Valence v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.

50 So. 2d 847, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 595
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 1951
Docket19624
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 50 So. 2d 847 (Valence v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.) 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
Valence v. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 50 So. 2d 847, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 595 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

50 So.2d 847 (1951)

VALENCE et al.
v.
LOUISIANA POWER & LIGHT CO. et al.

No. 19624.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

February 26, 1951.

*848 Aubrey C. Evans, New Orleans, for plaintiffs and appellees.

Monroe & Lemann, J. Raburn Monroe, Walter J. Suthon, Jr. and Jack A. Bornemann, all of New Orleans, for Louisiana Power & Light Co., defendant and appellant.

Frank T. Doyle and Robert C. Hughes, New Orleans, for Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., defendant and appellant.

JANVIER, Judge.

Mrs. Mozella Theriot Valence, wife of Anthony Valence, was a passenger in a motor bus of Louisiana Power and Light Company on February 28th, 1949, when it was driven off the highway into a ditch alongside. At the time Mrs. Valence was from two to four months pregnant. On August 12th, 1949, about five and one-half months after the accident, the child with which she had been pregnant was born dead.

Mr. and Mrs. Valence brought this suit for damages against Louisiana Power and Light Company and Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, its liability insurance carrier, alleging that the accident resulted from negligence of the operator of the bus and that many injuries were sustained by Mrs. Valence, and particularly that the death of the unborn child, prior to its birth, was the result of those injuries, and therefore was a result of the accident.

Mr. Valence prayed for solidary judgment against the two defendants in the sum of $15,000. He claimed $5,000 as representing the amount spent for medical and hospital bills and the loss of earnings of Mrs. Valence for a period of twenty months, and also as the cost of employing someone to "attend" to Mrs. Valence, and $10,000 as a recompense for the "mental anguish, disappointment and grief caused by the present and future loss of companionship of the expected child."

Mrs. Valence prayed for solidary judgment against the two defendants for $30,000, $15,000 of which she claimed for "past, present and future pain and suffering", and $15,000 for the "mental anguish, disappointment and grief caused by the present and future loss of companionship of the expected child."

The defendants denied that the accident resulted from negligence of the bus driver and they denied that Mrs. Valence received any injuries at all, and they especially alleged that "she received no injuries which in any way affected the birth of her child."

There was solidary judgment against the two defendants in favor of Mrs. Valence for $15,000 and in favor of Mr. Valence for $12,500. Both defendants have appealed devolutively and suspensively.

In oral argument counsel for defendants have admitted that though they have not conceded that there is liability, they feel that the principal issues are whether Mrs. Valence was seriously injured and whether *849 the loss of the child was the result of the accident, and they further contend that, regardless of the cause of the loss of the child, as a matter of law there can be no recovery for such loss.

The record leaves no room for doubt that the accident, such as it was, resulted from the negligence of the driver of the bus. A passenger had boarded it only a very short time before the accident occurred, and the operator had turned to give change to this passenger and had thus diverted his attention from the operation of the bus, and had allowed it to swerve to its side so that its wheels went into a ditch alongside the highway.

The record shows that instead of permitting the passengers to alight, the driver attempted to extricate the bus by driving it first backward and then forward several times and that only then, after hearing protests from some of the passengers, did he allow them to alight.

We conclude that for such injuries and losses as were sustained the defendants are liable.

The major item of loss claimed is based on the fact that the expected child was born dead, and since there is presented by the defendants the contention that for such an item of loss or damage there can be no recovery as a matter of law, we deem it proper to discuss that legal question first because if there can be no such recovery, regardless of the cause of the loss, then there is no necessity to consider or discuss the extensive medical testimony touching upon the question of whether the stillbirth of the child was the result of the accident.

Counsel for defendants direct our attention to Article 28 of our Civil Code which provides that: "Children born dead are considered as if they had never been born or conceived."

They say that since a child born dead is considered as never having been conceived, it must be concluded that nothing has been lost since there can be no loss of anything that has never existed.

We note that in Youman v. McConnell & McConnell, Inc., 7 La.App. 315, the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit in a simlar situation said that even if it could be conceded that the "stillbirth of the child" had been caused by the accident "we do not think the mother could have a right of action for the loss or death of the child."

Cooper v. Blanck, La.App., 39 So.2d 352, 353 affords us little assistance in the solution of this problem. It is true that there the child received injuries "en ventre sa mere" and we said: "* * * if the child be killed at this period, before its birth, we see no reason why its parents cannot maintain an action for the death of their child." The truth of the matter was, however, that there the child lived several days after its birth and the question was whether the parents could inherit from the child, which had been born alive, the right to recover for injuries sustained prior to its birth. Obviously in the above quoted statement we indulged in obiter dicta.

We note an interesting discussion on the subject of "Tort Liability for Prenatal Injury" in 24 T.L.R. at page 435, and particularly at pages 439 to 441.

The author says that the general rule is that: "There can be no recovery for the loss of the society and prospective earnings of the child." * * *

We cannot be persuaded that, under no circumstances, should there be awarded damages to the parents of the unborn child if the foetus, while in its mother's womb, has been so injured that it cannot be born alive. We are certain that the redactors of our code had no such purpose in mind in enacting Article 28.

There can be no doubt at all that there could be a recovery for a result of an accident which might cause sterility, or which might otherwise prevent parents from having children. If, as the result of actionable negligence, a husband or a wife should be so injured that either, in the future could not expect to produce children, surely this would be taken into consideration as an item of damage. It necessarily follows, we think, that when parents are actually expecting the arrival of a child, and they are deprived of the fruition of that great expectation by the actionable negligence *850 of someone else, they may recover from the tortfeasor as an item of damage for that particular loss.

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50 So. 2d 847, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valence-v-louisiana-power-light-co-lactapp-1951.