Allen v. Honeycutt

171 So. 2d 770, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4607
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1965
DocketNo. 10328
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 171 So. 2d 770 (Allen v. Honeycutt) 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
Allen v. Honeycutt, 171 So. 2d 770, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4607 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

GLADNEY, Judge.

The plaintiff herein, Lola Ethel Allen, has instituted this action ex delicto by reason of personal injuries sustained in a fall at a small restaurant located in Shreveport. Named as principal defendants are James Honeycutt, the proprietor, his liability insurer, Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company and Mrs. William R. Barrow, an owner and lessor. Other parties were brought into the suit by third party proceedings and a summary judgment for indemnification was obtained by Mrs. Barrow and Continental Casualty Company against Allen E. Couvillion and George E. Dement, lessees of the owner. Following trial on the merits damages were awarded in favor of plaintiff and against the named defendants, other than Mrs. Barrow. Appeals have been lodged in this court by Miss Allen as to her demands against Mrs. Barrow, by Hartford and Honeycutt, and by Allen E. Couvillion and George E. Dement. Miss Allen and Mrs. Barrow and Continental Casualty Company have filed separate answers to the appeal.

[772]*772The accident which befell Miss Allen occurred at the Po-Boy Grill, a small compact building located at 617 McNeil Street. Approximately three hundred customers enter and leave the building daily through one door of average width and height located about midway of the length of the building on the side adjacent to the sidewalk. A description of the passageway is pertinent. The door is of hollow steel, with hinges on the left side of the exit. The top half is fitted with clear glass. Honeycutt had affixed in a vertical position to the right inside of the door a chrome bar handle of one-half inch in diameter and about fifteen inches in length. It was made secure by two brackets, one at each end. The handle in some way was connected to each bracket. Four sheet metal screws were inserted in the top bracket and two in the lower. In falling plaintiff pulled the handle from the door. According to the testimony of Honeycutt, the screws holding the brackets in place were not loosened by the displacement of the handle and he later removed the screws and brackets from the door and placed them in a drawer in the grill where they were when the business changed ownership prior to the trial of the case. Neither the handle, brackets or screws were available as evidence for the trial. The handle and its attachments were purchased for the purpose of use as a door handle. The door, approximately one and three-quarters inches in thickness, was equipped with a Yale door check but contained no latch. It opened to the outside and when closed is flush with the outside wall. The door step consists of a semi-circular block of concrete with dimensions of fifty-eight inches in width, thirty-two inches deep and six and one-half inches in height. Covering the threshold of the door is a custom-made metal plate about twelve inches wide securely affixed to the floor. The exterior portion of the plate is flat and level for approximately three and one-half inches, then for one and one-half inches it rises, completing a rise of one inch in the process and then levels off for seven inches. The top of the plate is smooth and unpainted. The uncontra-dieted testimony of Honeycutt discloses that at the time of the accident a rubber door mat was laid over the steel plate and only that portion directly under the door was not covered by the mat. This testimony was corroborated by John O. Crawford, an employee, who testified that at ten-thirty on the morning of the accident he swept and put the rubber mat in place. The mat was described as having a smooth surface on top and a kind of foam rubber suction bottom. The mat, when spread out, extended over either side of the door and was kept snug against the moulding. Its thickness was estimated as being three-quarters of an inch.

Miss Allen testified that on March 22, 1962, shortly after the noon hour, having eaten lunch in the grill she attempted to-leave and in doing so sustained severe injuries from a fall which occurred as she stepped to the doorway. The door handle became disengaged while she was falling and was in her left hand when she struck the sidewalk outside of the grill.

It is contended that plaintiff’s fall was-occasioned (1) by the negligent and faulty construction, installation or maintenance of the door handle, and (2) by the negligent and faulty construction, installation or maintenance of the door framing, particularly the bottom thereof, said negligence and fault being predicated on the use of a smooth, slant surfaced metal plate across the bottom of the doorway precisely where patrons using the door must step, and (3) by the negligent and faulty construction and installation of the stepping arrangement, particularly providing only three and one-half inches of level surface between the slanted portion of the outside edge of the threshold.

Honeycutt is further charged with actionable negligence in that he exposed the invitees to his business to dangerous conditions arising out of the faulty door han-[773]*773die, out of the design and construction of the threshold, out of the design and construction of the step arrangement, and in failing to provide a safe place for his customers and in failing to warn them of the hazardous conditions so enumerated.

As against the defendant, Mrs. William R. Barrow, the petitioner alleged her negligence to consist of (1) failing to maintain her building in a safe condition and proper state of repair and because of vices in construction with reference to the threshold, door handle and stepping arrangement, and (2) it is charged that she was negligent in leasing a building which contained a door handling system and stepping arrangement that was dangerous and faulty in design and maintenance.

The trial judge assigned written reasons for his judgment in favor of Miss Allen and observed that she testified she did not know what caused her to fall, but that when she started out of the door she had the sensation of falling and she recalled trying to grab or catch something with her right hand, and when she hit the ground she had the handle of the door in her left hand; and he further surmised that the only explanation for her fall was that she had either slipped from the edge of the threshold and as she attempted to support herself with the handle on the door it pulled loose from the brackets and she fell out, or that when she stepped out of the door supporting herself with the handle, the handle pulled loose, causing her fall. The court held that plaintiff had proved her fall was caused by the negligent and faulty installation and maintenance of the door handle, and assigned therefor two reasons, the first of which was that the handle was inadequate to support the weight of a person using it and secondly, that Honeycutt was negligent in failing to secure the lower bracket holding the handle with but two screws when such bracket was designed to hold two more screws.

The record entirely fails to establish the initiating cause of plaintiff’s “fall. There were no eyewitnesses to the fall and we must depend solely upon the testimony of Miss Allen. We are, therefore, confronted with uncertainty and speculation as to the cause of her accident. The trial judge stated that he was impressed with the veracity of Miss Allen and so are we, yet the fact remains that she could not and did not recall circumstances which are essential to the establishment of her case. Typical of her testimony are the following extracts where counsel repeatedly attempted without avail to elicit from her the certain cause of the accident:

“A * * * got up and I remember walking to the door, and as I started out the door, I remember falling.

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 2d 770, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-honeycutt-lactapp-1965.