Byrnes v. National Casualty Co.

45 So. 2d 408, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 539
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1950
Docket19412
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 45 So. 2d 408 (Byrnes v. National Casualty 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
Byrnes v. National Casualty Co., 45 So. 2d 408, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 539 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

45 So.2d 408 (1950)

BYRNES
v.
NATIONAL CASUALTY Co. et al.

No. 19412.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

March 27, 1950.

*409 Joseph A. Casey, M. C. Scharff, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Gordon Boswell, Stanley E. Loeb, New Orleans, for National Casualty Co., defendant-appellee.

Plauche F. Villere, New Orleans, for Denis Rufin, defendant-appellee.

JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiff, an elderly lady, sustained serious physical injuries on the night of November 28, 1948, when she fell while walking in the parking lot provided by the operator of a restaurant located at 3016 South Carrollton Avenue, known as "Ye Olde College Inn". She brought this suit for damages against Denis Rufin, Sr., the owner and operator of the restaurant and the adjoining parking lot, and against Rufin's insurer, National Casualty Company, erroneously sued as National Casualty Company of Detroit. She prayed for solidary judgment against the two defendants in the sum of $25,168.80.

She charged that the accident resulted from the negligence of Rufin in that the parking lot was poorly lighted and in that Rufin permitted a large hole, filled with water, to remain in the surface of the lot, with the result that, being unable to see the hole because of the darkness, she stepped into it and fell to the ground, sustaining a fracture of her right hip.

Defendants admitted the occurrence of the accident and that the restaurant and parking lot are operated by defendant, Rufin, but they denied all liability to plaintiff, denying in particular that the parking lot was poorly lighted, and averring that plaintiff's accident was caused by her own negligence in failing to observe and avoid the hole into which she stepped. In the alternative that it should appear that there was any negligence on the part of defendant, Rufin, then defendants alleged that the accident resulted from the contributory negligence of plaintiff herself as above set forth.

After an extended trial in the district court, there was judgment dismissing plaintiff's suit, and she has appealed.

The record shows that on the Sunday night in question the plaintiff arrived at the establishment at about seven or seven-thirty o'clock in an automobile owned and driven by Charles M. Ives. In the car also were Mrs. Ives, their two children, and Mrs. Ives' mother, Mrs. Charles A. Butler. The car was parked in the parking lot under or near a tree, and the entire party walked across the lot and entered the restaurant. Some time later they left the restaurant to return to the automobile, and just before Mrs. Byrnes reached the automobile the accident occurred.

The parking lot was surfaced with clam shells, and the record shows that the owner, Rufin, had contracted with a paving contractor to pave the surface of the lot *410 with "blacktop", but that the paving contractor, having found it impossible to devote the necessary time to it as promptly as Rufin desired, had dragged or scraped the lot on various occasions in an effort to keep it in proper condition, and that the last scraping or dragging had been performed about three days before the occurrence of the accident. This last scraping had been done on Thanksgiving Day, which was the preceding Thursday, and the accident occurred on Sunday night, or, as we have said, three days later.

Plaintiff makes two charges of negligence: (1) That Rufin was at fault in allowing the hole to remain in the surface of the lot, and (2) that the lot was improperly lighted.

It is obvious, of course, that there is no duty in the operator of such a lot to maintain its surface absolutely smooth. It must be recognized that in such a surface there are always depressions or indentations, and therefore it cannot be said that it is negligence to allow such indentations to remain so long, as they are only such as may be expected in such a place. Plaintiff, however, asserts that this particular hole was about five inches deep and was three or four feet long and two feet or so in width. Defendants did not attempt to prove the exact depth of the hole at its deepest point, though Albert Rufin, who was on duty at the time, says that it was "maybe about 2 inches deep."

Mr. Ives, testifying as a witness for plaintiff, says that it was "perhaps four or five inches in depth in the center", though he says that there was water in it and that he did not measure it, and he added: "* * * it is impossible to determine the depth of the hole covered with water."

Mrs. Ives said: "I imagine it was about 4 inches deep, because it was covered with water and I don't know the exact depth." She said that she had seen the hole when she and the children got out of the car to go into the restaurant. She said that the children "have very bad eyesight and I am always on the lookout for them."

Emile Rufin, who says that he "runs" the place, said that the hole "looked like an area three or four feet long and two or three feet wide, with a small amount of water in it. He said that he was not in position to say how deep it was.

Amato, one of the employees of defendant Rufin, says that he couldn't say how deep the hole was, but he described it as a water puddle about three to four feet long, about two feet wide and sloping down towards the center.

There is no doubt at all that there had been considerable rainfall either on that day or the preceding day, and there is no doubt too that in such a surface of crushed shells there are bound to be depressions or indentations in which water will remain after a substantial amount of rain has fallen.

We conclude, from all of the testimony concerning the description of the hole, that it was not sharply defined in the sense that there was a precipitous drop to its bottom, and that it was merely a depression in the surface. In fact, this is conceded by all of the witnesses, most of whom referred to it as a depression or as an indentation, or as a water puddle.

It is true that one of the employees of defendant Rufin, the witness Amato, to whom we have already referred, is said to have remarked: "The lady has fallen. That's a shame. They had contracted to have this repaired." However, we do not see in this remark any statement that he recognized the hole as being dangerous. He merely expressed the view that it was unfortunate that the lady had stepped into the water, and that he knew that the owner of the establishment had made a contract with the paving contractor to substitute for the shell surface the blacktop surface, and that this contract had not, at that time, been carried out.

In determining what is a defect in a sidewalk, or a store aisle, or a parking lot, we must take into consideration the nature of the establishment, and we must undertake to determine just what type of surface the user would have the right to expect. A person walking through a store is justified in assuming that the floor is level and smooth. But where a *411 person walks in a parking lot, surfaced with shells, it must be realized that that surface will have indentations and depressions, and the person using it must exercise such care as may be required in the use of such a surface, and we do not see that it can be said to be actionable negligence of the owner of such a surface to allow indentations such as that which is indicated by the evidence here, to remain.

In White v. City of Alexandria, 216 La. 308, 43 So.2d 618, the Supreme Court, as expressed in syllabus No.

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 2d 408, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrnes-v-national-casualty-co-lactapp-1950.