distress, inside the room, became, if possible, more pronounced, and the defendant continually assured the inmates that he would be with them in a moment. Finally, after several minutes, he succeeded in getting in, and he found Miss Dejean standing near the door, which she had just unfastened, and his daughter on, or near, the bed, which occupied the middle of the room, whilst the intruder, he tells us, was heard by him, though not seen, escaping through the North dormer window. All the witnesses who were present, with the exception of the negro Smith, who was not examined, concur in the statement that the two girls were crying and sobbing in a state of most intense excitement, and it is not claimed that any connected conversation took place at that moment. Exactly what was said, before, and after, the opening of the door, and subsequently, is regarded as of some importance, and will, a little later, be considered from that point of view. As a matter of fact, almost as soon as the door was opened,, the defendant sent the negro, Jones, to the Opera House to hasten the return of Mrs. Veazie, and the negro, Beauchamp, a boy of fifteen,' accompanied him, whilst the two frightened girls went down stairs, where Robert Ohacere, a neighbor living [205]*205about a block away, whose family had been alarmed by the outcries, as also his wife and daughter, found them in the hall. The defendant then came down stair, and, feeling impatient for the arrival of his wife, and doubtful, perhaps, as to the delivery of the message which he had sent, went in search of, met, and returned with, her, the girls being left in the meanwhile, with Mr. and Mrs. Chacere and their daughter.

It is necessary, now, to a proper understanding of the situation, that we should go back to a period antedating the evening upon which the above narrated events took place. Miss Ludie Yeazie testifies that for two or three months, the plaintiff had been forcing himself upon her attention in various ways; that he had spoken to, and attempted to get into conversation with, her, on several occasions; that he had followed her on the street; that he attempted to get her to go across the street from her home to an oifiee, which he was in the habit of frequenting, upon the pretence that some one wanted to speak to her through the telephone; that he was in the habit of hanging about, and passing and repassing, her father’s house, and coming to the fence and asking her questions, and trying to converse with her; and that, upon the evening in question, she and Miss Dejean being seated upon the gallery, the plaintiff passed by, and taking his seat upon the gallery of the office opposite, occupied himself with looking over the top of a newspaper at her and her friend until, at the suggestion of the latter, they retired within the house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 La. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandoz-v-veazie-la-1901.