Alexander v. Washington
Citation | 274 F.2d 349 |
Decision Date | 19 January 1960 |
Docket Number | No. 17902.,17902. |
Parties | Hobart ALEXANDER et al., Appellants, v. Booker T. WASHINGTON et al., Appellees. |
Court | United States Courts of Appeals. United States Court of Appeals (5th Circuit) |
George L. Vaughn, Jr., Vaughn & Morrow, Los Angeles, Cal., for appellants.
Fred Simon, Shreveport, La., George H. Robinson, Homer, La., Dixon Carroll, Shreveport, La., C. T. Munholland, Monroe, La., Harry V. Booth, Shreveport, La., Norton Standeven, Oklahoma City, Okl., Charles E. Barham, Ruston, La., Robert K. Mayo, Shreveport, La., for appellees.
Before RIVES, Chief Judge, and HUTCHESON and CAMERON, Circuit Judges.
This appeal is from a judgment dismissing a complaint for lack of jurisdiction and for failure to comply with an order of the Court requiring the plaintiffs to file a bond in the sum of $1,000 as security for costs.
The four appellants, as plaintiffs below, alleged that they were nonresidents of the State of Louisiana, and were the owners of an undivided four-tenths (4/10) interest in approximately 960 acres of land in twenty tracts in Claiborne Parish, Louisiana. They sued their co-owners and certain oil companies and others for a declaration that certain oil pooling and unitizing agreements were null and void, for an accounting for oil and gas taken from the land, for an injunction, damages, and other relief. The eight co-owners, made defendants, were alleged to be citizens of the State of Louisiana, as were the other defendants. Federal jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332.
Some of the defendants other than the co-owners filed motions to realign the parties and to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, claiming that the interests of the co-owners are identical with the interests of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs then filed a second amended complaint in which they alleged that their co-owners, made defendants, had conspired with certain of the other defendants to defraud the plaintiffs of their property. One of these co-owners was Roosevelt Washington who had acted as plaintiffs' agent and attorney in fact in executing the several leases. The complaint alleged that Roosevelt Washington had been declared non compos mentis, and that his incompetency existed throughout all of the transactions. Some of the defendants other than the co-owners then filed a motion to realign Roosevelt Washington as a party plaintiff and to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, claiming that no conspiracy could possibly exist as to Roosevelt Washington for the reason that he was alleged to be non compos mentis throughout the events and period involved. The district court sustained the defendants' motions to realign Roosevelt Washington as a party plaintiff and thereafter to dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
Article 31 of the LSA-Civil Code provides as follows:
Yancey v. Maestri, La.App., 1934, 155 So. 509, held that under the civil law of Louisiana an insane person or his estate cannot be held liable in damages for his tortious acts.
Thus under Louisiana law, and the averments of the complaint, it must be accepted that Roosevelt Washington was not liable to the plaintiffs either on contract or in tort. It is true that the consequences of his wrongful acts need not go unredressed, but can be declared to be void and of no effect. The appellants suggest that in such event his interest may lie more with his codefendants than with the plaintiffs. To quote from their brief:
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