Denneker v. Pecoraro

64 So. 2d 510, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 607
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1953
DocketNo. 19957
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 So. 2d 510 (Denneker v. Pecoraro) 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
Denneker v. Pecoraro, 64 So. 2d 510, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 607 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

At abput’9:30 or 10:00 o’clock in the morning on December 20th, 1950, Mrs. Lillie Mae Harris Denneker, one of the plaintiffs, while descending the steps leading to the ground from the front porch of an apartment building in which she and her husband, as tenants, occupied an apartment, fell down the steps to the ground below and sustained serious physical injuries. She and her husband, Sherman Denneker, brought this suit for damages against the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pecoraro, alleging that they are the owners of the premises in which the accident occurred, and that the cause thereof was the failure to maintain the premises in proper condition. Plaintiffs particularly alleged that the premises were defective in that the owner of the property had nailed to the front edge of the porch at the top of the steps a “piece of tin, measuring approxi[511]*511mately three inches wide and forty-six inches long, * *

Plaintiffs also alleged that it had rained earlier on that morning, and that rain water had accumulated in the overhead gutter attached to the roof of the porch, and that the gutter had leaked “with the result that water had dropped on the said strip of tin, making same slippery and unsafe.” They also alleged that

“it was the obligation of defendants to maintain the said premises in a safe and proper condition, either by refraining from installing a piece of material such as the said strip of tin, or by preventing the leaking of the said rain water, or both.”

Mrs. Denneker prayed for judgment for $23,500 for her pain and suffering, for the fracture of her right radius, a chip fracture of the head of the left radius, and permanent injury to her right arm. Mr. Denneker prayed for judgment for $249.-58 for expenses resulting from the treatment of Mrs. Denneker and for the cost of a new dental plate. Alternatively, in the event it should appear that Mrs. Pecoraro alone owned the premises, plaintiffs prayed for judgment against her alone.

Defendants answered, averring that plaintiffs had occupied an apartment in the said premises for a period of five years prior to the occurrence of the accident and that

“at no time during such period of occupancy have plaintiffs complained of or raised any question concerning any defective condition of the premises, or any dangerous condition of the stairs,”

and defendants also averred that Mrs. Den-neker’s fall

“was occasioned solely by her own negligence in failing to use such care in descending the steps as would be used by the ordinarily reasonable person,”

and

“in attempting to descend the steps in a rapid manner contrary to and in disregard of reasonable prudence, and in failing to avail herself of the use of the handrails on said steps.”

In the alternative that it should appear that there, was any defect in the premises, defendants averred that the accident had been .caused solely by the contributory negligence of Mrs. Denneker.

After an extended trial, there was judgment in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans dismissing the suit, and plaintiffs have appealed.

At the request' of counsel for plaintiffs, the District Judge rendered written reasons as follows:

“Because there is in this case a direct conflict between the testimony of plaintiff and some of 'her witnesses on the one hand, and the defendants and some of.their witnesses on the other hand, which raises a question of verac-» ity, counsel for plaintiff has asked that I assign the reasons which caused me to dismiss this suit.
“I rendered judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit because I came to the conclusion that plaintiff did not establish by a preponderance of the evidence and with the certainty which the law requires that she was injured as a result of any vice or defect in the leased premises. The plaintiff’s case is based on the theory that she slipped on the metal nosing of the last riser on the edge of the porch while attempting to descend the front stairway of the leased premises. She contends that at the time of the accident this metal strip was wet from rain water which dripped down back of the awning which covered the stairway, because of deterioration of some of the timber in the roof above.
“Plaintiff produced as a witness a reputable architect who testified that in his opinion it was not good building practice to install this type of metal nosing. He stated: ‘A metal nosing is often used in construction inside a building and outside as well, but whenever a metal nosing is used it is always of a nonskid type.’ He further stated: T believe that the sheet metal . used could be hazardous in the sense that it [512]*512is a slippery material when wet.’ On the other hand, witnesses who used the premises for many years testified that no accident had ever happened there and that the sheet metal was. not slippery.
“Before deciding the case I visited the premises at the request of counsel for both sides and made tests in the presence of counsel and the litigants under all possible conditions.. I found that while rainwater could not drip on the metal strip from the alleged defective part of the roof, rainwater nevertheless could drip upon the metal strip through the crack between the awning and the building in the event of a driving rain. However, I found it possible to stand upon this, strip, even when wet, without slipping, and that the tin strip was not slippery under any conditions. Eight different tests were made, which included all possible conditions, namely, with' the tin with paint upon it, and with the paint removed, with the tin dry and with the tin covered by water, and with the person descending the stairs standing on one foot on either the leather portion of the shoe or on the rubber heel, and in all instances with full pressure applied and without the support of the railing.
“In my opinion the plaintiff did not prove that her fall was caused by contact between her foot and the tin. No one but she witnessed the inception of her fall. That she did fall is confirmed by several witnesses. Mrs. Charles Le-tellier saw her sitting on the bottom step with her mouth bleeding. Mrs. Leonard Robles, her sister, who was called after the accident and after plaintiff had already .been removed to the hospital, sáw ‘a puddle of blood on the concrete by the front step.’ Francis E. Landry, who was in his apartment, heard her scream and upon coming out found her on the cement at the bottom of the stairs in front of her apartment. John Capretto, a defense witness, saw something rolling down the steps ‘five, six or seven steps’ from the bottom. Other defense witnesses arrived shortly after plaintiff was carried upstairs. The only witness, how.ever, who gave any testimony with respect to the beginning of the fall was the plaintiff herself, and it is significant to note that she herself did not state positively at any time that her foot slipped when it came in contact with the tin strip, although she expressed the opinion that this must have been the cause of her fall. She testified: ‘Well, I came out the door and I started toward the steps, and I reached over for. the banist.er — it is a column post, a round post — and I reached over for the banister, and. as I did my foot suddenly slipped from underneath.

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Bluebook (online)
64 So. 2d 510, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denneker-v-pecoraro-lactapp-1953.