State ex rel. Dupas v. City of New Orleans

102 So. 2d 77, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 818
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1958
DocketNo. 21132
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 So. 2d 77 (State ex rel. Dupas v. City of New Orleans) 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
State ex rel. Dupas v. City of New Orleans, 102 So. 2d 77, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 818 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

McBride, judge.

Relator, Ralph Dupas, aged 21, a pugilist, seeks a mandamus against the Mayor of the City of New Orleans and the Chairman and Registrar of Vital Statistics for the City Board of Health, for a delayed certificate of birth showing him to be a member of the white race. He alleges that he is the child of Peter Dupas and Evelyn Foto, born October 14, 193S, in New Orleans. He further alleges that his efforts to secure a delayed birth certificate from respondents in accordance with the statutory regulations and the rules of the City Board of Health have been unavailing.

Respondents interposed exceptions of no right and no cause of action and, alternatively, excepted to the jurisdiction of the court ratione materiae. Then answering, with full reservation of their exceptions, respondents set up as their defenses: (a) that relator was born in Davant, Parish of Plaquemines, and not in New Orleans; (b) that he is the child of Peter Duplessis, father, and Evelyn (Eveline) Duplessis, mother, both colored; and (c) that relator’s birth was registered with the Bureau of Vital Statistics, State of Louisiana, on November 12, 1935, as per registration number 24,795. Respondents then pray for a dismissal of the suit, and, alternatively, it is prayed that in the event they are ordered to issue to relator the delayed birth certificate that they be authorized to issue the same in his true name and that his race or color be stated therein.

On the return day when the matter was called for hearing, the exceptions were considered by the court, the result being that the exception of no cause of action was overruled, and rulings on the other exceptions were reserved inasmuch as the judge thought these exceptions must rest on the evidence to be adduced upon the trial of the merits of the case.

After a trial which consumed six days,, at which numerous witnesses testified and' some ninety documents or photostatic copies were introduced into evidence, the trial judge, with written reasons, rendered judgment overruling the exceptions to the court’s jurisdiction ratione materiae and no right of action, and the writ of mandamus sought by relator was made peremptory and respondents were ordered to issue the delayed birth certificate. Respondents have appealed.

Upon argument of the case before this court, we requested counsel to confine themselves to the issue whether relator’s birthplace was in the Parish of Plaquemines or the City of New Orleans as that is the focal point in the case, and if it be true, as respondents contend, that relator was not born in New Orleans, then the wrong defendants are before us and the suit must fall. Counsel were informed that if the court should conclude that relator was a native of New Orleans, the case would in due course be refixed for further argument.

Under the terms of Act 257 of 1918, LSA-R.S. 40:147, prevailing at the time of relator’s birth, the State was divided into districts for the registration of births and other vital statistics, and the Parish of Orleans and the City of New Orleans, together, were constituted a separate and distinct primary district. Provisions were made for the appointment of local Registrars of Vital Statistics for each of the registration districts, and the Chairman of the Board of Health of the Parish of Orleans and the City of New Orleans was designated as ex-officio Recorder for said parish and city. It was provided that within ten days after the date of each birth, a certificate thereof shall be filed with the Local Registrar of the district within which the birth occurred. (See Sections 4, 13, LSA-R.S. 40:149 to 40:152, 40:243.) LSA-[79]*79R.S. 40:322, 323 make provision for the acceptance of any registration more than six months after the time prescribed for its filing — in other words, the filing of a delayed birth certificate.

Counsel for respondents have renewed and reurged their exceptions to the trial court’s jurisdiction ratione materiae and no right of action, but we conclude that the exceptions were properly overruled below. The Louisiana Constitution of 1921 LSA-Const., confers jurisdiction on the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans in cases “where no specific amount is in contest” such as a mandamus proceeding. Art. 7, §§ 35, 81. The exception of no right of action has as its basis the theory that as relator’s birth occurred in a place other than the Parish of Orleans, he has no legal right to demand the delayed certificate from respondents. Relator specifically alleged he was born in New Orleans, and if it is a fact that this allegation is untrue, which is one of the defenses raised in the answer, that is a matter which addresses itself to the merits of the case rather than being a predicate for the exception of no right of action, and if the suit is to be dismissed, we think it would be proper that the judgment should be based on the merits and not on the exception.

In support of his claim that his birthplace is New Orleans, the most important evidence relator introduced was elicited from Mrs. Harold J. Powell, a close friend and neighbor of Evelyn Dupas, who testified that she actually observed the birth on the evening of October 14, 1935, in the Dupas home at 620 Mandeville Street, after she and Evelyn Dupas had returned from a theater. The witness stated that the event transpired before she could even summon the midwife, Mrs. Legendre, who had previously been engaged by Evelyn Dupas.

A man named Enos V. Russell, another of relator’s witnesses, also testified that he was born in New Orleans. Russell’s testimony is that his half sister, Mrs. Loretta Legendre, a graduate midwife, attended Mrs. Dupas, whom he personally knew, during her pregnancy with relator, and that the birth took place at the mother’s home on Mandeville Street rather than at his sister’s maternity home. Russell insists he handled some of his sister’s business and that he remembers relator’s birth because it took place shortly before Armistice Day, the date on which his own son was born.

Other testimonial evidence introduced by relator emanated from his mother and father, the mother testifying that relator was born in a house on Mandeville Street, and the father stating that all of his children, including relator, were born in New Orleans. Another witness, Josephine St. Ann Duplessis, an aged woman, late of the Parish of Plaquemines, but now a resident of New Orleans, about whom some comment will be made later herein, testified she is the foster mother of Evelyn Dupas, and that her said foster daughter immediately upon her marriage with Peter Dupas moved from the Parish of Plaquemines with him to New Orleans, and that New Orleans has been their home ever since.

Christophe Duplessis was also called as a witness for relator, hut his testimony is such that no useful purpose can be served by it. This man testified first that Evelyn Dupas moved from her Plaquemines Parish home upon being married to Peter Dupas, and that all her children were born in New Orleans. However, after extensive impeaching testimony and evidence, he changed his story and said that Ralph Dupas was born in Davant, Louisiana, Parish of Pla-quemines, in October 1935. The trial judge in referring to this witness commented: “I don’t think he knows what he’s talking about himself most of the time.”

In an effort to bolster relator’s contention that the City of New Orleans is his birthplace, there was introduced on his behalf the inscription on the records of Sts. Peter and Paul Church, which reflects that on [80]

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Related

State ex rel. Dupas v. City of New Orleans
125 So. 2d 375 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 2d 77, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dupas-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1958.