Court Opinion

ID: 7192226
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:58:20.850134+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:16:13.352801
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Todd, J.
Mrs. V. Vredenburg, in her own behalf as the widow of ■William Hazard Vredenburg, deceased, and as tutrix of his minor children, brings this suit against the defendants, and claim from them in solido fifty-five thousand., dollars damages.
The petition alleges, substantially, that on or about the 30th of October, 1877, the said W. H. Vredenburg had cattle on pasturage in a lot or field situated within the limits of the city of New Orleans, on or *632near the junction of the Bayou St. John and Metairie Ridge; that while he was crossing his pasture on that day, in search of his cattle, he was sprung upon by an enormous and. ferocious bear, which threw him down and bit him in fifteen places, and lacerated his flesh in a horrible manner, and of the wounds thus inflicted, after suffering excruciating torture and pain, the said Vredenburg died on the 27th of November following; that the bear had been kept on the premises of a society calling itself the “ Crescent City Rifle Club,” which adjoined Vredenburg’s pasture; that under color of being officers and members of said club, though without any lawful right of so using the premises, the defendants having control and possession of the bear, whether owners of him • or not, kept him on said premises for their pleasure and use; that the bear was wild and dangerous, and was kept in a negligent manner, and insecurely chained, and broke loose and prowled in the adjoining pasture of the deceased, and was not seen in time to be avoided by him; that byvthe terror, wounds, excruciating pains, long and torturing illness and mortal injuries inflicted on said Vredenburg, he suffered damages in the sum of $50,000; and his right of action for the same has, by operation of law, survived in favor of his widow and minor children; that the business of the deceased — that of keeping a dairy — was broken up by his illness, and he was forced to sell his cattle and dairy at a loss of $3000, and an expense of $2000 was incurred for medical attendance, medicines, nurses, surgical operations, etc.
The defendants were asked to be cited, and were cited, individually. They first filed an exception, alleging the vagueness of the petition, in not showing whether they were sued because members of the Rifle Club, or individually and apart from such alleged membership, and in not setting forth specifically the items of damage and expenses charged.
The following entry on the minutes shows the disposition made of this exception, which, as it has an important bearing on the pase, we quote in full:
“ After hearing pleadings and argument of counsel, it appearing from the petition, the prayer thereof, and the admissions of counsel for the plaintiff, on argument, that defendants are sued individually and not as members of any society or corporation, and plaintiff having filed a detailed bill for medical attendance, medicines, surgical operations and nurses, in compliance with defendants’ exceptions, it is ordered said exceptions be overruled,” etc.
Tne defendants for answer pleaded the general issue.
There were twenty-six persons named as defendants in the petition, some of whom were not cited, others of whom ore discharged before or after judgment, leaving only seven of the original number now parties to the suit.
*633The ease was tried by a jury, and from a verdict and judgment against them in solido for fifteen thousand dollars, the defendants have appealed. After the rendition of the judgment, an execution was taken out thereon, and W. J. Behan, one of the defendantsdn the suit in which the judgment was rendered, and one of the appellants in the present appeal therefrom, applied for an injunction against said writ, which was refused by the judge a quo; and from this refusal of the judge he took an appeal to this Court; and this injunction case was, by consent, consolidated with the original suit of Mrs. Vredenburg vs. W. J. Behan et al., the pleadings of which we have just recited. The two cases, thus consolidated under the agreement, are to be reviewed and passed on together.
1. The facts out of which this controversy grew are, substantially, as follows:
The defendants were members of an association or society known as the Crescent City Rifle Club.
In July, 1877, the Club, wishing to send some of its members North to participate in an inter-State rifle shooting match, about to take place in New York, for the 'purpose of providing means therefor, concluded to give an entertainment at Milneburg, on Lake Pontchartrain. The Continental Guards, a military company of the city of New Orleans, to further the object in view, and as a contribution to the proposed entertainment, offered to the Club a bear, owned by the officers of the company, “ as a prize to be shot for ” on the occasion. The offer was accepted, and a member of the club was instructed to make the necessary arrangements for shooting for the bear.
