Smith v. Delery

114 So. 2d 857, 238 La. 180, 1959 La. LEXIS 1076
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 25, 1959
Docket43928, 43943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 So. 2d 857 (Smith v. Delery) 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
Smith v. Delery, 114 So. 2d 857, 238 La. 180, 1959 La. LEXIS 1076 (La. 1959).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

We granted certiorari in this case on the applications of the plaintiff, William N. Smith, and the intervenor, St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Company, 1 to review the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Parish of Orleans, affirming the judgment of the district court dismissing the suit plaintiff had filed to recover damages, 2 individually, and on behalf of his minor son, Wayne R. Smith, who sustained severe and permanent injuries as a result of having been shot and wounded by the defendant, Edward L. Delery; and also dismissing the intervention. 3

The record discloses that the minor, Wayne R. Smith, a 14 year old newspaper boy, was delivering the Times-Picayune at about 4:30 in the morning of October 12, 1953, along his regular route in the Metairie section of Jefferson Parish, riding his bicycle and accompanied by his dog. The boy testified that he had already delivered the paper to the defendant, one of the sub *183 scribers, and was making deliveries on the opposite side of the street, when his dog, attracted by the barking of other dogs, ran in the back of defendant’s premises; that after parking his bicycle opposite from a driveway (which runs parallel and within five feet from the side of defendant’s house), he walked across the street, retrieved his dog from the bushes in the rear of defendant’s residence and was starting back towards the front of the house, when the dog tried to pull away (the dog apparently got away from him a couple of times) ; that he stopped and stooped over the dog to get a firm hold on its fur (the dog having no collar) when he was ordered by the defendant to halt, 4 which warning was followed within a fraction of a second by a shot, the bullet entering the boy’s back right of the center and leaving his body about 3 to 3i/¿ inches in the front below the left armpit, penetrating one of his kidneys which, together with the spleen, had to be removed.

Defendant admits the shooting, but seeks to avoid liability on the ground that the minor’s action led him to believe that he was a prowler or intruder, intending to harm either himself or his family, and that in view of his apprehension and fear, brought upon by the frequent appearances of prowlers, peeping, toms and intruders on his premises and in the immediate neighborhood, he acted as a reasonable and prudent man in light of the surrounding circumstances.

The Court of Appeal, in a well-considered opinion, observed: “There are very few disputed questions of fact. However, the question of whether Delery should be held liable seems to us to depend almost entirely upon a determination of one fact which is. in dispute, that is, whether young Smith, at the time at which the shot was fired- — regardless of what may have been his purpose in going to the rear of the Delery residence- — had turned and was obviously going away from the residence, or had dashed- or dived into the shrubbery which was alongside the residence and partially under the window from which the shot was fired.” And, after carefully reviewing and analyzing the pertinent evidence, concluded that “The record convinces us that the boy had done nothing more than attempt to prevent his dog from joining in the barking and that, in perfect good faith, he had done all that he could to retrieve it from somewhere near the rear of the residence. However, liability vel non of Delery does not depend upon whether young Smith looked through the window but rather upon the question of whether or not Delery, un *185 der all the circumstances, acted as a man of reasonable prudence would have acted. We think that he did.”

In reaching this conclusion, the Court of Appeal, relying on its prior holding in the case of Patterson v. Kuntz, La.App., 28 So. 2d 278, stated: “When we compare the facts of this case with those found in Patterson v. Kuntz, supra, [28 So.2d 282] it seems that, except for the fact that young Patterson was to some extent himself to blame, there is no distinction between the facts here and the facts there. There the previous occurrences, together with the presence of the young men and his approach towards the Kuntz residence, were held sufficient to justify the action of Kuntz in firing the shots. In that case we found that the intruder failed ‘to heed [the] warning [to stop],’ but continued on in the direction of the bedroom window. Here, though young Smith did not continue in the open towards the window, nevertheless he continued towards a hiding place immediately alongside the house and put himself in a position in which, had he been an intruder with felonious intent, he would have constituted just as great a threat as he would have constituted had he continued directly towards the window.”

Plaintiff and intervenor concede that the rule announced in Patterson v. Kuntz, supra, i. e., that “resort to the use of a dangerous weapon in order to repel a supposed attack upon a defendant’s person or that of persons to whom he owes a duty to protect cannot be countenanced as justifiable save in exceptional cases where the actor’s fear of the danger is not only genuine but is founded on facts which would be likely to-produce similar emotions in men of reasonable prudence,” is correct, but argue that it is inapposite from a factual standpoint.

The record unmistakably shows that the actual appearance of prowlers, peeping toms and intruders and repeated rumors of such appearances, extending over a period of more than one year, had created a general fear and apprehension among defendant and his neighbors, which was probably heightened by the fact that most of the men (except the defendant) held travelling jobs, and during their frequent absences their young wives and minor children looked mainly to the defendant for protection; that on several occasions the. men had joined in patrolling the neighborhood in an effort to detect and apprehend a prowler; that various complaints were filed with the police, who — in response to those complaints— likewise searched the neighborhood for any intruders; that the landlord owning the apartment building fronting on the back of defendant’s house had been asked to install a floodlight, but refused to do so, whereupon defendant illuminated his rear yard and driveway to discourage any prowlers; that on at least two occasions various neighbors detected a prowler and chased *187 him, the last of these incidents occurring ■only three days prior to the shooting.

We think that in view of the general state of apprehension and fear prevailing at the time and the specific occurrences taking place immediately before the shooting, which will be discussed in detail later herein, the trial judge and the Court of Appeal were correct in finding that defendant had acted as a reasonable and prudent man in the belief that he and his family were in immediate danger.

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 2d 857, 238 La. 180, 1959 La. LEXIS 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-delery-la-1959.