Bell v. State

553 So. 2d 902, 1989 WL 138246
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 16, 1989
Docket88-CA-2329
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 553 So. 2d 902 (Bell v. State) 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
Bell v. State, 553 So. 2d 902, 1989 WL 138246 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

553 So.2d 902 (1989)

Mary B. BELL and James A. Bell
v.
STATE of Louisiana, Louisiana Stadium and Exposition District, and Facility Management of Louisiana, Inc.

No. 88-CA-2329.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

November 16, 1989.

*903 J. Michael Placer, Lafayette, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Joseph I. Giarrusso, Jr., Mark M. Gloven, McGlinchey, Stafford, Mintz, Cellini & Lang, P.C., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Before BARRY, WARD and WILLIAMS, JJ.

BARRY, Judge.

Mary and James Bell appeal a judgment which dismisses their suit against the State, the Louisiana Stadium and Exposition District, and Facility Management of Louisiana, Inc. for damages from Mary Bell's fall down steps at the Louisiana Superdome.

FACTUAL TESTIMONY

Mrs. Bell testified at the bench trial that she and her husband, James Bell, along with friends Annette and Asa Broussard, attended a Saints game on November 9, 1986. Mrs. Bell was wearing high heels. After the game, they left the Superdome from the plaza level (about 3:30 to 4:00 p.m.) and walked down stairs to the parking garage. Mrs. Bell started down the middle of the steps in a large crowd behind her husband and in front of the Broussards and fell down. She did not use the handrails on each side of the steps. Mrs. Broussard claims to have found Mrs. Bell's shoe on the top step with the heel in a small hole.

Mrs. Bell testified that she could not stand and her left foot was swelling. Mr. Broussard carried Mrs. Bell to the car and Mr. Bell drove to Hotel Dieu hospital's emergency room (the Broussards remained in the car). A splint was placed on her foot and later that night she went to Lafayette General Hospital for treatment by an orthopedist, Dr. Gregory Gidman.

Mrs. Bell inspected the steps in November, 1987 with Mrs. Broussard, Ralph Junius (an expert), and her attorney Oscar Reed, Jr. Mrs. Broussard corroborated Mrs. Bell's testimony about the fall and the subsequent inspection.

Mrs. Bell stated that Dr. Gidman performed a reduction and placed pins in her dislocated foot. She spent five days in the hospital and had a cast on her foot for six to seven weeks. Mr. Bell's testimony corroborated his wife's details as to the fall and her treatment. Mr. Bell did not see the cause of his wife's fall.

Odele Grosz, personnel director for Facility Management, testified that she handled security and first aid reports for the Superdome. She said that on November 11, 1986 she learned of Mrs. Bell's accident by telephone when Mrs. Bell called her and she prepared a claim report. According to her written first aid report admitted at trial, Mrs. Bell fell on steps outside Gate A when the heel of her shoe caught in the rubber pad on the steps. Mrs. Bell told Ms. Grosz that the rubber had a crack and her heel got caught. Mrs. Bell told Ms. Grosz that she fell down three steps. Although Ms. Grosz conceded that in an earlier deposition she stated that the phone report was taken *904 on November 9, 1986, she testified the deposition was incorrect.

EXPERT TESTIMONY

Ralph Junius, an expert civil engineer retained by Mrs. Bell's counsel, testified that he inspected the stairs on November 19, 1987. He said the hole measured one and a half inches long and had been there "for some time." He felt the hole was a hazard to a female wearing high heels. He declared that it would take a "certain random chance," however, for such a fall to occur.

Mr. Junius reviewed Chapter 33 of the New Orleans Building Code (adopted in 1949 but revised) and the National Fire Prevention Association [NFPA] Sections 101 and 102, which he felt were applicable. The Superdome opened in 1975 after ground breaking in 1971. Article 3302 of the Building Code provided that the variation in the heights of risers could not exceed 3/16 inch with no variation in treads. Although Mr. Junius noted such a variation in the stairs in question, he did not feel that condition was particularly hazardous.

Mr. Junius said that Article 3305[1] of the Code provided that stairways over seven feet wide have one or more continuous intermediate handrails so that there is no more than sixty-six inches between adjacent handrails. Because the steps in question were substantially wider than seven feet,[2] Mr. Junius concluded the stairs were not in compliance with that article. There were no intermediate handrails where he determined two would have been necessary because of the width of the stairs.

Mr. Junius reviewed a May 15, 1970 letter written by Murvan Maxwell, Chairman which concerned a ruling of the New Orleans Board of Building Standards and Appeals after a public hearing on a variance. The letter provides in pertinent part:

Pursuant to the public hearings conducted on 4 December 1969, and on 4 March 1970, encompassing the above cited appeal [Louisiana Stadium Project], this Board rules as follows:
1. Because of the immense volume of the contemplated structure, together with the fact that ample and positive automatic venting to the atmosphere is to be provided in the apex of the ceiling, the provisions of Standard No. 102-1967, "Tents, Grandstands, Air Supported Structures Used for Places of Assembly", as promulgated by the National Fire Protection Association, may be utilized as design criteria for the grandstand seating, aisles, exitways, folding and telescopic seating, etc., of subject domed stadium.
2. The travel distance number and arrangment of vomitories, concourses, exitways and exits—on all levels—are acceptable as proposed and presented to this Board.
* * * * * *
5. The method of egress from the field level, including provisions for access to refuge in the adjacent garage area via adequately designed and rated openings (with ways of egress thereto properly marked), as proposed and presented to this Board, is hereby approved.
* * * * * *
The above waivers may be incorporated in the construction documents, which *905 documents shall be submitted to the Department of Safety and Permits in the prescribed manner for review, analysis, and approval.

Mr. Junius interpreted the first paragraph to mean that NFPA 102 would be acceptable within the confines of the dome (which he feels would include the stairs at issue) instead of the New Orleans Building Code provision relative to stairs.

NFPA No. 102 (1967 edition), paragraph 23, Article 222 provides:

The materials, design, fabrication, and construction of structures or devices included within the scope of this standard shall comply with the approved construction standards for safety to life and property. Where no specific standards are prescribed, conformity with the following applicable standards shall be deemed as compliance with approved standards for safety to persons and property.
* * * * * *
(f) MEANS OF EGRESS. Life Safety Code, NFPA No. 101-1967, National Fire Protection Association.

Mr. Junius testified that No. 102 made NFPA No. 101 applicable since No. 102 does not provide standards for exits.

NFPA NO. 101 (1967 edition), paragraph 5-3164d under Handrail Details, provides:

Every stairway required to be more than 88 inches in width shall have intermediate handrails dividing the stairway into portions not more than 88 inches in width, except that on monumental outside stairs 2 handrails may be permitted.

According to Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
553 So. 2d 902, 1989 WL 138246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-state-lactapp-1989.