Trumbaturi v. Katz & Besthoff, Ltd.

158 So. 16, 180 La. 915, 1934 La. LEXIS 1589
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 26, 1934
DocketNo. 32959.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 158 So. 16 (Trumbaturi v. Katz & Besthoff, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trumbaturi v. Katz & Besthoff, Ltd., 158 So. 16, 180 La. 915, 1934 La. LEXIS 1589 (La. 1934).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

This is an action for damages. Defendant excepted to plaintiff’s petition on the ground that it set out no cause of action. This exception was overruled by the trial court, but when the case was called for trial before a jury, the defendant objected to the introduction of any testimony on the ground that no cause of action was alleged. This objection was sustained and plaintiff’s suit was ordered dismissed. Plaintiff appealed from this ruling and carried her case to the Court of Appeal, Parish of Orleans, where the ruling of the trial court was affirmed., See opinion reported in 154 So. 58, 60.

Plaintiff applied to this court for writs, which were granted, and the case is now before us for review.

As a cause of action plaintiff alleged that defendant, which is a corporation, owns a chain of drug stores in New Orleans from each of which it sells drugs, including carbolic acid, which is a deadly poison; that plaintiff’s daughter ordered by telephone from one of these drug stores carbolic acid and directed that it be delivered at her residence ; that a clerk in the drug store sent the poison by a man of full age employed by de *920 fendant to deliver packages and that the package containing the poison was delivered by the deliveryman to the plaintiff’s daughter in person; that her daughter, over twenty-one years of age, was demented, simpleminded, idiotic, irresponsible, and for that reason did not know the deadly quality of the drug, and “being ignorant of its deadly quality and being demented and irresponsible, drank same, not knowing the fatal result that would follow and in consequence thereof died”; that her said daughter suffered intensely as a result of drinking the poison, and that “your petitioner is entitled to recover damages for the pain and suffering experienced by her said daughter, in the sum of $2500.00 and for the loss of the love, companionship and affection which your petitioner has experienced as a result of the death of said daughter, she should recover the further sum of $7500.00”; that she had the same love and affection for her, afflicted daughter “as any mother has for her child, and was deeply shocked and grieved by the untimely death of her daughter.”

In a brief filed in this court by counsel for defendant, we find a full and fair statement of the acts of negligence attributed by plaintiff in her petition to defendant, and for convenience we quote the same as follows:

“That defendant neglected to comply with a regulation of the Board of Health of the State of Louisiana, which requires dispensers of poisons to maintain, for inspection by proper authorities, a written record of all sales of poisons;
“That defendant further was guilty of negligence in failing to ask for and receive a written receipt for the carbolic acid, in violation of its own regulation and custom;
“That had defendant taken the precaution of questioning plaintiff’s daughter, in order to obtain the information required to be recorded in the poison register, it would have ascertained her mental incapacity, and further, that had the boy who delivered the carbolic acid questioned plaintiff’s daughter, or required a receipt from her, he would have discovered her mental condition sufficiently to apprise him of the danger of delivering such a poison to so irresponsible a person;
“That defendant’s failure to keep the poison register, as required by the regulation of the State Board of Health, and its failure also to require a receipt of defendant’s daughter, constituted acts of negligence, which were the proximate cause of the subsequent death of the daughter who drank the acid, with fatal results.”

The regulation of the State Board of Health with which it is alleged defendant failed to comply is Regulation No. 35 of the Food and Drug laws of this state, and reads as follows:

“All druggists and all other persons dealing in or selling poisonous substances shall keep a special book open at all times to the proper authorities, in which they shall register the name and quantity of the drug and the name and residence of the person to whom any poisonous substance is sold, and the use it is intended for, also the date of the Sale, whether Sold upon a personal acquaintance with the buyer.”

If as a matter of fact plaintiff’s daughter died as the result of swallowing a *922 deadly poison, she being ignorant of its effects, and if that poison went into her hands through the fault and negligence of the defendant, plaintiff is entitled to recover damages under article 2315 of the Civil Code, as amended by Act No. 159 of 1932, p. 520, which says that “every act whatever of man that •causes damage to another, obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.” Whatever right of action the deceased may have had against the defendant, had she survived, was transmitted by her death to her mother, and under the last paragraph of the article, the mother has a right also to recover such damages as she may have sustained.

Defendant excepted to the petition on the ground that it set out no cause of action. The basis of this exception is not that plaintiff would have no right of recovery if she could show that her daughter’s death was due to the fault of defendant, but that plaintiff has not alleged facts sufficient to show that defendant was at fault.

The effect of the exception is to admit all the well-pleaded facts, but not the conclusions of the pleader, and in order to determine whether the petition sets out a cause of action, the petition must be construed as a whole, in its entirety. All parts of it must be considered and given effect.

So far as we are informed, the trial court submitted no written reasons for his holding that the petition sets out no cause of action. But we have before us the opinion of the Court of Appeal affirming the judgment of the lower court and the brief of counsel for defendant. We think the Court of Appeal and counsel have erred in laying too much stress on those allegations relating to defendant’s failure to properly keep a record of the sale of the carbolic acid to the deceased.

The Court of Appeal said:

“There was no causal connection between the death of plaintiff’s daughter and the failure of the clerk to enter in the record ■certain information which was in his possession.”

Counsel for defendant quote the above in their brief and say:

“However, conceding, arguendo, that defendant owed the duty to plaintiff’s daughter to keep the poison register, and that it failed to do so, this fault was not the proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s daughter, who died as a result of her own willful act, by deliberately drinking the poison. Even though plaintiff (defendant) had complied with the food and drug regulations and had kept the register, it is evident that this would not have prevented plaintiff’s daughter’s death.”

No fault can be found with the court’s conclusion that there was no causal connection between the death of plaintiff’s daughter and the failure of defendant to keep the proper record, and none can be found with counsel’s reasoning.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 16, 180 La. 915, 1934 La. LEXIS 1589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trumbaturi-v-katz-besthoff-ltd-la-1934.