The entertainment came off on the 3d of August, 1877; the bear was brought on the ground and was offered as a prize, as previously arranged. He was won by William Arms, a member of the club, and one of the defendants. Arms put him up again to be shot for, and this time he was won by another person, who, however, declined to claim the prize. Arms had the bear taken to the grounds of the club, and caused him to be chained to the corner of the club-house; and there the bear remained until the 30th of October, 1877. These grounds had been leased by the club, and the house erected by it belonged, by the terms of their charter, to the members of the club.
The pasture of Mr. Yredenburg, who was engaged in a dairy business, adjoined the grounds of the rifle club, and he and his employees in going to and from the pasture passed through these club grounds. On the ’ evening of the 30th of October, Mr. Yredenburg went to the pasture after his cowsv' A short time thereafter, as he was returning from the pasture, he was attacked by the bear, which in the meantime had gotten loose, and received the injuries of which he subsequently died. *634Tetanus or locked-jaw supervened, attended with great suffering, and his death occurred on the 27th November, twenty-one days after the wounds were inflicted. It is shown that just after Mr. Yredenburg passed through the club grounds on his way to the pasture, a boy, who was employed by him to assist in driving his cattle, and in his dairy business generally, came into the club grounds accompanied by a small dog, and teased the bear by setting the dog on him; and it was whilst the animal was thus worried, that he twisted his collar off, and ran after the dog- and finally encountered Mr. Yredenburg; and just as he attacked him he was whipped by his keeper in an effort to prevent the attack, which only served to enrage him the more.
This last mentioned fact, touching the acts of the hired boy in causing the bear to break loose, is charged to have remotely caused or contributed to the death of the deceased, and is relied on by the defendants as a ground to relieve them of responsibility for the result; and though not strictly in the order of pleading adopted by their counsel, it is well to consider it at once, and eliminate it from the case.
2. The doctrine of contributory negligence has never been carried to the .extent contended for in this instance. Had the acts referred to been committed by Yredenburg himself, there would be great force in the plea urged; and the principle invoked would be strictly applicable. It is for his own acts, however, in this respect, that a man ís bound and for which he must suffer; but he cannot be held equally answerable for the acts, faults and negligence of his employee.
The master or employer is only answerable for the faults of his employee when committed “in the exercise of the functions of his employment, and when he might have prevented the act ahd not done it. C. C. 2320.
In this instance, the boy’s act was not in the remotest degree connected with his employment; his employer was not present, was not knowing or consenting to it; and it was not in his power to prevent it.
Besides, the responsibility attaching to those who own, control or keep animals feres natures, to which class a bear belongs, is of that strict and grave character, as not to be relieved or modified by considerations of the kind presented, nor to be measured by rules that apply to owners or keepers of domestic animals.
Animals of this kind, such as lions, tigers, bears, are universally recognized as dangerous. It is the duty of those who own or keep them, to keep them in such a manner as to prevent them from doing harm, under any circumstances, whether provoked, as they are liable to- be, or not provoked. There must be security against them under all contingencies. Domat, p. 475; Merlin, Répertoire, tome 26, p. 242, verbo Quasi-Delit; Marcadé, tome 5, pp. 272, 273; 1 Law Repts., p. 263; 3 Law Repts., p. 330.
*635Nor does it matter that an animal oí this kind may be to some extent tame and domesticated; the natural wildness and ferocity of his nature but sleeps, and is liable to be awakened at any moment, suddenly and unexpectedly, under some provocation, as was the case in this instance.
If the defendants are otherwise liable for the acts of the bear, the acts of the boy in provoking him cannot, for these reasons, affect in the least that liability.
8. Another defense urged against the plaintiff’s right to recover, is that the defendants are sued in their individual capacity, as admitted in the record, and cannot be held liable for acts done as members of a society, and as stockholders in a corporation known as “ the Orescent City Rifle Club.”
