Douga v. Ancona Baking Co.

193 So. 271
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1940
DocketNo. 17264.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 193 So. 271 (Douga v. Ancona Baking 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
Douga v. Ancona Baking Co., 193 So. 271 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

At about 8 o’clock on the evening of May 4, 1938, at the corner of St. Thomas and First Streets in this city, Mary Ellen Douga, a young girl, at that time 9½ years of .age, sustained injuries when she fell over an overturned breadbox which was lying on the sidewalk alongside her aunt’s barroom and grocery store located on that corner. The box, as it lay on the sidewalk, was from 14 to 18 inches in height, and extended approximately 3 feet in each of the other two directions. It had been provided by a delivery truck driver of defendant, Ancona Baking Company, Inc., so that the daily supply of bread for the grocery whjch was delivered before the opening of the store might be protected from the weather and against pilferage.

When the truck driver, Clay Alvarado, first brought the box to the grocery store, he placed it against the outside wall of the store, on the sidewalk, and did not fasten it in any manner to the said side wall, and it appears that in most instances such boxes' are not affixed to anything, but are merely placed on the sidewalk, as this one was. Later, on several occasions, it was found that the box had been turned over by unknown persons, and, on at least one other occasion, it had been placed in the street. *272 At the suggestion of the store owner, Alvarado agreed to affix it to the side of the said building. This he did, making use of .two nails — either 8 or 10-penny — and a hammer; which, he says, were furnished to him by the store proprietor. It seems certain that on one occasion after it was so nailed it was pulled away from the wall by unknown persons, and there is evidence to the' effect that the defendant’s said driver knew that this had been done and that, 'instead of again nailing the box to the wall, he merely placed it back into its proper position against the wall and allowed the nails to protrude ’ from the rear of the box toward the side of the wall.

Alvarado denies that he knew that the box had been so removed and states that, on his last trip prior to the accident, it was in its proper place and, so far as he knew, was still affixed to the wall. On this point, then, there is a conflict in the evidence.

There is also a dispute as to whether or not Alvarado produced the nails and the hammer which he used in affixing the box in the first instance, he stating that they were furnished him by the owner of the store, whereas plaintiff contends that he produced them from defendant’s truck.

On the night on which the accident occurred, the little girl, who states that she frequently visited her aunt who owns the barroom and store, was in the barroom, which opens upon the sidewalk about 18 or 20 feet from the spot at which she fell over the box. She was an unusually intelligent child, beiing almost first in her classes at school, and she seems to have answered the telephone frequently, as she did a moment or so before the accident. This call was for a neighbor. She' received permission to summon the neighbor and stepped upon the sidewalk and, after traversing the 18 or 20 feet between the door and the then overturned box, fell over it and sustained a severe cut when her leg came into contact with one of the nails which protruded from the back of the overturned box.

Her father, on her behalf, has brought the present suit and claims $7,500 for her use and benefit, and for himself seeks $32.-50 as , the amount he has expended for. medical bills, et cetera. He charges that there- was negligence in. the driver of the truck in affixing the box with nails instead,'of screws, .and. that, there was also negligence in -that later, when the said. truck driver was advised that the box had been detached, he did not remove the protruding nails, but merely placed the box back into its original position, leaving the nails still protruding from its rear.

Defendant maintains that there was no duty to affix the box and that Alvarado did it at the request of the little girl’s aunt with nails and a hammer furnished by her.

Defendant also maintains that Alvarado did not know that the box had been pulled loose from the side of the building and that he did not know of the protruding nails, and particularly defendant contends that, even if its driver was negligent in any of the particulars charged, the legal cause of the accident was the carelessness of the little girl herself in falling over the box, which was plainly visible.

The case was tried below by a jury, which rendered a verdict remarkable in that, though it made no mention thereof, it obviously rejected the claim on behalf of the little girl herself, and yet ran in favor of the father for $32.50 on his own behalf. Application for new trial was refused by the district judge, who gave the following written reasons for his refusal: “My reason for refusing a new trial is that as all of the evidence has been carefully presented by both sides, an appeal to the Court of Appeals would be, in my opinion, more expeditious. This judgment is contradictory. The minor’s claim should either be allowed or disallowed.”

Plaintiff, on behalf of the little girl, has appealed.

We cannot definitely tell from his reasons whether our brother below felt that the jury had erred on the main demand in not finding in favor of the little girl, or whether he meant that the verdict was unexplainable since it should not have been in favor of the father unless based upon the liability of defendant, in which case it should also have run in favor of the child.

There are certain facts not in controversy, upon which we first fix our attention because they seem to show a carelessness on the part of the unfortunate little girl without which the accident would not have occurred, regardless of whether there was, on the part of Alvarado, negligence legally chargeable to defendant corporation. These facts are that the box was quite large, was conspicuously painted,- and was lying on the sidewalk almost *273 directly' under a bright 300-watt street light. As we have remarked, the box, lying on its front, extended above the sidewalk between 14 and 18 inches, and therefore, because of its height and because of its color, it must have been quite conspicuous. It was lying almost directly in the center of the sidewalk, only three or four feet from the corner of the street. There was no balcony nor any other obstruction to screen it from the street light, which was almost directly overhead.

Mrs. Douga, the mother of the little girl, concerning the light, testified as follows :

“Q. Is that a dull light or a very bright light? A. Well, it is just the same as any other light on a corner.
“Q. Well now, you have had occasion to either go in or out of that place of business after dark. Did you have any difficulty in seeing anything? A. No, I didn’t.”
* * * * * *
“Q. Is there enough light for you to see? A. Yes.
“Q. Plainly? A. Yes.”

The aunt, Mrs. Schmaltz, the owner of the store, said that it is “just the same light as you have at other corners”, and the little girl herself states that she knows of no reason why she did not see the box and that probably she just wasn’t looking. She testified as follows:

“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douga-v-ancona-baking-co-lactapp-1940.