75 So. 234 | La. | 1917
While the plaintiffs’ son, about 15 years of age, arid a boy named Carl Watson, and others, were employed at an embankment or fill, on the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railroad, the embankment caved in upon them, killing the plaintiffs’ son and injuring the Watson boy.
The principal business, and perhaps the only business, of the railway company was to haul logs from the woods to the sawmill of the J. E. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, and the two corporations were owned by the same stockholders and managed by the same individuals.
The plaintiffs first brought suit against the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company for damages for the death of their son, alleging that he was employed by that company at the time of his death. Oliver C. Watson, father of Carl Watson, brought suit against the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company and the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company arid the Iron Mountain Lumber Company, in solido, for damages for the injury to his son. The latter concern was found to be merely the name under which the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company transacted a part of its business.
The two suits, arising from the same accident and depending largely upon the same evidence, were consolidated for the purpose of the trial in the district court, and were tried together. Before judgment was rendered in either suit, the present plaintiffs filed this suit against the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company, for 'damages for the death of their son, alleging that he was employed by that corporation at the time of the accident. Separate judgments were rendered in the consolidated suits, both being dismissed.
The judgment of the district court, dismissing the suit of the present plaintiffs against the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, was based upon the finding of the district judge that the plaintiffs’ son was employed, not by the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, but by the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company. The court held that the 'defendant in that suit, J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, was not liable for damages, because that corporation was not the employer of the plaintiffs’ son, and that judgment could not be rendered against the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company in that, suit, because that corporation was not a party defendant. The following is a copy of the judgment, and reasons for judgment, in full, viz.:
*541 “The plaintiff institutes this suit against the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited. The defendant denied employment of the minor, and the proof shows that the minor was in the employ of the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company at the time that he received his injury which resulted in his death. I do not think that the plaintiff has any right or cause of action against the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited; and as the railroad company, in whose employ the boy was at the time of the accident, is not a party to this suit, no judgment can be rendered against the party sued. For these reasons, it is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that plaintiff’s suit be dismissed at his cost.”
The plaintiffs in this suit did not appeal from the judgment rendered against them in the suit against the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company. Oliver C. Watson appealed from the judgment rendered against him in his suit against the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company and the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company and the Iron Mountain Lumber Company; and, on appeal, the judgment of the district court was annulled, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Com pany and the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company, in solido, for the sum of $6,000. A rehearing was granted only on the question of the quantum of damages, and the case was remanded for further evidence as to the effect of the injuries suffered by the boy, Carl Watson. See Watson v. J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Co. et al., 132 La. 796, 61 South. 795.
In the opinion rendered by this court in Watson’s Case, it was said:
“It is admitted that the Iron Mountain Lumber Company is not a judicial person, but is merely a name under which J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited, transacts part of its business; and the evidence shows that while the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company is incorporated, and appears to be the owner of a couple of logging roads which extend from different mills of the j. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company into the woods, said corporation is practically owned and is wholly controlled by the same persons who own and control said mills, that practically its entire business consists in the handling of the logs and lumber used and produced by said mill, and that all of the employés who work upon or for said railroad or corporation and receive salaries or wages are paid by the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited, through the Iron Mountain Lumber Company, Limited.
“The .T. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited, and the Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railroad Company, are, as we have stated, practically owned and wholly controlled by the same people, and the interest of the two companies in the business which is done by them is so entirely in common as to be distinguished only, perhaps, as matter of bookkeeping, and even that distinction is not proved.”
This court did not, however, in the decree rendered in Watson’s Case, declare that the lumber company and the railway company had not a separate identity or corporate existence. On the contrary, the decree recognized the separate identity and corporate existence of each corporation, by condemning them in solido to pay damages to the plaintiff.
After the judgment was rendered by this court in the case of Watson v. J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Co. et al., the defendant in the present suit of Ely Mercer and Wife v. Natchez Ball & Shreveport Railway Company, filed a plea of res judicata in the district court, based upon the judgment of the district court, dismissing the suit of the present plaintiffs against the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company. The contention of the defendant in this case was and is that the lumber company and the railway company are one and the same corporation. The district court took that view, maintained the plea of res judicata, and dismissed the plaintiffs’ suit; from which judgment the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.
Opinion.
The fact that the lumber company and the railway company are- interlocking corporations, engaged in a common enterprise, owned and controlled by the same stockholders, and managed by the same individuals, does not make them one corporation with two names. What this court held in Watson’s Case was that the two corporations were so interrelated that they could be held liable in
The judgment appealed from is annulled and reversed, the defendant’s plea of res judicata is overruled, and it is ordered that this case be remanded to the district court to be tried upon its merits. The defendant, appellee, is to pay the cost of the appeal; the costs of the district court are to await the final judgment.