According to the language of the petition, fairly construed, and the ; admissions in the record, the suit is against the defendants as individuals, and they are not sought to be made responsible as members of a corporation or because of such membership. Their being designated and referred to as members of this rifle club, may be regarded as descriptive, and at the same time as bearing diredtly on .the causes and motives that led to the acts and negligences charged against them. It might be argued, and it is in fact urged by plaintiff’s counsel, that keeping a bear or other wild animal was not one of the objects for which the association or alleged corporation in question was formed, was not, within the scope or purposes of its organization; and that it is only for ¡ acts done or omitted by a corporation in its corporate capacity, and ■ within the limitation suggested, that it is bound; and that, if the members of such corporation are guilty of acts of commission or omission entirely foreign to the purposes of the corporation, and not connected with their duties as officers or members of such body, they, the members, become personally and individually liable.
Under the view that we take of this subject, the question suggested does not properly arise, and it is unnecessary to pass upon it. It is a principle of law that cannot be successfully controverted, that where persons sought to be made liable for their acts, imprudence or negligence, seek to escape such liability, by pleading some privilege or immunity, in derogation of common right, they must clearly establish the existence of the same, and bring themselves strictly within the provisions of the law on which they rest such claim. Eor instance, in this case, when the defendants, sued as individuals, seek to shelter themselves under the protection of corporate rights and privileges, and by virtue thereof claim exemption from personal responsibility, and the party against whom such immunity is invoked, denies its existence, the court is forced to consider the issue thus presented, and inquire into *636the legality of the charter under which the claim is asserted, and see whether their pretensions are well founded and supported by law or not. And we do not concur with the defendants’ counsel that such inquiry can only be made in a direct action, attacking the charter of such alleged corporation. There may be some force in such reasoning, when the object of such attack is to have declared the forfeiture of the charter of a corporation admitted to have been legally created, and when such forfeiture is claimed by reason of the violation of its charter; or where the party sued has acknowledged the existence of the corporation by dealing or contracting with it as such; but where in the absence of such con- . ditions, as in this case, it is relied on as a matter of defense to a personal action, and its legal existence is denied, it becomes a legitimate subject of inquiry, and we must determine whether this alleged corporation was created under the authority of any law of the State. 16 An. 153; 29 An. 369; 37 Cal. 354; 46 N. Y. 477; 3 N. Y. 394; 73 Ill. 197; 32 Ind. 138, 169.
Article 446 C. C. provides:
" Corporations unauthorized by law or by an act of the Legislature ■enjoy no public character, and cannot appear in a court of justice, but in the individual name of all the members who compose it, and not as a political body; although these corporations may acquire and possess ■estates, and have common interests as well as other private societies.”
Was this rifle club a corporation authorized by law ?
It was not chartered by a special act of the Legislature, but claims its existence as a corporate body under the provisions of section 677 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, authorizing the creation of corporations for literary, scientific and charitable purposes. And by reference to the act of incorporation, passed before a notary public in conformity to the -general law referred to, we find the purposes and object of this corporation, as therein declared, “ to be the establishment of a rifle club for the encouragement and advancement of the science of rifle shooting; the establishment of a club-house and ranges, and such other purposes in ■connection therewith as may be designated by law.”
The right of individuals to receive a franchise from the State, and to be endowed with corporate immunities, is a privilege of a high order, ■and like all other privileges, is stricti juris; and the object or purpose •on which such privilege is based and from which such right is claimed, must come strictly within the plain intent, terms and meaning of the law.
Guided by this rule, and after a careful examination of the authori-' ties that offered light on the subject, we are constrained to conclude that the declared object of the association in question does not fall within the purview, the letter or the spirit of the law relied on ; that the act of incorporation for such purpose was unauthorized by law, produced no *637legal effect and conferred no legal right. In other words, we cannot, by any reasonable rule of construction, term “ riñe shooting ” a science. It may rightly be called an art — an important art — but it does not rise to the dignity of a science. The distinction between the two, science and art, has been the subject of much erudite discussion, and given rise to some confusion of ideas; but it is a distinction that is now generally accepted, is well defined, and has received authoritative recognition. It may be summed up thus : “ Science, in its broadest sense, is knowledge; ” or, as stated by an eminent lexicographer, “ the knowledge of many, methodically digested and arranged, so as to be attainable by one a “ body of principles and deductions to explain the nature of some matter,” — as mental science, moral science, physical science, etc. “ It depends on abstract or speculative principles.” “Art relates to practice or performance.” It is “practical skill as directed by theory or science,” “the mere application of -knowledge.”
