Cade v. Tafaro

34 So. 2d 72, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 393
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1948
DocketNo. 18778.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 72 (Cade v. Tafaro) 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
Cade v. Tafaro, 34 So. 2d 72, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 393 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Nenie Cade, the pliantiff and appellee, was the lessee under a month to month verbal lease of the premises 2230 Clio Street, which were owned by Joe Tafaro. On August 31, 1946, at about 9:30 o'clock, a.m., plaintiff was injured when she was struck by a plank which fell from the ceiling of the porch, and she brings this suit for damages amounting to $4,617.75 for personal injuries and the loss of certain earnings, against Tafaro, the landlord, and his public liability insurance carrier, London Lancashire Insurance Company, Ltd. *Page 73

The corporate name of the insurance carrier was incorrectly stated in the petition — its correct name is London Lancashire Indemnity Company — and by agreement of counsel the suit was abandoned as to London Lancashire Insurance Company, and the corporation, under its correct name, was never made a party defendant in the suit.

Joe Tafaro answered the suit denying the alleged injuries and averring that plaintiff knew of the defective condition of the ceiling and was guilty of contributory negligence, such as to bar a recovery, by reason of her continued occupancy of the premises. He further claims that he knew nothing of the defect in the ceiling and had no opportunity of learning thereof, because vicious dogs kept by plaintiff prevented his entry into the premises for the purpose of making an inspection.

An intervention was filed by the Board of Administrators of Charity Hospital of Louisiana in New Orleans, in which it is alleged that hospitalization and medical treatment to the amount of $111.75 had been furnished plaintiff as a result of her injuries, and a judgment for that amount against both plaintiff and defendants was prayed for.

This appeal has been taken by Joe Tafaro from a judgment of the lower court in favor of plaintiff for $1,000, and in favor of the intervenor, and against him, for $111.75. Plaintiff answered the appeal, praying for an increase in the award to $2,500.

There is no doubt that plaintiff suffered injuries on the date alleged. At about 9:30 o'clock in the morning she opened the blinds leading to the upstairs front porch of the leased premises, and stepped upon the porch. Just as she did so, one end of a plank in the ceiling over the porch became detached, and the loose end swung downward and struck her on the head and about the shoulders. Besides the plaintiff's testimony regarding the occurrence, one Eddie Glenn, who was walking along the sidewalk on the far side of Clio Street, opposite the leased premises, saw the board swing down from the ceiling and strike plaintiff's head. Glenn stated that he thereupon crossed the street to plaintiff's house and attempted to enter it to reach the upper porch, so that he could assist her. He found the front gate fastened and was never able to get into the house. However, he testified that a short time thereafter a Charity Hospital ambulance arrived and plaintiff was placed into it and taken away. That the board did break loose from the ceiling is admitted by Joe Tafaro. He testified that after being notified of the accident he visited the premises and found a board from the ceiling hanging down by one end; that it was a plank about 7/8 of an inch by 6 inches, and 12 feet long; that the height of the ceiling was 10 feet, 1 inch from the porch floor. He pulled the board entirely from the ceiling and laid it on the porch.

The difficulty in this case emanates from the unsatisfactory method employed by plaintiff in the endeavor made to prove the nature and extent of her injuries. She relied to a great degree upon her own testimony to prove that which should have been shown by medical experts. Plaintiff testified that she remained in the Charity Hospital for sixteen days. In this she is supported by the intervention of the administrators of the hospital, which asserts that she was hospitalized for sixteen days. However, counsel for plaintiff did not see fit to summon as witnesses the five doctors who plaintiff says treated her in the hospital, nor did he offer in evidence a certified copy of the hospital record, which under the provisions of Act 90 of 1938 would have constituted prima facie proof of its contents.

Taking the record as it is, we find that plaintiff was knocked unconscious by the blow from the board. At one point in the testimony she claims that she remained unconscious for fifteen minutes, and in another statement she testified that she did not "come to" until after reaching the hospital. She remained in the hospital for sixteen days, but what treatment was accorded her, or what the findings of the hospital physicians were, we are at a loss to know. Plaintiff, a Negress 37 years of age, described the treatment as follows:

"Q. What type of treatment did you receive at Charity Hospital? A. Well, they had an iron on my neck and had my bed *Page 74 hoisted up. They had my head in a brace and iron on the back of my neck and my bed hoisted high.

"Q. How long did you remain under that type of treatment? A. Two weeks and a half."

We also find many discrepancies and inconsistencies in her testimony. In the petition she claims an item of $306 for the loss of earnings. She testified that she was employed by the Central Laundry at a wage of $18 per week, and that the injuries disabled her to the extent that she could not work after the accident and lost wages to the amount claimed, calculated up to the date of the filing of the suit. On cross-examination, however, she admitted that her employment with the laundry ceased in January 1946, long before the accident on the porch.

Her petition also alleges that she had notified her landlord several times about the defective condition of the porch ceiling, but on the witness stand she testified that she did not know of the dangerous condition of the ceiling, and that her only complaint concerned the bad condition of the floor and bannister of the porch.

Plaintiff also attempted to exaggerate the circumstances surrounding the accident. To Dr. Kisner she made the statement that "the roof of a porch caved in," and she told Dr. Maurer that the "front porch caved in on her." The testimony of these physicians will be analyzed later.

Not long after being discharged from the hospital, we gather, plaintiff consulted her attorney regarding the institution of a suit against the landlord for damages. Evidently plaintiff's attorney made demand on behalf of his client, for counsel for both parties admitted that plaintiff was examined by two physicians, Dr. Dan Dysart Baker, the physician for defendant Tafaro's insurer, and by Dr. Wendell Kisner, a physician acting at the instance of the attorney for plaintiff. It was agreed between counsel for each party that the insurance carrier would furnish plaintiff's counsel with a copy of Dr. Baker's report, and that the claim adjuster for the insurer would be given a copy of Dr. Kisner's report.

[1] The two physicians made their examinations, and copies of the reports were interchanged as agreed. However, another unusual circumstance occurred — on the trial of the case below, plaintiff failed to produce Dr. Kisner, who made his examination of her at the request of her counsel, as a witness. At the trial defendant's counsel, when Dr. Kisner did not appear as a witness, offered in evidence a copy of Dr. Kisner's report. Plaintiff strenuously objected to the admission of the report as evidence, upon the ground that it was hearsay. The trial judge admitted the report, and considering the agreement of the parties to interchange the reports of the examining physicians, we think that the court's ruling was correct.

The disputed report, which is dated November 6, 1946, contains among others, the following statements:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 72, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cade-v-tafaro-lactapp-1948.