Burke v. Werlein
This text of 58 So. 140 (Burke v. Werlein) 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.
Opinion
Plaintiff demands damages of defendant, on the ground that he (defendant) owns certain premises on Bienvillestreet, in this city, in front of which he-caused an excavation to lie made, and unnecessarily and illegally left open, and had. covered it with boards, which appeared to be intended, and to be safe, for pedestrians to-walk on, but which broke when so used by him (plaintiff), whereby he was precipitated, into the excavation and injured. By supplemental petition, plaintiff alleges that there-was a building contract between Werlein and James Geary, which necessitated the making of the excavation referred to in the original petition; that Werlein, as owner, reserved to himself “complete control and supervision of the work to be performed thereunder,” and caused said excavation “to be-dug through the agency of said Geary”; that “across said excavation the defendants had placed boards, for the purpose of permitting pedestrians to cross the said sidewalk over-said excavation”; that he met with the accident whilst walking along the sidewalk and exercising due caution; and he prays for judgment against the parties named, in so-lido. Werlein filed exceptions of vagueness- and “no cause of action,” and Geary of misjoinder and no cause of action; and, the exceptions filed by Geary having been maintained, and the suit, as to him, dismissed,plaintiff has appealed.
One who causes an excavation to be made-in a sidewalk, and covered with boards, which invite a pedestrian to walk on them, but which break beneath his weight, precipitating him into the excavation and injuring-him, and one who actually does the thingsméntioned, may be held liable, in solido, to-the person injured; and, as they may be sued together originally, there is no reason why they should not be brought together, as-defendants in the same suit, by supplemental petition, seasonably filed. The exceptions of misjoinder and no cause of action were-therefore improperly maintained, and the judgment appealed from is accordingly' avoid[441]*441ed and reversed, the exceptions overruled, and tlie case remanded to the district court •for further proceedings according to law.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
58 So. 140, 130 La. 439, 1912 La. LEXIS 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-werlein-la-1912.