Worcester, Webster, verbo Science, Art, Whewall, Davies.
If “rifle shooting” is a science, the term may, with equal propriety, be extended to nearly everything pertaining to the occupations and pleasures of men. And as corporations may be created to promote science, it might multiply corporations ad infinitum, until all personal industries and pursuits would be swallowed up and all individual liability cease. The law does not encourage such tendencies and is not so lavish of her favors. We are strengthened in our conclusions on this point by what may be properly regarded as a legislative construction of the law in question, under which this corporation claims to have been established. Section 677 of the Revised Statutes, containing the provision referred to, is but the re-enactment of an original act passed in 1855. Subsequently to the passage of this act, in 1857, with a view doubtless to extend the privileges granted by the act, and, as it were, to enlarge its scope and intendment, the Legislature passed another act for the purpose, as therein declared, “ of promoting the love and practice of the fine arts.” This last act now constitutes Section 737, R. S. By the “ fine arts ” is meant, according to the universal acceptation of the term, music, painting, sculpture, etc. If the first act of 1855 was not sufficient to embrace such objects, if science could not and did not include these, we cannot readily conceive how it could embrace “ rifle shooting,” and authorize the incorporation of .rifle clubs. Surely, music and painting and sculpture are nearer a kin to science than rifle practice or rifle shooting, and societies for the promotion and encouragement of the former present a better claim to a “ scientific purpose” than the latter. Yet the Legislature virtually declared, by enacting the second act, that the. first was too narrow, too limited in its terms and provisions to embrace these fine arts.
*638The Crescent City Rifle Club never had a corporate existence. To give it or decree it one would be to pervert the plain intent of the law.
Reaching this conclusion, we must regard this club as a voluntary association of persons, and their rights and responsibilities must be tested and determined by the same rules that apply to individuals or members of a private society. Thus, the use of the club grounds and the club building and their appurtenances belonged jointly to the individual members, and such joint proprietorship imposed correlative duties and responsibilities.
á. A great deal of testimony was taken that had little or no bearing upon the real issues involved in the case, and many bills of exception appear in the record embodying the objections to its admission. These objections went mainly to the effect of the evidence, as held by the judge ■a quo, though much of it was wholly irrelevant.
The conclusion we have come to touching the merits of the case, and the disposition we shall make of it, render it unnecessary that we should pass upon these various bills. The salient facts of the case, and upon which our conclusions mainly rest, summarized from the statement heretofore given, are these:
That the bear was accepted by the rifle club as a prize to be shot for under the auspices of the club, and to raise a fund for the purposes of the club; that it was shot for, and subsequently carried to the club grounds by the direction of a member of the club and one of the defendants; that it was kept there and fed there for nearly three months by an employee of the club, and the expenses for its keeping and feeding paid for by the treasurer of the club, and an account of such expenses submitted to the governing committee of the club, of which some of the defendants were members; that it was seen from time to time at the club house by members of the club and by all of the defendants save one; that no one objected to his being there; that whilst thus kept on the club grounds in charge of a keeper, he broke loose, attacked and wounded Mr. Yredenburg, who died of the wounds inflicted.
The Code declares, “ that every act whatever of man that causes •damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.”
That a person is. responsible for the damage resulting from "his negligence or imprudence.” That he is answerable, not only for his own ■acts, but for the acts of persons for whom he is responsible, and of things in his custody. C. C. 2315, 2316, 2317, 2321.
The law upon this subject is to the same effect under every enlightened system of jurisprudence.
Thus a distinguished writer on this subject has said:
The mere keeping of an animal of a fierce nature, such as a tiger dr bear, or dog known to be wont to bite, is unlawful, and therefore, if *639any person is bitten or injured by such an animal, an action is maintainable against the person who keeps it.” Addison on Torts, pp. 22, 230.
