Tripani v. Meraux

159 So. 762, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 187
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 18, 1935
DocketNo. 16025.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 So. 762 (Tripani v. Meraux) 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
Tripani v. Meraux, 159 So. 762, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 187 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit for monetary redress for damages caused by the bite of a dog. The defendant, Dr. L. A. Meraux, resides in the parish of St. Bernard. The petition alleges that the dog had roamed or wandered into the parish of Orleans and that there, while the owner was not present, it had bitten the plaintiff, Mike Tripani.

By a plea to the jurisdiction ratione person®, Dr. Meraux challenged the right of the courts of the parish of Orleans to hear the matter, calling .attention to article 162 of the Code of Practice, which, in part, reads as follows: “It is a general rule in civil matters that one must be sued before his own judge, that is to say, before the judge having jurisdiction over the place where he has his domicile or residence. * * * ”

In the district court this plea was sustained and the suit ordered dismissed. Plaintiff has appealed'.

Plaintiff concedes that the general rule is that “one must be sued before his own judge,” but he points out that article 162 itself states that there are “exceptions expressly provided! for by law,” and he directs our attention to the exceptions set forth in paragraph 9 of article 165, and he maintains that the facts alleged here bring the matter within the express terms of those exceptions. That paragraph reads as follows: “Trespass. In all cases where any person, firm or corporation shall commit trespass, or do anything for which an action for damage lies or where any corporation shall fail to do anything for which an action for damage lies, such person, firm or corporation may be sued in the parish where such damage is done or trespass committed or at the domicile of such person, firm or corporation.”

Defendant, exceptor, takes up the burden of the argument and contends that the act complained of here — permitting a vicious dog to roam at large — is an act of omission, and that, since this act is charged against an individual and not against a corporation, the case is not within the exception relied upon by plaintiff; in other words, that, though the paragraph permits a suit for damage resulting from a negligent act of commission to be brought in the parish in which the damage is sustained', whether the tort-feasor be an individual, a firm, or a corporation, for damage resulting from an act of omission, the suit, if an individual or a firm is the alleged tort-feasor, may be brought only at the domicile of the tort-feasor, and that in such case it is only where the defendant is a corporation that the courts of the parish in which the damage was sustained are also given jurisdiction.

A mere reading of the paragraph shows plainly that a distinction is made between acts of omission and acts of commission, but *763 plaintiff maintains that the distinction was inadvertently drawn by the framers of the article and that it was not intended that any such distinction should be made between jurisdiction of such a suit against a corporation on the one hand or against a Arm or am individual on the other. Plaintiff also argues that, even if the distinction was intended and if we feel that an individual tort-feasor who1 is sued for damage resulting from a negligent act of omission may be sued' only at hisi domicile, nevertheless the plea to the jurisdiction 'here should be overruled because the negligent act of permitting a vicious dog to roam at large is an act of commission and not of omission.

Until the year 1910, even against a corporation, a suit for damage resulting from an act of omission could be brought only at the domicile of the corporation. Prior to that time there were many decisions of our Supreme Court distinguishing between acts of omission and acts of commission and holding that, where the damage resulted from an act of omission, the corporation could be sued only at its domicile, but that for acts of commission the suit might be maintained in either of the parishes.

In Devons v. Lee Logging Co., 121 La. 518, 46 So. 612, 613, the court said:

“The court holds' that acts of omission are excluded from the class of cases actionable at the place of the accident by the words! quoted, ‘commit,’ ‘committed,’ ‘do,’ ‘done,’ used in the cited article of the Code of Practice.
“These words, the court held, implied action necessarily, and wherever there is such action — that is, whenever the act! is actually done, or there was a commission, and not an act which amounts, as in the case before us for decision, to an omission — the case is then brought within the exception laid down in the decision hereafter cited.”

In Montgomery v. Louisiana Levee Co., 30 La. Ann. 607, it is said that: “The plain language of No. 9 of article 165 of the Code of Practice is, that for things done, for acts of commission, for which an action for damages lies, the suit may be brought in the parish in which the damage is done; but that this rule does not apply to omissions, neglect, or failure to do, because wrongs of this latter class are not only not mentioned in this article, but are excluded by the use of the words ‘commit’ and ‘committed,’ ‘do’ and ‘done,’ which necessarily imply action.”

See, also, In re Cumberland Tel. & T. Co., 116 La. 125, 40 So. 590; Castille v. Caffery Central Ref., etc., Co., 48 La Ann. 322, 19 So. 332, 336; Dave v. Morgan’s L., etc., R. Co., 46 La. Ann. 273, 14 So. 911; Houston v. Vicksburg, S. & P. R. Co., 39 La. Ann. 796, 2 So. 562; Gossin v. Williams, 36 La. Ann. 186; Culpepper v. Arkansas S. R. Co., 110 La. 745, 34 So. 761, 763.

The last case so holding prior to the year 1910 was the Devons Case, from which we have quoted and which was decided in 1908.

With these cases in mind we feel that the legislature, in 1910, when it enacted Act No. 44, could not have been unmindful of the distinction which had been drawn by the courts between acts of commission and those of omission, and that the distinction made in that statute, which permits corporations to be sued in either parish for either acts of omission or acts of commission, but requires that for acts of omission the individual or the firm must be sued at its domicile, was not inadvertently drawn, but resulted from deliberate intent, on the part of the members of the legislature.

Then, too, we must bear in mind that legislation which permits a suit in a parish other than that óf the domicile of the defend ant is in derogation of common right, and therefore must be strictly construed. If interpretation is necessary, the strict, limited interpretation must be adopted rather than that which is broad. In this connection the Supreme Court, in Castille v. Caffery Central Ref., etc., Co., supra, quoted with approval language used in Montgomery v. Louisiana Levee Co., supra, as follows: “It is a familiar rule that statutes in derogation of a common right must be construed strictly. The entire article 165, is an exception to the general rule established by article 162.”

We are unable, therefore, to agree that paragraph 9 of article. 165. of the Code of Practice permits a suit for damage caused by a negligent failure of an individual to act to be brought in any other parish than that of the domicile of the individual.

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Related

Tripani v. Meraux
165 So. 453 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1936)

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159 So. 762, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tripani-v-meraux-lactapp-1935.