Waldrip v. Liberty Mut. Ins.

11 F.R.D. 426, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3653
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 18, 1951
DocketCiv. No. 3085
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 F.R.D. 426 (Waldrip v. Liberty Mut. Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waldrip v. Liberty Mut. Ins., 11 F.R.D. 426, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3653 (W.D. La. 1951).

Opinion

PORTERIE, District Judge.

One of the main points advanced by movant, after the trial of the case is all over, is a surprise to the Court. The point is that the plaintiffs failed to allege and prove that their deceased children were not survived by wives or children. No motion of any kind or character was filed by the defendant company, except this late one at the conclusion of the case.

We tried the case and, at its conclusion, our mind was soaked with the fact that the two boys who were killed in the car collision had never been married. We know at this very moment, as a fact established beyond a reasonable doubt, that neither one of the two boys ever married. , So, we are now faced with a motion of this character based on an alleged technicality of the law and we are requested, after trial had, to set aside the whole suit.

A.

We believe that the fact was pleaded and then established by sufficient proof.

(a) Paragraph 4 of the complaint reads as follows: “Complainants, Robert L. Wal-drip and Eula Mae Jennings, both allege that they were previously married and that of this union a son was born on August 19, 1931, named William Leon Wal-drip and that this son was a minor on the date of the tragedy hereinafter mentioned, being then almost 19 years of age.”

(b) Paragraph 5 of the complaint reads as follows: “Complainants, Robert L. Wal-drip and Eula Mae Jennings, show that they were divorced some years ago and that the custody of their son, the said' William Leon Waldrip, was given to complainant Eula Mae Jennings but show that the boy [428]*428stayed alternately with his Mother and with his Father and was on terms of intimacy, love and affection with both parents and was, in turn, ■ esteemed and beloved by them, during all the period up to and including the date of his death.” (Emphasis ours).

(c) Paragraph 6 of the complaint reads as follows: "Complainants, Lemuel J. Green and May Foster Waldrip, show that they were married in Big Sandy, Texas in the year 1930 and of this union there were born to them two sons, namely, Bobby Ray Green, on January 28, 1932, and Doyce Gene Green, born on November 14, 1933.”

(d) Paragraph 7 of the complaint reads as follows: “That subsequent to the birth of these children, complainants, Lemuel J. Green and May Foster Waldrip, were divorced and custody awarded to May Foster Waldrip, but that the children resided in part with both parents after the divorce, and were beloved and esteemed by. the children and,- in turn, both parents loved and cherished the children to the date of their injury and death hereinafter set out.” (Emphasis ours).

We believe that in the face of these four allegations, connected with a prayer seeking judgment under Article 2315, Civil Code wherein the plaintiffs are seeking judgment to the clear exclusion of any surviving wives or children, there is alleged in sum total the equivalent of the direct allegation that there are no wives or children of these two deceased boys.

B.

Then, under the above allegations, we believe that .the' real and legally sufficient facts are established in the record of" the case:

" For about two days, the teachers, neighbors, friends, and parents of the two boys took the witness stand and testified to scores of circumstances, if not hundreds, which, proved indirectly and circumstantially -that neither had ever married. The teachers said both were at school in their classes at the time of the accident and that the two boys were alternately living with their respective fathers and mothers. The fathers and the mothers and many of the witnesses attested to the activity and conduct of each boy' until the time of his death and no possible intimation occurred that either one of them had been married or had children. We particularly recall one gentleman who indicated his going out fishing and taking trips in the woods with one of the boys and description was given as to the manner of leaving or going out, which would exclude the possibility of their having a separate home, a wife, or children.

- And, finally and conclusively, this Court is faced with the fact that, if it were not so, the defendant .would long ago have obtained an affidavit as to the marriages and -as to the children, have presented it to the Court, and a new trial would then be ordered.

So, in our conscience, that is the way the case stands; the fact is presented not only by the preponderance of the evidence, but is established beyond a reasonable doubt: that neither boy ever was married or had any children.

So, we find the necessities of the law to ■have been followed and, consequently, the motions are denied and overruled.

But the motion of the defendant urges us to inquire further and say that, even though the fact be clearly proved, we should ignore the fact and allow the defendant at least a new trial, just because there was not in black and white, typed out in the -complaint, the fact of the boys never having been married and, consequently, having no issue.

The brief supporting the motion says that the law of Louisiana is such. We do not think so.

In the case of Smith v. Monroe Grocery Co., La.App., 171 So. 167, the defendant made a serious move at the very beginning of the case: An exception (of Louisiana state character) to the jurisdiction ratione personae was file-d, followed by defendant’s objection to the introduction of any testimony in .favor of plaintiffs at the very beginning of the case, with the objection made permanent during the trial.

In the instant case, as previously noted, no exception was made at any time, except [429]*429after the case was fully completed and in a motion for a new trial.

No motion was made by the defendant before us attacking the capacity to sue of the plaintiffs. We believe such objection should be made in limine litis and in the face of our knowledge that the objection is not supported by the fact or facts, how can the good conscience of a judge fail to direct the refusal of a new trial?

So, this Smith v. Monroe Grocery Co. .case, supra, does not satisfy us.

Movant has referred us to the case of Horrell v. Gulf & Valley Cotton Oil Company, Inc., 15 La.App. 603, 131 So. 709. In Jhat case, when up for trial and upon plaintiffs’ first witness being questioned, objection was made to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that the petition did not negative the existence of a wife and child, or children, of decedent. The trial judge, in his discretion, permitted amendment to be made by plaintiffs and proof was made by plaintiffs upsetting the contention of the defendant. The defendant in the instant case either knew or did not know of the point in the beginning of the case. If it did know of the point that could be urged, it did not make it because it knew the two boys had never married and had no children. It decided to make a gamble later of the technical point. If the defendant did not know of the legal point that might be made at the beginning of the case, but became aware of it later, perhaps after trial, it is making the technical point as a gamble just the same.

In either instance, and particularly under this Horrell case now discussed, the defendant is too late with its objection.

The defendant refers us also to the case of Blackburn v. Louisiana Ry. & Navigation Co., 128 La. 319, 54 So. 865.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F.R.D. 426, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldrip-v-liberty-mut-ins-lawd-1951.