And again:
“ The owner oí wild and savage beasts, such as lions, tigers, wolves,’ bears, etc., if he neglects to keep them properly secured, is liable for injuries committed by them according to their nature, without any evidence that he knew them to be ferocious, or that he was negligent in the mode of keeping them, since he is bound in ordinary prudence, to know that fact and to secure them from doing harm.” Sherman and Bed-field on Negligence, $188.
“ One who harbors a dangerous animal on his premises, though not his owner in any sense, is nevertheless responsible for injuries committed by it while on or near his premises, to th-e same extent as if he owned it.” Sherman and Bedfield on Negligence, pp. 227, 228.
Mr. Justice Blackburn, of the English Oourtof Exchequer, thus lays down the rule on this subject:
“We think the true rule of law is, that the person, who for his own use or pleasure brings on his land, and collects and keep there any thing likely to do mischief, if it escapes, must keep it at his peril, and if he does not do so is prima facie answerable for all the damage, which is the natural consequence of its escape. * * * This is, we think, established to be the law, whether the things so brought be beasts, or water, or filth, or stenches.”
Fletcher vs. Rylands, Court of Exchequer, 1 Law Reports, p. 263; see, also, Hale’s Pleas of the Crown, vol. 1, 430; May vs. Bourdetts, 9th Adolphus & Ellis (3 Q. B.) U. S. 101; Earl vs. Van Alstein, 8 Barbour, N. Y. 630; 41 Cal. 138.
These principles thus enunciated are sound and have our full approval.
There is a recognition of their spirit in an ordinance of the City of New Orleans on the subject, which declares:
“No wild or ferocious animals shall be kept within the limits of the city, on the premises of individuals, or in menageries, unless such animals be under the charge of an armed guard day and night.”
Leovy’s City Laws and Ordinances, Art. 703.
And it is to be noted that this bear was kept on the club grounds, within the city limits, in open disregard of this ordinance. .
The fundamental principle on which the liability of the defendants rests, is concisely expressed in the following legal maxim, that is as old as the law itself and recognized in every known system of jurisprudence: “ Sic ntere tuo ut alienum non laeclas.”
Proprietors or co-proprietors of lands or houses must not permit their property to be put to such uses as to cause injury to others, whether *640by being made a refuge' for noxious animals or a magazine for gun powder, dynamite or other explosive substances, or as a generator of foul and pestilential vapors destructive of health. And there was a tacit, though clear recognition of this principle by the defendants themselves, or some of them, in calling a meeting after Mr. Vredenburg’s death to raise contributions for the relief of his family. No liability was openly avowed or intended to be acknowledged on account of this sad affair by such action, but there was a latent sense of responsibility evidently felt, which found expression in the language of one of the defendants, when testifying as a witness on the trial of the case, and wlm said by way of explaining the motive that prompted the proposed assistance, “ that it was on account of the accident occurring on the grounds of the club.”
; It is, however, urged in behalf of one of the defendants, W. J. Behan, as sufficient to free him from any liability, that he did not know that the bear was on the premises. Under the circumstances of this case we cannot give such effect to this fact; npr do we consider it as having any real bearing on the question of his liability.
This club was composed of many individuals; it had a complete organization, with regular officers, governing committee, keeper of the grounds, etc. The defendant referred to was the head or chief of the association. Of course from the nature and objects of the organization it was not contemplated, nor was it possible that all the members thereof* the owners of the club-house and lessees of the grounds should occupy the property; and, therefore, it was necessarily placed in the control and keeping of employees of the club, who were charged with its; management, and with the proper police and superintendence of the club-house and grounds, and generally with the same duties that the owners themselves were subject to, and who in this respect represented the owners, who were legally responsible for the acts and omissions of such keeper or keepers. Nor can the fact of knowledge or ignorance of the employers touching such acts or omissions on the part of the employee, restrict or enlarge that responsibility. It is a case where the-principle of respondeat superior applies to its full extent.
