Deblanc v. T. & P. Ry. Co.

6 La. App. 433, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 482
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 1927
DocketNo. 9906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 La. App. 433 (Deblanc v. T. & P. Ry. 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
Deblanc v. T. & P. Ry. Co., 6 La. App. 433, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 482 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CLAIBORNE, J.

This is a damage suit for physical injuries.

The plaintiff alleged that on November 13, 1917, while she was a passenger on one of the trains of the defendant railroad she was injured through the negligence of its employees; that “she boarded one of defendant’s trains in the city of New Orleans and upon reaching her destination at Luling, La., in this parish (St. Charles), at about 6:30, attempted to alight from the said train and the agent and employee of the defendant company failed to place the footstool in the proper location and seen (seeing?) that petitioner was about to fall kicked the said footstool, thereby tripping petitioner and causing her to fall prostrate upon the ground and injuring her as hereinafter stated. That it was quite dark at the time and the agents and employees of the defendant company failed to provide the proper light, so as to enable petitioner to see and said employees while in the performance of their duties failed to properly place the footstool so as to enable petitioner to properly alight from said train. That petitioner was very much humiliated and, due to the negligence of the employees of said defendant company, suffered a severe sprain of the left ankle joint with partial .separation of .the fibia fabular articulation and also that of the second row of tarsal bones, which injuries were very painful for at least four weeks, during which timé' petitioner was entirely incapacitated; and petitioner alleges that she is still suffering from the said in[434]*434juries and it is possible that said injuries will be permanent in character.

She claimed the following damages:

Humiliation, pain and suffering — $2000.00 Loss of time and inability to attend
to her household duties ______________ 1000.00
Doctor and medicine __________________________ 200.00
Permanent injuries. ____________________________ 1000.00
Total ____________________________________________$4200.00

The defendant denied all the allegations of the petition and averred “that if said plaintiff was injured said injuries were caused through no fault of your respondents, their agents, officers or employees, but that the said injuries were caused through the gross carelessness, recklessness and negligence of the plaintiff which contributed to the accident”.

There was judgment for plaintiff for $1000 and the defendant has appealed.

There are therefore three charges of negligence alleged against the defendant:

1st. That it failed to put the footstool in the proper place.

2nd. That an employee kicked the footstool, thereby tripping plaintiff and causing her. to fall; and

3rd. That the employees of the defendant failed to provide proper lights to enable plaintiff to see and properly alight.

The plaintiff lives at Des Allemands; she describes how she fell:

“When I went to get off the auditor was there, and instead of having the stool right under the step, he had it at a little distance under the step, and as I went to step he noticed the mistake, and pushed the stool, and I slipped, and my right foot hit up against the rail of the track.”

And she fell, and her husband helped her up, and also Dr. Johnson, who was there, assisted her; there was no one else; the train auditor got off and took the stepping-box and dropped it on the ground and stood near facing the plaintiff and looking straight up into the coach. The plaintiff repeats:

“Instead of putting the stepping-box right under the step of the train he put it a little distance, and I went to get off and he must have noticed his mistake, saw my foot go further down, and he pushed the box and it hit me up against the shin and tripped me, and I fell and my right foot hit up against the rail underneath the train.”

The auditor put the step too far out from the stép; when she came down, she did not see the step there until she went to get off; her foot went down between the step •and the box; she did not see the box at all; she felt where it was, and she fell right there; her right foot went between, and when the auditor pushed the box it hit against her left- foot; she did not see the box, but she noticed it when the auditor pushed it and she felt it; it was too far from the step; it was fourteen inches from the step; it was too dark, she could not see it; when she went down, her right foot went down to the ground between the stepping-box and the rail of the track; her husband was right there; she fell back; the depot was further up towards Hahnville; the step of the coach from which she got off was a short distance before reaching the depot; her husband was there right alongside of the train; closer to the train than the auditor; the step of the coach from which she got off [435]*435was about 30 feet away; Dr.' Johnson was standing right behind her, up in the vestibule between the two coaches; Dr. Johnson asked her if she was hurt and she told him no.

She does not know whether it was a vestibule coach or not.

A. DeBlanc, plaintiff’s husband, testified -that when his wife “went to get down the auditor pushed the stool, and she put her foot down; he pushed the stool towards the train and she fell over”.

There was no other witness to the accident, on the part of the plaintiff, except Dr. Johnson.

On behalf of the defendant H. S. Philips, conductor of the train, testified that it was his duty to look after the train; that no one complained to him of having been hurt.

H. A. Manning testified that he was auditor on the train; that his duties consist in collecting transportation, handling of stepping-boxes and unloading passengers; when the train stopped, he got down from the coach and placed the stepping stool in a position to unload passengers; two passengers got off before the plaintiff, on the same stepping stool; neither he nor anyone else removed it after he had placed it in position; Mrs. DeBlanc just barely touched the box with the front end of her foot, and fell, that is her feet spread on the ground and she stumbled but did not fall, when her foot practically missed the stepping-box; he “did not kick it at all with any foot”; the stepping-box was not tilted over, it remained in the same position in which he placed it; after he placed the stepping-box in the position that it was in he at no time touched it or moved it, or kicked it while Mrs. DeBlanc was getting , down, or while any other passengers were getting down.

Dr. Johnson, plaintiff’s witness, is acquainted with the plaintiff; he was in the same coach with her at the. time of the accident; he accompanied her to the vestibule when she was about to get out with a view of assisting her to alight. He was speaking to her while he went to the door.

He testified:

“Well, as I said before, I' walked to the end of the car with her, and it was my intention to get off the train myself and help her; but there was someone waiting there for her, and, as sfie got out, she fell, and after she fell, why I got off the train myself and I assisted this party (some relative of theirs I think), I assisted him in raising Mrs. DeBlanc up on her feet again.”
“Q. And you say you saw her fall?
“A. Yes. sir.
“Q.

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Related

Betts v. Shreveport Rys. Co.
137 So. 615 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 La. App. 433, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deblanc-v-t-p-ry-co-lactapp-1927.