Smith v. Monroe Grocery Co.

171 So. 167
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1936
DocketNos. 5314, 5315.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 171 So. 167 (Smith v. Monroe Grocery Co.) 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
Smith v. Monroe Grocery Co., 171 So. 167 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

A school bus transporting some 25 CCC enrollees was proceeding on the Dixie-Overland Highway between Monroe and Ruston in this state, about 9:30 on the night of August 30, 1935, and collided with a truck belonging to defendant Monroe Grocery Company, Limited. In this collision, Melvin Lee Smith and Oscar James were killed. Both of them were occupants of the bus and enjoyed the ages of 18 years.

As a result of said deaths, these suits were brought by the respective mothers and fathers of the deceased young men against the Monroe Grocery Company, Limited, and its insurer, the Trinity Universal Insurance Company. The petitioners alleged numerous acts of negligence on the part of the truck -owner, and its employee.

According to the court minutes, defendants filed exceptions to the jurisdiction ratione personae in both suits. Amended petitions were thereafter tendered and allowed, and such exceptions were overruled. Exceptions of no cause or right of action were then directed to the petitions. These pleadings were general in nature and did not point out or refer to any particular alleged defects of the petitions. They were submitted without argument and overruled.

Defendants in their joint answers, after reserving their rights under the previously filed exceptions, admitted the deaths of Smith and James, but denied responsibility therefor.

By agreement of counsel, the cases were consolidated, and a trial was then had on the merits. At the commencement of the trial the following objection was offered and overruled:

“Defendants object to the introduction of any testimony whatever in either of these consolidated cases on the ground and for the reason that plaintiffs’ petitions, nor either of them, disclose a cause or right of action against your defendants.”

From judgments in favor of the respective plaintiffs in both cases, defendants prosecuted suspensive and devolutive appeals.

In the brief of defendants’ counsel in this court, it is contended that the exceptions of no cause or right of action filed in both cases should have been sustained by the trial court and the suits dismissed, for the reason that the plaintiffs failed to allege and prove that their deceased children were not survived by wives or children.

On learning of that contention, all plaintiffs, through their attorneys, moved that the cases be remanded to the trial court with instructions to permit them to aver that decedents were not survived by wives or children, and to adduce proof in support thereof. These motions allege:

“That the exception of no cause or right of action urged and relied oji in this Court by appellants was originally filed in the trial court, without in any manner pointing out at what it was levelled; no argument, either orally or in brief, was made in support of it and the court led to .believe that it was filed pro forma and impliedly requested that it be overruled pro forma, as is more fully evidenced by the attached affidavit of the Honorable E. L. Walker, Judge of the Third Judicial District Court, Lincoln Parish, Louisiana, which affidavit is made a part hereof.”

*169 The attached certificate of Judge Walker, above referred to, reads:

“Ruston, Louisiana,
“November 3rd, 1936.
“I, E. L. Walker, Judge of the Third Judicial District Court, Lincoln Parish, Louisiana, do hereby certify that the exceptions of no cause or right of action filed by defendants in suits No. 10,340 and 10,341 on the Docket of said Third Judicial District Court, said suits being entitled Andrew R. Smith et ux v. Monroe Grocer Company et al, and William E. James, et ux v. Monroe Grocer Company et al, respectively, were filed by counsel for defendants in Open Court, and the Court given to understand, by implication, that they were filed pro forma and would not be insisted upon.
“Further certify that when said exceptions were called for trial counsel for defendants stated in Open Court they desired to make no argument in support thereof, did not point out at what said exceptions were levelled, filed no brief in support thereof, and the Court by implication invited to overrule said exceptions pro forma.
“Further certify that said exceptions were not relied on or argued by.defendants in their brief submitted on the merits of the cases.
“Further certify that if the minute entries in said cases show that said exceptions were tried, argued and submitted, said minute entries contain error to the extent that said exceptions were not tried or argued. That submission of them were for the purpose of overruling them pro forma.”

' Plaintiffs’ motions to remand the cases were opposed by defendants for the' following reasons:

1. That the cases are before this court without complaint on the part of plaintiffs of any rulings made by the trial court, and there is therefore no legal ground for remanding them.
2. That whatever rights or causes of action plaintiffs may have had for the deaths of their sons are perempted, more than one year having elapsed from the date of such deaths, and plaintiffs cannot now be permitted to allege and prove causes and rights of action in themselves not heretofore alleged.

Plaintiffs’ rights to recover for the deaths of their sons are statutory, 'and spring from the provisions of article 2315 of the Louisiana Civil Code.

The jurisprudence of this state uniformly holds that for the mother and father to recover for the death of a child under the above-mentioned article, they must allege and prove that such decedent was not survived by a spouse or child. In other words, a petition must negative the existence of a surviving wife and children, and there must be proof in substantiation thereof, for the more distant relatives to recover. Blackburn v. Louisiana R. & N. Co., 128 La. 319, 327, 54 So. 865; Register and Wife v. Harrell, 131 La. 983, 60 So. 638; Horrell v. Gulf & Valley Cotton Oil Co., 15 La.App. 603, 131 So. 709.

This well-established principle of law is fully recognized and appreciated by plaintiffs’ counsel, as is evidenced by the filing of the motion to remand. The failure to. make the necessary negative aver-ments was, according to the language of such motion, -the result of counsel’s oversight or inadvertency. It is reasonable to presume that had the exceptions of no cause or right of action particularized regarding the objections to the petitions, or had they even been urged and argued in the trial court, plaintiffs’ counsel would have then become cognizant of their oversight and supplied the necessary allegations and proof. Although our laws do not prevent the filing of a blanket exception of no cause or right of action, the courts of this state have on several occasions frowned on such practice. The Supreme Court, in Davis v. Arkansas Southern Ry. Co., 117 La. 320, 41 So. 587, 588, said:

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-monroe-grocery-co-lactapp-1936.