Ellis v. Kolb

196 So. 89, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 65
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 20, 1940
DocketNo. 17280.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 196 So. 89 (Ellis v. Kolb) 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
Ellis v. Kolb, 196 So. 89, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 65 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

This suit is brought by Mr. and Mrs. Pri-oleau Ellis against Conrad Kolb and the Maryland Casualty Company, his underwriter, for $15,000 damages due to physical injuries sustained by Mrs. Prioleau Ellis due to a fall which occurred in Kolb’s Restaurant on August 27th, 1937, at about 7:30 P. M. Mr. Ellis claims $155.28 as •expenses incurred by him, as head and master of the community, in connection with medical fees, drugs, etc. Plaintiffs allege that as Mrs. Ellis entered Kolb’s Restaurant, on the evening of the accident, she was escorted to a table by an employee, apparently the head waiter, and that another waiter, pursuant to the custom obtaining in Kolb’s and other restaurants, pulled out the chair for her and that as he did so, she prepared to seat herself “reasonably assuming that the waiter, who was holding the chair, would comply with the usual custom and push it in so that petitioner could sit on it”, but that he failed to push it in with the result that she fell to the floor and sustained serious and painful injuries. Defendants at first denied that Mrs. Ellis fell in the restaurant because of the lack “of sufficient information to justify a belief” but that “if said Mrs. Katheleen Gordon Ellis sustained any injuries as a result of an accident in Kolb’s Restaurant,' concerning which defendants lack any information, defendants specially deny that any of the waiters or employees of said restaurant had any connection, whatever with said accident or were in any way responsible therefor”. Answering further and, in the alternative, defendants averred that if any of the waiters or employees of Kolb’s restaurant were in any way connected with the fall of Mrs. Ellis, that she was guilty of contributory negligence, in that she failed to exercise ordinary care in assufning that the person who was holding the chair would push it towards the table at the moment that she intended to sit down, and that it was her duty to see that the chair was in a proper position before she undertook to seat herself. A supplemental answer was filed by the defendants in which it was stated that subsequent to the filing of their original answer, defendants had discovered that Mrs. Ellis had met with an accident in Kolb’s Restaurant on August 27th, 1937, and that, therefore, they desired to amend their answer in that particular. This supplemental answer also contained certain averments, the effect of which were to intimate, if not charge, that Mrs. Ellis had been a member of a drinking party prior to her entrance into the restaurant and that she was under the influence of liquor when the accident occurred.

Plaintiffs objected to the filing of the supplemental answer upon the ground that it changed the issue, whereupon defendants, struck out all reference to the drinking of alcoholic liquors. Nevertheless, the court excluded the supplemental answer, and its action is complained of, but, we believe, without justification, since the alternate defense in the original answer was sufficient for all purposes of their defense, except drunkenness which they voluntarily abandoned in recognition of its impropriety under their pleadings.

There was judgment below in favor of defendants dismissing the suit and plaintiffs. have appealed to this court.

Since it is admitted that Mrs. Ellis fell in the restaurant on the night mentioned *91 in her petition, the first question to be considered is whether her fall was occasioned by the negligence of an employee of the defendant’s restaurant.

The record shows that on the evening of the accident, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis, Messrs. Harold Grant, St. Clair Adams, Jr., Tom Bramhall and Jack Brill, were gathered at the Cocktail Bar of the St. Charles Hotel and all except Tom Bramhall and Jack Brill concluded to go to Kolb’s Restaurant, which was a short distance away, for dinner. Mrs. Ellis and Mr. Harold Grant walked on ahead, reaching the restaurant first, Mr. Adams and Mr. Ellis having stopped at the cashier’s desk in the St. Charles Hotel so that Mr. Ellis might cash a check.

As Mr. Grant and Mrs. Ellis entered the restaurant they were escorted to a table and, according to Mrs. Ellis, she fell to the floor when a waiter failed to push her chair forward as she attempted to seat herself, the chair having been moved back as she approached the table. The only person with Mrs. Ellis at the time was her escort, Grant, and he was in a position to corroborate or impeach her testimony, a most important witness from plaintiff’s point of view. Her counsel realized this fact and sought to have him testify in plaintiffs’ behalf only to be informed that he knew nothing about the matter or, as Grant expressed it in his letter to plaintiffs’ attorneys, under date of November 3rd, 1937, about two months after the accident “I regret to say that I have no recollection of the accident which you advise occurred in Kolb’s Restaurant sometime ago”. Nevertheless, we find Mr. Grant appearing as a witness on behalf of defendants on March 30th, 1939, about nineteen months after- the accident and about seventeen months after he claimed, in his letter to plaintiffs’ attorneys, that he knew nothing whatever about it. As a witness, he pretended to know a great deal, in fact, his testimony covers twenty-eight typewritten pages in the record. The substance of it, as relates to the accident, is that Mrs. Ellis did not fall as she seated herself at the table upon first entering the restaurant, -but sometime later when she returned from a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Bolles, who were seated at a nearby table, when “she either hit the side of her chair, something like this, and she was on that side, as I remember, and she just kind of went down. She might have touched the chair. I know she was trying to sit down”. He also stated that both Mr. Ellis and Mr. St. Clair Adams were present when she fell and that no waiter was near her chair at the time. He admitted that he was under the influence of intoxicants when he entered the restaurant.

Concerning Grant’s testimony, defendants’ counsel, in their brief, remarked that “the trial judge disregarded Grant’s testimony due to,the fact that he admitted on the stand he was intoxicated at the time, and that he wrote Mrs. Ellis’ attorney that he knew nothing about the case, and we shall not rely upon his testimony in arguing the case.” It thus appears that Mrs. Ellis’ statement, finds no support in the testimony of Grant. In addition to the fact that Grant’s testimony is rejected by counsel for both sides, and is further discredited by his written statement that he knew nothing about the accident, it is contradicted by Mr. and Mrs. Bolles, both of whom testified that Mr. Adams and Mr. Ellis were not in the restaurant at the time Mrs. Ellis fell and that her fall occurred before she visited their table. Mrs. Bolles testified that she was not acquainted with Mrs. Ellis at the time, though Mr. Bolles and Mrs. Ellis had known each other for a long time. She says that after Mrs. Ellis had fallen to the floor she came to their table and chatted a few minutes and returned to her own table; that subsequently she and Mr. Bolles visited the Ellis’ table, at which time Mrs. Ellis went to the dressing room; that she followed her and found her extremely upset, nervous and very nauseated.

The evidence of Mr. St. Clair Adams and of Mr. Ellis, except for their statements to the effect that they were not present at the time of the accident, throws no light upon the manner in which Mrs. Ellis fell. With the exception of a Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 89, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-kolb-lactapp-1940.