Driscoll v. Provenzano

783 So. 2d 552, 2001 WL 300478
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 2001
Docket00-CA-1156
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 783 So. 2d 552 (Driscoll v. Provenzano) 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
Driscoll v. Provenzano, 783 So. 2d 552, 2001 WL 300478 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

783 So.2d 552 (2001)

Donald DRISCOLL
v.
Joseph PROVENZANO and ABC Insurance Company.

No. 00-CA-1156.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

March 28, 2001.
Writ Denied June 1, 2001.

*553 Edmund J. Schmidt, III, Jefferson, LA, Counsel for plaintiff-appellant.

Albert D. Giraud, David I. Bordelon, Ungarino & Eckert Law Firm, Metairie, LA, Counsel for defendants-appellees.

Court composed of Judges GOTHARD, McMANUS and GULOTTA, Pro Tempore.

CLARENCE E. McMANUS, Judge.

This matter involves a fall down a flight of steps. Finding no manifest error, we affirm the jury's finding, and the trial court's judgment, that any possible defect in the steps did not cause the fall and resulting injuries.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

The matter was instituted by Appellant Driscoll's Petition for Damages, filed on March 9, 1999. The petition named Joseph Provenzano as the Defendant, as the lessor of the apartment Driscoll was renting, and on whose premises the accident occurred. An amended petition added as a Defendant Provenzano's liability insurer, Scottsdale Insurance Company.

The Defendants-Appellees answered all petitions, and the matter was set for trial.

*554 Prior to trial, all parties filed requested jury charges; Provenzano filed a requested special verdict form.

The matter was tried on February 7, 8 and 9, 2000. The trial was preceded by a conference regarding the requested jury charges during which attorneys for both parties reviewed the trial judge's prepared charges, and during which each party presented arguments in support of his requested charges. The trial judge did accept some requested charges but rejected several which had been proposed by Driscoll. In addition, the trial judge declined to delete some to which Driscoll objected. After the conclusion of Provenzano's case, and after the jury had retired to deliberate, Driscoll made formal objections to the charges as given.

In response to interrogatories, the jury returned the finding that the "defective condition on the property owned by Joseph Provenzano" had not been "the actual cause of any injuries sustained by Donald Driscoll." A written judgment was signed by the trial court judge on February 11, 2000, in which the judge adopted the jury verdict as the judgement of court.

Driscoll timely filed the instant appeal. He now raises the following errors:

1. The standard of care owed by a lessor to a lessee is strict liability. Article 2695. The Trial Court refused to charge the jury with this standard and improperly charged the jury with a simple negligence standard under Article 2317.1.
2. The Trial Court failed to charge the jury with a correct definition of "defect" and "minimum standards of construction."
3. The landing and stairway were defective which caused Plaintiff to fall.

FACTS

This case arises out of Driscoll's fall down a flight of steps which led up to the apartment he was leasing from Appellee Provenzano. The steps are described in testimony as "A-frame" concrete steps and are described on a blueprint as a "precast concrete stair stringer." Photographs show two sets of stairs set against the side of the apartment building and joined by a landing between them which fronts two doors on the second story of the building. Screen doors on the landing open towards the middle of the landing, with the doors swinging away from the steps as they open. The inner door of each apartment opens into the apartment. Facing the apartment, Driscoll lived in the left Apartment, Apartment A. Driscoll's testimony indicates that he fell all the way from the landing to the bottom of the steps.

Appellee Provenzano testified that he had purchased the apartment building in 1990, and that the condition of the steps had not changed between this date and the date of Driscoll's fall. Provenzano also testified that he knew the building had been built at least thirty years before the accident occurred because he had one tenant, Noah Orlano, who had been living in one of the apartments for this number of years. Provenzano identified income tax forms which indicated that in some years immediately preceding the accident he had spent nothing on repairs to the building. Provenzano also testified that he had not had any complaints about the steps for as long as he had owned the building. Finally, Provenzano stated that the screen door to Driscoll's apartment opened "away" from the steps leading to that door, so that access to the apartment would have been "clear."

Driscoll produced an expert witness, Jerry M. Campbell, an architect, who testified that the landing was defective. *555 Campbell testified that he and an associate had examined the steps and landing and had taken measurements during their examination. Campbell testified that he judged the building, from its appearance, to have been constructed in the 1960's or 1970's, and stated that he had reviewed tax assessment forms for 1977, which he assumed had been the year it was built. He therefore evaluated the design of the landing under several codes, which he stated would have been applicable as of 1977. He stated that the design of the landing was deficient under the 1977 Jefferson Parish Building Code, the 1967 National Building Code, and the Life Safety Code, which is issued by the National Fire Prevention Associations. Campbell testified that the design of the landing was substandard because the screen doors open out onto the landing but do not swing all the way open until they are flush against the side of the building. Campbell testified that this configuration would "obstruct" entrance to the apartments as the screen doors are opened by anyone standing in the middle the landing, and would further violate all three of the above building codes, which require that landings are designed so that a certain minimum number of inches remain between a partially opened door and the railing of the landing. Campbell opined that the landing was defective and unreasonably dangerous because, "When the door's opened, you can't get between the railing and the edge of the door."

On cross examination, Campbell admitted that had the apartment building been built before 1977, the above codes would not apply to its design. Further, on cross examination, he could not state without equivocation that the screen doors could not be pulled completely open to rest against the side of the building.

Provenzano's expert, architect Charles Silbernagel, testified that the landing complied with codes in effect at the time the building had been constructed, which had been at least as early as 1960. Silbernagel had determined the date of construction by calling the parish assessor's office, which indicated that as of this date taxes were assessed against improvements on the lot at the address in question. Silbernagel testified that the design of the landing complied with regulations set out in the 1952 Jefferson Parish Building Code and the applicable code (of an unspecified date) issued by the National Fire Prevention Associations. Further, he stated that even when the screen door to Driscoll's apartment is pulled open to form a ninety degree angle with the side of the building, the space between the open door and guardrail was adequate under the applicable codes.

Appellant Driscoll testified that he had been living in Apartment A for about two weeks before the accident occurred, and his description of the fall is as follows.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
783 So. 2d 552, 2001 WL 300478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driscoll-v-provenzano-lactapp-2001.