A reference to the authorities on this subject leave no room for doubt on this point. Thus a distinguished law writer has declared that “the master is liable for the acts of his servant, not only when they are directed by him, but also when the scope of his employment or trust is such that he has been left at liberty to do, while pursuing or attempting to discharge it, the injurious act complained of. It is not merely for the-wrongful acts he was directed to do, but the wrongful acts he was suffered to do, that the master must respond.”
• “ The wrong for which the master shall respond need not be an in*641tentional wrong; indeed, the liability is commonly all the plainer if it is not. Every man owes to every other the duty of due care to avoid injury ; and whether he manages his business in person or entrusts it to others, he must, at his peril, see that this obligation is observed. If another has suffered an injury through the neglect or improper management o.f the business, the right of action arises, irrespective of the agency by which the business was conducted.”
“ It is immaterial to the master’s responsibility that the servant at the time was neglecting some rule of caution which the master had prescribed, or was exceeding his master’s instructions, or was disregarding them in some particular, and that the injury which actually resulted is attributable to the servant’s failure to observe the directions given him. ' In other words, it is not sufficient for the master to give proper direc-. tions, he must see that they are obeyed.” Cooley on Torts, pp. 534, 538, 539, 540, 549, 562; Sherman & Redfield on Negligence, § 59; 14 Howard, 468; 15 Ark. 118; 36 Vt. 248; 11 Minn. 277; 98 Mass. 567.
The acts and negligence on the part of the keeper of the grounds and ' the club-house, first, in receiving the bear on the premises, keeping him there for months, and suffering him to get loose, were all within the scope of his employment, and related directly to the duties with which he stood charged under his employment to properly manage and police the property, and bound him to exclude therefrom all things that might cause injury to others, or if anything dangerous was admitted, then at least to use such care and precautions as to render any injury therefrom impossible, and this brings the case clearly within the meaning and intendment of the authorities we have cited.
5. The defendants, however, claim their discharge from liability by reason of the discontinuance of the suit as to some of the original defendants, and the conventional release of others in consideration of the payment of stated amounts, contending that the legal effect of this was to discharge all, and cite Art. 2203 C. C., which declares “ that the remission or conventional discharge of one of the co-debtors in sólido, discharges all the others.” They say that the effect of the discontinuance entered, was, to suffer the demand, as to such parties, to prescribe, and those against whom.the suit was still prosecuted, if decreed to pay the debt, could not compel their co-obligors, thus released, to contribute towards the payment of the debt or towards indemnifying those that were compelled to pay it.
Admitting that the provision of law referred to applies to solidary obligors for a cause of action ex delicto — about which the authorities are not clear, and we express no opinion — still the proposition has no force.
The conventional discharge granted some of the parties, as evidenced by the receipts in the record, contained a reservation of the plaintiffs’ *642rights against the remaining defendants, which reservation, by the very terms of the law, deprived such discharge of the effect ascribed to it as respects the other obligors. And we are aware of no authority that supports the proposition that a mere discontinuance of the suit as to some of the obligors released all the rest. Nor is it true that the claim against the parties, thus discharged from the suit, was extinguished by prescription, for the demand continuing to be prosecuted against a part of those solidarity charged, interrupted prescription as to all.
6. We have been pointed to an alleged error in the verdict and the pleadings taken in connection therewith, and are asked to remand the case on account of it. It is this: The verdict finds in favor of the plaintiff for a stated amount. It is urged that the causes of action set out in the petition are twofold and distinct in favor of different parties. That one demand is in favor of the widow and children, under the special provision declaring that the right of action in the deceased survives to them, and the other in behalf of the succession of the deceased, such, for instance, as the expenses of the last illness and the loss resulting to the dairy business from such illness. There was no exception filed by the defendants to such faulty pleading, but issue was joined, and they went to trial without objecting to it. This might be held a sufficient reply to their complaint as to the form of the verdict, but giving every weight to it, it is no ground for remanding the case, since all the evidence before the jury is now before us, and we can give effect in our decree to the discrimination suggested, so far as the evidence will allow.
