Dorman v. T. Smith & Son

55 So. 2d 587, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 931
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1951
Docket19708
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 55 So. 2d 587 (Dorman v. T. Smith & Son) 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
Dorman v. T. Smith & Son, 55 So. 2d 587, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 931 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

55 So.2d 587 (1951)

DORMAN
v.
T. SMITH & SON, Inc.

No. 19708.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

December 10, 1951.
Rehearing Denied January 7, 1952.

*588 Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, Breard Snellings, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.

Sidney G. Roos, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

May & Carrere, New Orleans, for intervenor-appellee.

JANVIER, Judge.

The sole issue presented here is whether the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is applicable. Just what caused the accident from which the suit results is not shown and therefore it cannot be said that the evidence shows that the defendant was at fault. Consequently, unless, by the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, the burden of explaining the occurrence was shifted to the defendant, there is no liability. On the other hand, if, as a result of the doctrine, the defendant was placed under the necessity of showing that it was free from fault, it is liable because, as we have already said, the record does not disclose the cause of the occurrence.

Plaintiff, George J. Dorman, was in the employ of Alcoa Steamship Company, Inc., as a clerk. It was his duty on the day on which the accident occurred to check freight which was being unloaded from railroad cars and placed upon the river front wharf at New Orleans, to be later loaded into a steamship of Alcoa Steamship Company. The freight was being unloaded from railroad freight cars to a portion of the wharf which had been assigned by the Board of Commissioners of the Port of New Orleans (Dock Board) to Alcoa Steamship Company. The steamship company had entered into a written contract with T. Smith & Son, Inc., a stevedoring corporation, for the unloading from the various freight cars of the bags, packages, bundles and other freight which was later to be placed upon the steamship of Alcoa Steamship Company.

The particular commodity, which was being handled when the accident occurred, was tin plate, which was packed into flat bundles or bales and compressed. Each bundle was flat and had a surface area of approximately 4¼ feet, being 18 inches wide and 30 inches long. These packages were tightly bound by metal strips and, crosswise under each, there were three wooden skids, each about 1½ inches wide and about 4 inches high. These skids were fixed to wooden boards under the bales by nails, and the purpose of the skids was to raise each bundle about four inches from the floor so that each could be picked up by the lift machine, which was used in moving them from the boxcar to the wharf and in raising them to the various heights necessary for stacking. This lift machine was so constructed that its horizontal arms, which extended from its front, could be lowered to within a few inches of the floor *589 so that the machine might be brought alongside each bundle with the arms extended under the bundle and the arms could then be raised, the bundle moved, and either placed again upon the floor or stacked upon another bundle.

Quite a number of these bales or bundles of tin plate had been unloaded from the boxcar and had been stacked in tiers, three bundles high. The bundles varied in thickness so that, while the tops of all tiers were not exactly the same height, each tier was about 3½ to 4 feet high.

It was the duty of Dorman to check these bundles as they were placed upon the wharf, to see that none were missing or broken, and also to measure them to determine their cubic content, and to keep a record of their respective weights and sizes. The operator of the lift machine, an employee of T. Smith & Son, Inc., had stacked all of the tin plate, which had already been unloaded and placed upon the wharf, had placed in the particular stack which caused the accident one bundle weighing approximately 1,800 pounds on the floor of the wharf and had placed a second bundle weighing approximately 1,400 pounds on top of the first bundle, and had then placed a third bundle weighing approximately 1,800 pounds on top of the second. He had then driven his lift machine away from this stack of tin plate towards the boxcar and Dorman, the plaintiff, had measured these three bundles to determine their cubic content and had made a note thereof. Dorman had then turned his back toward the stack when suddenly, for some undisclosed reason, the top bundle slipped towards the end near which Dorman was standing, partially collapsed, and caused the partial collapse of the intermediate bundle also, with the result that the top bundle fell upon Dorman, causing the injuries from which this suit results.

Dorman brought the suit against T. Smith & Son, Inc., praying for judgment for $97,000, alleging that the accident had resulted from negligence of T. Smith & Son, Inc., had been negligent "in improperly stacking a skid or package of tin plate weighing 1800 lbs." He also alleged that the said employees of T. Smith & Son, Inc., had been negligent in improperly stacking tin plate "in a manner which permitted it to fall upon petitioner," and that the employees had violated rules of the Dock Board in stacking tin plate weighing almost 6,000 pounds in a space in which only 1,800 pounds should have been placed.

T. Smith & Son, Inc., filed exceptions of vagueness and no cause of action, and plaintiff then, by a supplemental and amended petition, alleged that, because the employees of T. Smith & Son, Inc., had stacked tin plate weighing nearly 5,000 pounds in a spot at which only about half that weight should have been stacked they were negligent, and that they were also negligent in that the said packages "were unsteadily packed one on top of the other, and that their weight was so great that being so improperly and unsteadily packed that the top one fell off the other two, either by the skids giving away and breaking, or because the weight of the said pile of tin plate was too great for the support of the wharf to properly support it, due possibly to vibration of the wharf, * *."

The Travelers Insurance Company intervened and alleged that it was the compensation insurance carrier of Alcoa Steamship Company; that it had paid to Dorman in compensation, or had paid for medical benefits $1,246, and that it would be liable for further compensation, and prayed for judgment against T. Smith & Son, Inc., for this amount and for such other amounts as it might be required to pay in the future.

T. Smith & Son, Inc., answered, admitting the occurrence of the accident, denying that any of its employees were at fault, and averring that the plaintiff, Dorman, was in complete charge of the unloading of the boxcars and in the placing of the bundles of tin plate on the wharf; that the lift machine and the operator thereof had been rented to Alcoa Steamship Company on an hourly basis, and that T. Smith & Son, Inc., "had parted with control over said machine and operator for the period of time said machine and operator was being used by said Alcoa Steamship Company."

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff for $10,000 and in favor of Travelers Insurance *590 Company for $1,736 and for $175 as attorney's fees. Defendant has appealed.

The contract between T. Smith & Son, Inc., and Alcoa Steamship Company is in the record, and from it we readily conclude that T. Smith & Son, Inc., agreed to unload and place the various portions of cargo on the wharf and that it cannot properly be said that T. Smith & Son, Inc., had merely rented its equipment and employees to Alcoa Steamship Company on an hourly basis.

On the other hand, we think that the record leaves no other conclusion than that the work of T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 So. 2d 587, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorman-v-t-smith-son-lactapp-1951.