State ex rel. Treadaway v. Louisiana State Board of Health

54 So. 2d 343, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 829
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 1951
DocketNo. 19723
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 So. 2d 343 (State ex rel. Treadaway v. Louisiana State Board of Health) 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. Treadaway v. Louisiana State Board of Health, 54 So. 2d 343, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 829 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On February 12th, 1946, Grant T. Treadaway, as relator, brought this suit against the Louisiana State Board of Health, praying for the issuance of a writ of mandamus to compel the said Board to change one of its records, that made on November 12th, 1930, showing the registration of the death of the relator’s mother, Anna Treadaway, in which the race of his mother is entered as colored.

Relator seeks to have the record changed so as to show the race of his mother as white.

The Board of Health filed answer denying that relator’s mother was a member of the white race. Thereafter the Board of Health filed a plea of nonjoinder, contending that Grant Treadaway is one of the many children of Anna Treadaway and that, therefore, the other said children are necessary parties, and later still the said Board filed exceptions of no cause of action and no right of action. All of these pleas and exceptions were overruled, and after a trial there was judgment in.favor of relator making peremptory the writ of mandamus and commanding the said Board “to correct its record of the death oi Anna Treadaway, recorded in Ward District .No. 52-5507, File No. 55, registered [344]*344No. 13543, to show that the said Anna Treadaway is a person of the Caucasian, or white, race.”

The Louisiana State Board of Health prayed for and obtained an appeal to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, and that court has transferred the matter to this court. See State ex rel. Treadaway v. Louisiana State Board of Health, 218 La. 752, 51 So.2d 41.

The relator is the son of Daniel Treada-way and his wife, Anna Lafitte Treada-way. The race of relator’s father, Daniel Treadaway, is not at issue.

We have given considerable thought to the question which is raised by the plea of nonjoinder filed by the respondent. This plea is based on the fact that the relator, as we have stated, is one of several brothers and sisters, children of Anna Lafitte Treadaway and Daniel Treadaway, all of whom will be as much affected by a change in the registration of the race of relator’s mother as will relator.

The question is whether or not in such a case one of the children has a right, without the acquiescence of the others, to demand such a change as relator insists on here. Have the courts the right to assume that all of the children in such a case wish the change to be made? Is it a foregone conclusion that to be classified in all circumstances as a member of the white or Caucasian race is so obviously desirable that the courts must assume that all persons who might be affected by such a judgment as is prayed for here would favor such a judgment?

We-think that the public interest which is involved is paramount, and that in such a case what is most desirable is that the record be correct, and that whenever the attention of the Board of Health is directed by any person at interest to the possible incorrectness of a record and conclusive evidence is produced, the public interest demands that the correction be made regardless of whether or not all persons interested join in the request for the change. This, seems to be recognized in the statute which authorizes the change or alteration of such a record* where there is submitted “sufficient documentary or sworn evidence acceptable as a basis of the alteration.” See LSA-R.S. 40:266. In the cases cited by respondent only private rights were involved. On this question we have, therefore concluded that since the. matter was brought to the-attention of the Board of Health by a person who was affected by the record, the Board of ■ Health is authorized and, in fact, required by the statute to receive such evidence as might be available and, in accordance with its own rules, to make the change if the evidence submitted is found by the court to be satisfactory.

The pleas and exceptions were properly overruled.

The Treadaway family, of which Anna Lafitte Treadaway was the mother and Daniel Treadaway was the father, and of which Grant Treadaway was one of the sons, lived in St. Tammany Parish on the bank of Bayou Lacombe near its mouth where the father, Daniel Treadaway, followed his occupation as trapper, hunter and fisherman, and as caretaker of the navigation light at the‘mouth of Bayou Lacombe.

Both Daniel Treadaway and his wife, Anna, went to St. Tammany Parish from Plaquemines Parish, below New Orleans, and had lived in St. Tammany Parish for many years when, in 1930, the wife, Anna, died and the record, which is under attack, was made.

The children were the relator, Grant, his brothers, William T., Peter Wiley, Joseph and Daniel Treadaway, Jr.

The girls of the family were Anna (known as Darling), who married Louis Cazenave; Mary Lena, who married Joe D’Angelo; Marie, whose husband’s last name was Melina, and Encebelle.

When the mother, Anna Treadaway, died on October 15th, 1930, her death was registered in the records of the Louisiana State Board of Health by the Registrar, E. G. Villarubia, and according to the certificate, the information given to the Registrar came from Joe Treadaway, a brother of the relator, and it is that certif[345]*345icate, in which the race of the mother, Anna, is entered as colored, which is under •attack.

From that certificate it is made to appear that the parents of the deceased, Anna Treadaway, were Joe Lafitte, the father, and Augustine, the mother. The last name of the mother is not given on the certificate, though it otherwise appears that the full name of the mother was Augustine Casborne.

There is much contradictory evidence -as to whether the deceased mother, Anna, had several brothers and sisters. According to some of the evidence relied on by the Board of Health, the brothers were John Lafitte; Fanny Lafitte, whose husband was Charles Ducre or Dupre; Patrick Lafitte; Benjamine Lafitte, whose husband was Manuel Cryer, and Thompson Lafitte, whose first wife was Victorine Cryer and whose second wife was Lumina Silve.

There is nothing in the record to show the race of any of these persons except Thompson Lafitte, and it is the contention •of the relator that Thompson Lafitte was not a brother of relator’s mother, Anna Lafitte. If Thompson Lafitte was a brother of Anna Lafitte, there are many certificates in the record showing the race of Thompson Lafitte as colored and showing also the race of many of his children as colored. And if Benjamine Lafitte was a member of the family of relator’s mother, there is in the record a certificate showing the race of one of the children of Benjamine Lafitte as colored and showing that the mother of this child, Benjamine Lafitte, was herself colored. This certificate, recording the birth of Levine Cryer, shows her to be the female daughter of Manuel Cryer, the father, and “Ben (Lefitte) Cry-er’’, and it shows the race of the mother “Ben (Lefitte) Cryer”, who was obviously Benjamine Lafitte, as colored.

We find it unnecessary to set forth the details concerning the certificates which appear under the name of Thompson Lafitte and of his several children, because the contention of relator as to them is that they are not related to him, and the contention of the Board of Health is that they are. If they are related to him, then these certificates constitute a tremendous volume of evidence contradictory to the contention of relator and if they are not so related then these certificates should he disregarded.

We also find in the record a certificate showing the birth of “Anestasia Casnave Cazenave”.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 2d 343, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-treadaway-v-louisiana-state-board-of-health-lactapp-1951.