Saxton v. Plum Orchards, Inc.

40 So. 2d 791, 215 La. 378, 1949 La. LEXIS 952
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 25, 1949
DocketNo. 38998.
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 40 So. 2d 791 (Saxton v. Plum Orchards, Inc.) 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
Saxton v. Plum Orchards, Inc., 40 So. 2d 791, 215 La. 378, 1949 La. LEXIS 952 (La. 1949).

Opinions

HAMITER, Justice.

Invoking the attractive nuisance doctrine, plaintiffs sued to recover damages for the loss of their four year old daughter whose lifeless body was found in a deep pool of water on defendant’s property, they alleging that the child’s drowning was due entirely to the negligence of defendant in creating and maintaining the pool which was alluring and attractive to children.

Answering, defendant generally denied plaintiffs’ allegations, and it affirmatively showed as follows:

“And now for further answer to the plaintiffs petition defendant avers that it is the owner of the house in which the plaintiffs lived and that there was a lake or pond on another portion of the property owned by the defendant and that the plaintiffs knew this fact and that if a death did occur as recited in the plaintiffs petition a fact which defendant denies, then the cause of the death and the resulting damages was caused by the failure of the plaintiffs to properly attend and guard their minor child, that such act on the part of the plaintiffs should be a bar to their recovery. This fact the defendant specially pleads.”

There was judgment in the district court, after a trial of the merits, dismissing plaintiffs’ suit. On an appeal to the Court of Appeal that judgment was affirmed. The case is before us on a writ of certiorari granted on plaintiffs’ application.

About the year 1942 the defendant, Plum Orchards, Inc., acquired several acres of land. lying immediately north of the Gen-tilly Plighway in the City of New Orleans, and it proceeded to develop the property as a subdivision, some one hundred houses later having been constructed there of which it built and owned approximately eighty.

In the northern portion of the subdivision and well within its boundaries, defendant, during the latter part of 1943 or early in 1944, excavated a place for the three-fold purpose of draining the immediate area, of obtaining dirt for filling, and of providing sewerage. The excavation thereafter, by reason of rains and drainage, resulted in a large, somewhat oblong pool of water without any outlets, the length of which was approximately 200 feet. The width thereof ranged from 20 to 30 feet and the depth from 4 to 10 feet. It had abrupt or vertical, not gradually sloping, edges or banks. This pool, which was not fenced or otherwise isolated from the remainder of the subdivision, was very near to and clearly visible from Pecan Street, on which numerous houses fronted, and Dreux Avenue where a grocery store was operated. It contained *383 marine life such as crayfish, minnows and frogs.

In December, 1945, plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Elzy Saxton, rented from defendant, under a verbal monthly lease, house No. 4754 Pecan Street; and they, with their four children whose ages ranged from two to six years, moved into the premises. Directly across Pecan Street from their home, in a house facing it, lived Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gonsoulin and their nine children. The grocery store operated on Dreux Avenue was some 200 feet away. Also across Pecan street, a distance of about 150 feet, was the above described pool, it being situated 40 feet to the rear of the Gonsoulin dwelling and 10 feet to the side of the grocery store.

Shortly before noon on Sunday, March 24, 1946, Mrs. Saxton, after having played with her children in front of her home, prepared a light lunch. A few minutes later she called the children, and all of them responded except Juanita, her four year old daughter. Immediately, she and others commenced searching throughout the subdivision for the child, and, following an elapse of about two hours, a young neighbor (Vincent Ciccio) located her lying in the pool of water behind the Gonsoulin house at a point estimated to be from three to seven feet from the bank. Thereupon, Edward Gonsoulin went into the water (to a depth of five feet), brought the body out, and began administering artificial respiration. He pumped a small quantity of water from her system (according to Ciccio and Gonsoulin), but he did not succeed in reviving her.

While the body was still lying near the water’s edge wrapped in a blanket, a photographer employed by a New Orleans newspaper arrived on the scene and made several photographs of the pool. These disclose (they were identified and offered in evidence) no logs or debris on the surface of the water at the spot where the child was found. But a few feet away, the pictures show, there was a sizable accumulation of short boards, sticks and small pieces of timber which extended from the bank almost across the water. The same condition obtained at several other points in the pool.

Subsequent to the occurrence of the unfortunate accident defendant, according to the testimony of one of its officers, filled the pool with dirt.

In this court defense counsel called attention to the fact that there were no eyewitnesses to the accident and that plaintiffs have not offered any direct proof of death of the child by drowning. They state in their brief here: “There is a possibility that she could have been pushed or thrown into the pond by a third party.” This point apparently was not raised in the Court of Appeal, for we find no mention of it in counsel’s brief filed there or in' the written opinion of that court. Be that as it may a strong inference" arises from the circumstantial evidence that the child walked or *385 fell into the pool and that her death resulted solely from drowning. The body was found in the pool; the artificial respiration administered to it produced some water; and no one was seen at or near the pool during the two hour period in which the child was missing. And since this inference has not been overcome or rebutted it will be accepted as establishing the manner and cause of death. Siracusa v. Prudential Insurance Company, 211 La. 1066, 31 So.2d 213; 17 Corpus Juris verbo Death, §§ 166 and 176; 25 C.J.S.', Death, §§ 80 and 87.

Without merit also is the affirmative defense that the death, together with the resulting damages, was caused by the failure of plaintiffs to properly attend and guard their minor daughter. The evidence abundantly discloses that the parents often cautioned all of their children about playing near the pool, and that they did everything reasonably required of them to prevent the happening of the accident.

This brings us to the important question of whether the attractive nuisance doctrine is applicable.

With reference to the doctrine generally it is well and ably stated in 38 American Jurisprudence verbo Negligence, Section 142, that:

“The attractive nuisance doctrine or, as it is sometimes called, the ‘turntable doctrine’ is a subject upon which there has been no small amount of confusion and diversity of opinion. There has been a difference of opinion not only as to whether the doctrine should be recognized, but also, in jurisdictions where it has been accepted, as to the conditions under which it is applicable.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 2d 791, 215 La. 378, 1949 La. LEXIS 952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saxton-v-plum-orchards-inc-la-1949.