The damage from the injury to the business is not fixed, or made in any way certain by the evidence; and we are therefore unable to make any distinct allowance on this item; and the amount proved on account of expenses falls far short of that claimed. We must suppose that the jury was controlled by the evidence, at least to the extent of not allowing anything on any part of the demand that was entirely unsupported by proof, and what they did allow must be attributed to the cause or causes of action that there was some evidence to sustain. The total amount of the verdict must be presumed to have been awarded on the main demand in favor of the widow and minor heirs, except what the evidence shows should be applied to the claim in favor of the succession, as explained above. All that the succession is entitled to recover is on account of expenses of last illness, as stated, and under the evidence this amounts only to the sum of two hundred and sixty dollars.
7. There is, however, one grave error shown by the record, and to the prejudice of the defendants, and which, doubtless, had an important bearing on the verdict of the jury, which must be corrected.
It is this: that in his charge to the jury the judge a quo announced “ that damages can be claimed by the heirs of the deceased for the loss *643of his life,” to which the defendants’ counsel reserved a bill. This was clearly erroneous, as shown by frequent adjudications of this Court, which, in effect declare “ that an action for damages caused by the killing of a human being cannot be maintained.”
Hubgh vs. N. O. & Carrollton R. R. Company. 6 An. 495.
Earhart vs. Carrollton R. R. Co., 17 An. 244.
Frank vs. Same, 20 An. 26.
McCubbin vs. Hastings, 27 An. 716.
The act of 1855, amending article 2315 C. C., expressly limits such right in favor of the widows and minor heirs to the right of action which the deceased would have had, had he survived the injury, and it cannot be extended beyond this. Besides, on referring to the petition, it will be seen that this was the only right of action sought to be exercised in this case, and the demand was positively limited to this,
We must presume that this erroneous instruction to the jury influenced greatly their conclusion as to the quantum of damages allowed. The person killed was shown to have been in the prime of manhood, healthy and vigorous, and with every prospect of longevity ; and his life might, reasonably, have been "deemed inestimable to his wife and little children, and we must conclude that a large part of the sum allowed by the verdict was purely for this consideration. Satisfied of this, we are constrained to reduce the amount of the verdict, though urged on this account to remand the case, which we must decline doing, as the entire evidence is before us and we are authorized to make the correction. We are the more prompted to this course by the consideration, that there is nothing in the record, nor in the nature of the demand and the evidence in support of it, that, in the least, involves any turpitude on the part of the defendants, or reflects on their character as gentlemen. Their liability results from a strict application of legal principles, an application just and proper, but one that at the same time may be regarded, to some extent, as technical.
Their fault was that of imprudence and negligence, nothing more. For these reasons, we deem it just to reduce the amount of the verdict to $7,500, which must be credited with the amounts shown to have been paid.
8. The conclusions which we have reached touching the main action and the questions connected therewith, virtually dispose of the injunction case.
Had the injunction been allowed, and tried on its merits, it would have been dissolved, as we have disposed of all the questions involved in the case adversely to the pretensions of the plaintiff in injunction. There might be a question as to whether the allegations of the petition did not, on their face, show a prima facie right to enjoin; but we think *644it best for the interests of all parties that this vexatious litigation should terminate, and will shape our decree accordingly.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from in case of Mrs. Y. Vredenburg vs. W. J. Behan et al., No. 7573, on the docket of this Oourt, be amended by reducing the amount therein decreed against the defendants W. J. Behan, John Glynn, Jr., George Howe, Dudley Selph, William Arms and William Pierce to seven thousand five hundred dollars, two hundred and sixty dollars of which said sum is to be paid to the succession of W. H. Yredenburg, deceased, and the balance to the plaintiff as the widow of said deceased and as tutrix of his minor heirs; and as thus amended it be affirmed, defendants to pay costs of the lower court and plaintiff of the appeal in said case; and it is further decreed that the judgment in ihe case of W. J. Behan vs. Mrs. V. Vredenburg et al., No. 7917, be affirmed, plaintiff therein to pay costs of both courts.