Trent v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.

178 So. 2d 470, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4224
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1965
DocketNo. 6434
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 178 So. 2d 470 (Trent v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.) 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
Trent v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp., 178 So. 2d 470, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4224 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is an action for death benefits under the Louisiana Workmen’s Compensation Act. There is substantially no dispute as to the major portion of the facts surrounding this case. Curtis Trent, the deceased husband of the plaintiff, Pearl Anderson Trent, was employed by the Iberville Parish School Board as a teacher and athletic coach at Thomas A. Levy School in Rosedale, Louisiana, at wages which the defendant admits were of such an amount that 65% thereof exceeded $35.00 per week. On October 9, 1963, Curtis Trent and two other assistant coaches left the school at Rosedale and drove to Maringouin, Louisiana, for the purpose of permitting one of the assistant coaches to change clothes and drive to Baton Rouge with Trent and the other coach to attend a football game which was to be played that night at the Municipal Stadium in Baton Rouge. While in Maringouin, Trent and the two assistant coaches stopped at a bar and had several drinks, consuming a pint of Scotch whiskey between them. The three men then returned to the school where the two assistant coaches entered another automobile and commenced to follow Trent, who was driving his own automobile, to Baton Rouge. The evidence shows that the three coaches were going directly to the Municipal Stadium to scout the game.

While driving from Rosedale to the Municipal Stadium in Baton Rouge, Trent’s automobile was involved in an accident and he was instantly killed. His widow, the plaintiff herein, on May 5, 1964, filed the instant suit naming as defendant the appellant herein, Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, who was the Workmen’s Compensation insurer of the Iberville Parish School Board. In her petition, the plaintiff alleged that at the time of the accident she was married to, living with, and dependent upon Curtis Trent in the Parish of East Baton Rouge and that in addition thereto a minor child born to her and her husband, was well as two children of the petitioner by a former marriage were also dependent upon Curtis Trent for their support. She prayed for judgment against the defendant in the amount of $14,600.00, to be payable at the rate of $35.00 per week from the date of the accident, a penalty of 12%, plus attorney fees of $5,000.00. She alleged in substance that her late husband’s employment required that he make periodic trips in automobiles and therefore was hazardous within the intent and meaning of the Louisiana Workmen’s Compensation Act. She further alleged that the refusal of the defendant to commence payment of the weekly compensation benefits and to pay her the statutory allowance of $600.00 for funeral expenses had been arbitrary, capricious, and without justifiable cause, thus entitling her to recover from the defendant the 12% penalty and attorney fees provided for in the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The defendant answered the petition, denying every material allegation thereof, except that which alleged that Curtis Trent’s wages were of such an amount that 65% thereof exceeded $35.00 per week. They further stated in their answer that compensation payments had been refused

“because, under the circumstances and facts surrounding the death of Curtis Trent, respondent is not liable for compensation benefits.”

On August 10, 1964, plaintiff’s counsel served written interrogatories upon counsel for defendant, the last of which inquired of defendant as to whether or not they had communiciated to the plaintiff or anyone acting on their behalf their reason for not honoring the compensation payment in connection with the death of Curtis Trent.

[472]*472The defendant answered some of the interrogatories, objected to others, and answered the last interrogatory as follows:

“Although there have been no formal communications to plaintiff or her attorney regarding the reasons for refusing to pay compensation benefits in this claim, attorney for plaintiff is well aware that defendant has denied this claim because, among other reasons, the decedent, plaintiff’s alleged husband, had been drinking intoxicating beverages immediately prior to his demise and was not at the time engaged in the course and scope of his employment, since his employer, the Iherville Parish School Board, undoubtedly, does not hire its teachers or football coaches for the purposes of drinking alcoholic beverages in saloons or at other places, nor would any other sensible employer consider its employees carrying out his duties for which he was employed while proceeding to or from saloons to consume or after having consumed intoxicating liquors.”

The case was tried on .the merits on October 8, 1964, and the Lower Court rendered judgment, in behalf of the plaintiff, individually and for the use and • benefit of her three minor children, and against the defendant in the amount of $14,000.00 payable- at. .the rate of $35.00 per week from October 9, 1963, for a period of 400 weeks and also rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the amount of $600.00 for the funeral expenses. The Lower Court rejected plaintiff’s demand for penalties and attorney’s fees. On October 30, 1964, the judgment previously rendered was signed and filed, and on November 10, 1964, the defendant was granted this suspensive appeal.

During the course of the trial, counsel for plaintiff strenuously objected to every effort on the part of the defendant to urge the intoxication of Curtis Trent as a defense to this action. He predicated his objection on the defendant’s failure to plead specially the alleged intoxication of Curtis Trent. The Lower Court sustained each objection of this nature made by counsel for plaintiff but allowed counsel for defendant to proffer such testimony. At the conclusion of the trial, counsel for plaintiff withdrew all prior objections which he had made to the introduction of evidence pertaining to the defense of intoxication, and we therefore have before us, as a part of the record rather than as a proffer, the complete transcript of testimony, including that with reference to the alleged intoxication of Curtis Trent.

We believe, as did the Lower Court, that there are two primary questions to be resolved. The first is the question of the intoxication of Curtis Trent, and the second is the validity of the defense asserted by the defendant that Curtis Trent was not in the course and scope of his enn ployment at the time of his death.

John D. Dickerson, one of the assistant coaches who was with Curtis Trent for a time immediately preceding the accident, testified that he, Emmett Follins and Trent left the school where they were employed immediately after football practice at about 5:30 P.M. They went to Marin-gouin, Louisiana where Dickerson lived in order that Dickerson might pick up some clothes, as he was going to spend the night in Baton Rouge at Follins’ house. Dickerson testified that before they got to his house in Maringouin, they decided that they were going to stop off at a bar in Maringouin. He stated that when they arrived at the bar, the three of them jointly contributed toward the purchase of a pint of Scotch whiskey, which the three of them then proceeded to consume together. Dickerson testified that together the three men drank the entire pint of whiskey before they left the bar, and that they drank nothing else. His testimony was that each of the parties' had two drinks out of the [473]*473bottle. Dickerson noticed no difference in Curtis Trent after he had consumed the alcohol and stated that he had ridden back with Curtis Trent to the school in Rose-dale, with Curtis Trent driving.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 2d 470, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trent-v-employers-liability-assurance-corp-lactapp-1965.