Daigle v. Lang

377 So. 2d 1384
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1979
Docket10223
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 377 So. 2d 1384 (Daigle v. Lang) 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
Daigle v. Lang, 377 So. 2d 1384 (La. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

377 So.2d 1384 (1979)

George O. DAIGLE, III
v.
Samuel LANG, Leslie L. Inman, John M. Bee, Frederick S. Kullman, David A. Lang, Carl S. Downing, XYZ Insurance Company, New Orleans Saints, and ABC Insurance Company.

No. 10223.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

December 11, 1979.
Rehearing Denied January 18, 1980.

*1385 Owen J. Bradley, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

Dodge, Friend, Wilson & Spedale, New Orleans, Gordon F. Wilson, Jr., for defendants-appellants.

*1386 Drury & Lozes, James H. Drury and Stephen M. Lozes, New Orleans, for Engineered Equipment, Inc. and Walter F. Chappell, III, third-party defendants-appellees.

Before SAMUEL, BOUTALL and BEER, JJ.

SAMUEL, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit for damages for personal injuries received while dismantling a former radio tower. The defendants (hereinafter referred to as Kullman-Lang) were the members of the law firm who owned the building[1] and their respective insurers.[2] The radio tower, on which there was a lettered electrical sign advertising The New Orleans Saints, was located on the property owned by the law firm members.

Employers Commercial Union Insurance Company, the workmen's compensation insurer of plaintiff's employer, Engineered Equipment, Inc., intervened for compensation and medical expenses paid by it.

Kullman-Lang answered in the form of a general denial and filed a third party demand against Engineered Equipment, Inc., its chief executive officer, Walter F. Chappell, III, and Commercial Union, also the liability insurer of Engineered Equipment, for indemnity. In the alternative they pray for judgment against Chappell in the sum of one-half of any judgment as contribution of a joint tort feasor.

Thereafter, by supplemental and amended petition plaintiff joined Chappell, his insurer Commercial Union, and Joseph E. Viguerie, Jr., office manager of the Kullman-Lang firm, as parties defendant. Chappell and Commercial Union, then third partied Viguerie, a Kullman-Lang employee, and St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, insurer of the law firm, asking indemnity for Chappell and, alternatively one-half of any judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff, as contribution from joint tort feasors.

Prior to trial plaintiff settled his claim with defendants, Engineered Equipment, Chappell and Commercial Union (the jurors were not informed of this fact), and the suit, with the exception of the third party defendant, was dismissed with prejudice against those parties, reserving plaintiff's rights against the other defendants and their insurers.

The matter was tried to a jury on the merits with the trial court reserving its right to determine the matter of indemnity. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $214,643.70,[3] reduced by one-half (because of the settlement with Chappell and Commercial Union) to the sum of $107,326.85, and there was judgment on the third party demand in favor of defendants, Engineered and Commercial Union, dismissing the claims of the third party plaintiff, Kullman-Lang, against them. Defendants, Samuel Lang, Leslie L. Inman, John M. Bee, Frederick S. Kullman, David A. Lang, Carl S. Downing and Joseph Viguerie, have suspensively and devolutively appealed therefrom.

These facts are uncontested: In 1969 appellants purchased a brownstone building at 615 Howard Avenue on Lee Circle in New Orleans adjacent to that occupied by The New Orleans Saints as administrative and ticket offices. Both buildings were originally owned by the Saints or related interests. This litigation involves the removal of a tower in a cul de sac between the buildings. When the Saints or related interests owned both buildings, the tower was used for advertising by the Saints. Lettering spelling the team's name was attached to the tower and illuminated at night by electrical wiring originating in the Saints' building. The tower was on the property owned by Kullman-Lang.

*1387 Following acquisition of the building and the property on which the tower and sign were located, Kullman-Lang requested the owners of the adjoining building to pay for use of the sign. Those owners refused and thereafter the law firm decided to shut off the electrical power to the sign. Viguerie, a Kullman-Lang employee, engaged a Mr. Migliore, an electrician, for that purpose (the law firm was renovating the building and occupying offices elsewhere in the city at the time), gave him a key to the gate leading to the cul de sac, and instructed him to turn off the power.

Electricity ran from the adjoining Saints' building to a junction box on the tower through wiring encased in a flexible metal conduit. Power to the sign letters ran from the junction box on the tower by insulated wiring not covered by a conduit. The electrician disconnected the power at the junction box and on February 13, 1970 billed the firm for this work.

Two and one-half years later the firm decided to remove the tower since it served no useful purpose. It engaged Engineered Equipment to dismantle it. A written contract was entered into (discussed infra) and the dismantling began. Plaintiff, an Engineered Equipment employee so engaged, was injured when he sawed through the conduit leading to the junction box with a hacksaw. He suffered an electrical shock and was thrown from the tower to the ground.

In this court appellants contend: (1) The jury erred in finding Kullman-Lang and Viguerie negligent; (2) the trial court comments on the evidence were prejudicial to appellants; (3) the award for pain and suffering is excessive; and (4) the trial court erred in failing to enforce the indemnity provisions of the contract.

Relative to the first contention, appellants are liable only if Mr. Viguerie, the office manager, was negligent. Testimony as to his involvement was given by Viguerie, Mr. Chappell, president of Engineered Equipment, Mr. Robert L. Rebert, that corporation's general foreman, and Mr. Henry DeFrates, president of Carrollton Lumber & Wrecking Company.

It is clear from the record, and Viguerie admits, that he knew the electricity to the sign was controlled from the Saints' building, and that Migliore had disconnected the sign only from the junction box. This information was not conveyed to Chappell or Rebert.

Viguerie and Chappell met on three occasions prior to the dismantling. The first meeting was in the presence of DeFrates, who had been offered the job originally but had declined and had recommended several other contractors, among them Engineered Equipment. The three men met for the purpose of examining the tower and discussing ways of removing it. DeFrates had no financial interest in the matter and his testimony establishes he has no recollection of the electricity ever being discussed at that meeting.

Chappell returned for a second meeting with Viguerie to view the site. He recalls the responsibility for the electricity being discussed at either the first or second meeting, and that Viguerie accepted that responsibility.

Viguerie had no recollection of electricity ever being discussed at any meeting and denies accepting such responsibility. He stated he expected the contractor to be responsible for all phases of the dismantling, including the electrical wiring.

Because he would be the general foreman on the job, Rebert accompanied Chappell on the latter's third visit to examine the tower. He had no recollection of electricity being discussed with Viguerie at that time.

It was also established that a Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
377 So. 2d 1384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daigle-v-lang-lactapp-1979.