Clack v. Liggett Drug Co.

164 So. 482
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1935
DocketNo. 1522.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 164 So. 482 (Clack v. Liggett Drug 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
Clack v. Liggett Drug Co., 164 So. 482 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries brought by an emancipated minor, Miss Emily Barrow Clack, against the defendant Liggett Drug Company, Inc., and its indemnitor, the Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, Limited, of London, England.

The defendant drug company operates a drug store on the ground of the Triad Building situated at the northwest corner of Third and Florida streets in the city of Baton Rouge. The store faces Third street, which runs almost due north and south, and at a distance of about 25 feet from the corner of the two streets, on the north side of Florida street, which runs almost due east and west, it operates a freight elevator, with an underground shaft. The opening of the shaft is on the sidewalk which adjoins the buildings, and, when not in use, the opening is 'closed by means of a double steel door or lid which is flush with the sidewalk pavement. The door consists of two plates which extend from the north side of the sidewalk, southward, and when open stands perpendicularly; one on the east and the other on the west side of the opening. In order to hold them rigid, when so standing, an iron bar, called a “stretcher bar,” is fitted in two eyebolts; one at the south end of each door, on the inside. The door on the west side cannot fall over to the west more than a few inches from its center position when standing open because it there comes in contact with a pilaster which juts out from the wall of the building. The door on the east side is not afforded such protection, and, unless it is held rigid by the iron stretcher bar when standing perpendicularly, it is apt to fall over toward the east. The door on the east side is 33 inches wide running east and west, and 56 inches running north and south. The one on the west side measures 56 inches north and south, and 34 inches east and west. When they are both standing perpendicular therefore, or when the one on the west is resting against the pilaster and the one on the east falls over to the sidewalk on that side, there is an opening in the sidewalk 56 by 67 inches. There is no positive measurement in the record of the depth of the shaft, but it is referred to by some witnesses as being 5 or 6 feet deep. The bottom and walls are lined with concrete.

During the afternoon of March 12, 1934, at approximately 10 minutes of 4, the plaintiff, accompanying a blind lady, Miss Lillie Holland, was walking on Florida street in the direction of the opening of this elevator shaft. The elevator was being used at the moment, and both doors were standing in a perpendicular position. As she reached the door on the east side, her body came in contact with it in some manner, and the iron stretcher bar, which was used to hold both doors open, slipped out of position. The east door fell over toward the sidewalk on the east side, and plaintiff fell into the shaft hole sustaining the injuries which gave rise to this suit for damages.

Miss Clack at the time of the accident was 19 years old. She was a student at the State Institute for the Blind at Baton Rouge, and, although she has impaired vision, is by no means blind. Miss Holland, the lady she was accompanying, is a teacher at the Institute, and is totally blind.

In her petition plaintiff alleges that as she and her companion were walking west in the direction of the elevator shaft, the rays of the evening sun were shining directly in her eyes, and that, under the circumstances, an opening on the sidewalk such as the one in front of them, left unguarded and without any protection to keep the public from falling into it, constituted a veritable deathtrap.

In describing the manner in which she fell, she avers that her right leg became entangled with the chains that are attached to the doors and used to operate them, and that she was thus suspended head downward in the pit. The severest injury she claims was to her right leg, for which alone she seeks to recover the sum of $5,000. She claims impairment to her. nervous system for which she asks $2,000; impairment of her mental ability and loss of standing in school for which she asks $1,000; mental pain and anguish for which she seeks to recover $1,000; she claims that for the humiliation, mortification, and embarrassment caused by her body being exposed when she was suspended by her leg, she is entitled to recover $640, and for doctors’ bills, $360. Her total demand therefore is for the sum of $10,000, judgment for which is prayed for in solido against both defendants.

*484 The defendants, for answer, deny any negligence on the part of Liggett Drug Company, Inc., in the manner of construction and operation of the opening of the elevator shaft, and aver that to the contrary, it was properly constructed and guarded when open by the iron bar fastened to the south end of each door, and besides, on the occasion of Miss Clack’s accident, there was a red flag attached to each door to serve ás a warning to people who might be walking near the opening on the street. It is specially denied that on that particular day and at the hour she claims to have been on the street at this point, the sun’s rays could have blinded Miss Clack. In the alternative, it is pleaded that she was guilty of contributory negligence in not keeping a proper lookout and observing where she was going; in not seeing and heeding the warning given by the two red flags attached to the doors of the opening; and in walking into the opening in broad daylight. Finally, it is urged that the plaintiff had the last clear chance of avoiding the accident and was guilty of negligence in not having taken advantage of it.

The trial judge, without assigning written reasons, rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against both defendants, jointly and solido, for the sum of $3,535, of which amount $3,000 is for the personal injuries sustained by plaintiff, $350 for humiliation and embarrassment, and $185 for expert witnesses’ fees. Both defendants have appealed.

Miss Clack’s recital as to the exact happening is short and simple. She says that she and Miss Holland had turned the corner on Florida street; she occupying the north side of the sidewalk and that Miss Holland was on her left, holding her by the left arm. She did not know of the presence of this elevator 'shaft hole. The sun was in her face at the moment and she did not see the doors nor the warning flags which were attached to them. “I suppose as I hit that door” she says, “it gave way with me and I went down in there until somebody pulled me out.”

The defendants strenuously contend that Miss Clack’s vision could not have been affected by the rays of the sun, and in support of their contention they produced the testimony of Dr. D. V. Gutherie, professor of Astronomy, and Dr. Leo La Salle, Dean of the Engineering School, at Louisiana State University, who, after having been given certain data, made careful and minute scientific investigations and came to the conclusion, assuming of course that all the facts given them were exact, that it was impossible for the sun’s rays to have struck the eyes of a person of the height of Miss Clack at that particular time of the day on March 12, 1934. The accuracy of the calculations made by these two learned men is not questioned, but they are necessarily based on hypothetical facts.

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clack-v-liggett-drug-co-lactapp-1935.