Bates v. Blitz

17 So. 2d 816, 205 La. 536, 1944 La. LEXIS 694
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 13, 1944
DocketNo. 37208.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 816 (Bates v. Blitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Blitz, 17 So. 2d 816, 205 La. 536, 1944 La. LEXIS 694 (La. 1944).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice.

We issued a writ of certiorari in this 'c'ase in order that we might review the judgment of the Court of Appeal for the Parish of Orleans (13 So.2d 516) reversing the judgment of the lower court dismissing the plaintiff’s suit against her landlord and his insurer and granting her a judgment against them in the sum of $1,580.50 for injuries sustained when she fell while negotiating a platform fronting a room adjacent to hers in the courtyard used in common by all of the tenants of the building.

The defense, as reflected by the brief of the defendants, is that (1) no such accident happened; (2) the platform was unattached, forming no part of the leased premises; (3) the platform was neither placed there by the landlord nor with his authority; and (4) that the landlord was under no obligation to maintain or repair such a platform and, consequently, not liable for the injuries sustained by the plaintiff.

We find no difficulty in arriving at the conclusion, as did the appellate court, that the accident did happen as alleged by the plaintiff in her petition. The record also shows that the plaintiff, Bertha Bates, rented room No. 6 in a two-story wooden house owned by Rubin Blitz, one of the defendants, and located at 2605 Washington avenue in New Orleans. This negro tenement house, containing twenty rooms, ten up and ten down, forms a wing or “L”, the long side of which faces on a rectangular dirt yard approximately 25 feet wide that is enclosed on two sides by the house itself, on a third by a'wooden fence on the ¡Robertson street side, and, on the fourth, or Washington avenue side, by a fence with *539 a gate. Eight of the rooms, up and down, run the long side of the “L”, facing Robertson street and the wooden fence, while the two remaining rooms face the gate on Washington avenue, the only means of entrance and exit for all but the first downstairs room. Almost in the center of the yard and just about opposite the steps to room No. 6, occupied by the plaintiff, a stair rises from a concrete base to the gallery on the short side of the “L” and is protected and supported underneath by braces or rafters that make it difficult to pass under the stair without stooping or lowering the head. Because of the proximity of this stairway to the plaintiff’s front steps, in order to reach her room, it was necessary for her to pass close to the steps leading to room No. 5 and over a platform that was constructed in front of these steps for the use and convenience of the occupant of the room in negotiating the muddy and slushy spots caused by inadequate drainage facilities and the accumulation in puddles in front of the steps of the water running from the gallery fronting the upstairs rooms.

It also appears that on the afternoon of Wednesday, April 19, 1939, at approximately 3:30, having left the front gate after talking with a friend, the plaintiff, a woman.of 47, weighing about 186 pounds, in negotiating this platform in front of room No. 5, placed her foot on a plank or planks that gave way, causing her to fall face forward but turning her toward the left when the plank, rising, struck her in the nose. She landed on her left side with her back toward the steps and her left arm, crumpled under her, was broken. On October 23 following, she filed this suit against her landlord, Rubin Blitz, and his insurer, the Standard Accident Insurance Company, seeking to recover $6,580.50 in damages. Blitz, having died during the pendency of this suit, his executor was joined as a party to the proceedings.

The judge of the lower court, without assigning any written reasons, dismissed the plaintiff’s suit, and the Court of Appeal for the Parish of Orleans, reversing this, judgment, granted her damages for $1,580.-50 — $1,000 for the injury, suffering, and pain sustained by her, $350 for her doctor bill, $87.50 for her hospital bill, and $143. for earnings lost.

Under the express provisions of Article 2695 of the Revised Civil Code “The lessor guarantees the lessee against all the vices and defects of the thing, which may prevent its being used even in case it should appear he knew nothing of the existence of such vices and defects, at the time the lease was made, and even if they have arisen since, provided they do not arise from the fault of the lessee; and if any loss should result to the lessee from the vices and defects, the lessor shall be bound to indemnify him for the same,” and, as stated in the case of Glain v. Sparandeo, 119 La. 339, 44 So. 120, 121, “The lessor * * * is as much bound for the safety,, for ordinary use, of the necessary approaches and exits to and from the apartments which he lets as for the safety of the apartments themselves.”

The. appellate court pretermitted the question of whether the platform in front of room No. 5, over which plaintiff fell. *541 was constructed by the landlord or his agent and the question of whether it was attached to the step, being of the opinion that these platforms in front of the several rooms were necessary adjuncts of the leased premises, used with the full knowledge of the landlord for the convenience of the occupants of the respective rooms in negotiating the muddy places in front of the steps created because the landlord had failed to provide water spouts and gutters for the proper drainage of the roof water, and therefore permitted recovery under the decision of this court in the Glain case, which has been followed by the appellate courts in numerous instances, particularly in the cases of Estes v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., La.App., 157 So. 395, and Mosher v. Burglass, La.App., 170 So. 416.

Counsel for the defendants argue that these cases can have no application since the Mosher case dealt with a defect in a gallery and the Estes case with a defect in a brick yard, while in the instant case the mud courtyard was not defective in any way and the platforms used by the tenants had been placed there to suit their own convenience, clearly bringing the case under the holding of this court in Fischer v. Wells Fargo & Co. Express, 143 La. 1081, 79 So. 868.

In the Estes case, based on the holding in the Glain case above ‘quoted, the court pointed out in a well-considered opinion that Baudry-Lacantinerie, an eminent French authority, commenting under the heading “Contrat de Louage”, in Vol. 20 at p. 229, on Article 1721 of the Code Civil Francais (Code Napoleon), practically identical with Article 2695 of the Revised Code, said [157 So. 398]:

“The enjoyment must be guaranteed to the tenant, not only of his apartment itself, but also of the accessories, such as the entrance, the janitor’s lodge, the courtyard, the stairways, the cellars, the water wells.
“The tenant, having the right to use not only the principal thing, but also the accessories, his enjoyment must be guaranteed of the latter as well as of the principal thing.
“Among the accessories must be included the common parts of the property, those of which the tenant has the enjoyment with other tenants. * * *” (Italics ours.)

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Bluebook (online)
17 So. 2d 816, 205 La. 536, 1944 La. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-blitz-la-1944.