Builliard v. N. O. Terminal Co.

166 So. 640, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 117
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1936
DocketNo. 16128.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 166 So. 640 (Builliard v. N. O. Terminal Co.) 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
Builliard v. N. O. Terminal Co., 166 So. 640, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 117 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

Plaintiff, a negro carpenter 54 years of age, files this suit for damages resulting from injuries received by him in jumping off a railroad bridge, owned and operated by the defendant, over Bayou St. John in the city of New Orleans.

The main defenses to the suit are: (1) That the plaintiff was a trespasser or a mere licensee upon the private property of the defendant, and that, under the law, defendant owed him no duty of care other than to not wantonly or willfully injure him; and (2) In the alternative, should the court find that the plaintiff was an invitee upon defendant's property and that there was a lack of care on the part of the defendant, then, in that event, plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in certain particulars properly pleaded and enumerated in the answer.

The case was tried below before a jury, resulting in a verdict in plaintiff's favor for the sum of $1,750. On motion for new trial, the plaintiff entered a remittur, under order of the lower court, accepting a reduction in the verdict of the jury of $500, and judgment was finally decreed in his favor for the sum of $1,250. From this judgment defendant has appealed.

The record is voluminous, and involves both questions of law and fact.

In addition to the problem of liability of the defendant here presented, there is also a proposition of law referring to alleged prejudicial error by the trial court in rejecting certain evidence offered by the defendant.

The facts of the case may be stated as follows:

The accident occurred on the afternoon of September 19, 1933, in the city of New Orleans, at a bridge known as the "Black bridge," where the railroad tracks of the defendant cross Bayou St. John in the vicinity of City Park. This bridge carries two railroad tracks, and is used exclusively by the defendant for railroad purposes; there being neither a walkway situated thereon for pedestrians nor a roadway for vehicles. There is considerable testimony in the record, however, that, as a matter of fact, pedestrians use this bridge and that the employees of the defendant in charge of the bridge have actual knowledge of such use.

This bridge is approximately 60 feet long and is a drawbridge of the cantilever type, extending across Bayou St. John from the Mississippi river side to the City Park side thereof. In opening the draw, the end of the bridge on the Mississippi river side of Bayou St. John rises, but the end of the bridge on the City Park side does not rise. The bridge is operated by employees of the defendant known as "bridge tenders" from a tower on the City Park side of the bridge.

The tower is supported by two steel posts on the City Park side of Bayou St. John, and is situated approximately 35 feet above the level of the bridge.

The plaintiff, on September 19, 1933, was one of a great number of ERA workers engaged in an extension project of City Park in the direction of Lake Pontchar-train. It is undisputed that during the greater portion of plaintiff's employment by the ERA, or for a period of several months, plaintiff, together with other negro laborers, were driven in trucks from their homes, in the city of New Orleans, to a point adjacent to the Mississippi river side of the bridge each morning at approximately 7 a. m.

The testimony reveals that several hundred of these employees of the ERA, including the plaintiff, would customarily cross over the Black bridge in order to get to work from the point on the river side of the bridge where they depart from their trucks. The evidence further shows that, up to a month before the accident occurred, some of the trucks would cross Bayou St. John over the Esplanade avenue public bridge which is approximately three quarters of a mile nearer the city of New Orleans on Bayou St. John than the Black bridge, and that these trucks would follow a road on the City Park side of Bayou St. John to a point at or near the Black bridge. This procedure had been discontinued for a month before the accident, because the road on the City Park side of Bayou St. John from the Esplanade avenue bridge to the Black bridge was impassable, and the *Page 642 only vehicular road open to use after that period by the ERA workers was the road extending on the Mississippi river side of Bayou St. John from the Esplanade avenue bridge to the Black bridge.

The testimony also reveals that these ERA workers were relieved of their duties at approximately 2 p. m. each afternoon, and that it was their custom to re-cross the Black bridge, from the City Park side to the Mississippi river side thereof, in order to board the trucks which were waiting to haul them home at or near the Mississippi river side of the Black bridge.

On the date of the accident, after completing the work of the day and shortly past 2 p. m., plaintiff, together with some other workmen, walked through City Park to the Black bridge and then started to traverse this bridge from the City Park side to the Mississippi river side thereof for the purpose of boarding these trucks in order to ride to their respective homes.

Plaintiff claims that while he and several other men were on the bridge it started to rise. All of these men ran to the rising end of the bridge and jumped off to the bank. Plaintiff was the last man to make this jump, and as a result thereof sustained a broken leg.

The plaintiff testifies that the bridge started to rise without any warning as he and his fellow workmen were walking across it. He is corroborated in his statements, for the most part, by four other colored men, all of whom were his fellow workers, except one Wilbert Drummond, who was the driver of the truck which was to take plaintiff to his home. These witnesses all testify that quite a number of workmen (between 10 and 20) were on the bridge at the time it started to rise, and that all these men jumped off the bridge; that plaintiff was the last man of his party to jump off, and that he was further from the rising end of the bridge than any of the other men. These witnesses also testify that the bridge had risen from 8 to 10 feet from the ground on the Mississippi river side when plaintiff jumped off. None of these witnesses are able to say how fast the bridge was rising, but taking their testimony as a whole, it is safe to conclude that their opinion is that the bridge starts to rise slowly and that the speed is increased as it goes up.

It will be observed that the only real purpose in raising the bridge is to allow boats or vessels navigating in Bayou St. John to pass under it. Plaintiff and his witnesses all claim that they did not hear a boat whistle, signal, or other noise of any sort before the bridge started to rise, and that they saw no boat pass under the bridge after it was raised on this occasion. In fact, plaintiff and all of his witnesses testify positively that, although they had been working in that vicinity for some months, and had crossed the bridge twice a day during that period, they neither saw the bridge rise for boats to pass thereunder, nor did they hear boats signaling the bridge for the purpose of having it raised. One of the witnesses, however, did say that he saw the bridge rise on one occasion when he was going to get water away from his work.

After the accident the plaintiff had to be assisted from the point from where he fell, as a result of his jump from the bridge, to the truck on which he rode home, on account of the injury which he sustained in making this jump. Plaintiff's evidence fails to disclose that he, or his fellow workmen, notified the employees of the defendant at the time of the accident, of the occurrence of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 640, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/builliard-v-n-o-terminal-co-lactapp-1936.