Ensminger v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc.

65 So. 2d 402, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 651
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 25, 1953
DocketNo. 19935
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 65 So. 2d 402 (Ensminger v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc.) 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
Ensminger v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc., 65 So. 2d 402, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 651 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

At about 11:30 o’clock on the morning of August 16, 1950, plaintiff, Mrs. Sadie L. Ensminger, who had been a passenger for hire on a Jackson Avenue bus- of defendant, New Orleans Public Service, Inc., fell as she attempted to alight from the bus at the downtown river corner of Jackson and St. Charles Avenues, in New Orleans. She claims that the bus was not driven close alongside the curb of the sidewalk to the customary alighting place for passengers, but was stopped with the steps by means of which she had to alight at a point about six feet in the street and directly alongside “a depressed and cracked portion of the roadway,” and that she, being unaware of the hole or crack in the highway, found “no bottom” and fell to the pavement and sustained serious injuries.

Defendant answered, admitting that plaintiff had been a passenger on its bus and had fallen while alighting therefrom and had sustained injuries, but denied that the bus had been stopped with the step alongside a hole in the pavement and denied that plaintiff had fallen as a result of stepping into a hole, averring that

“in alighting from the bus plaintiff in some way either missed her step, miscalculated the distance, or did not pay sufficient attention in alighting and fell * *

The matter went to trial below on the sole issue of whether plaintiff had fallen as a result of stepping into a hole in the pavement, or had fallen because of her own carelessness while alighting. In the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans there was judgment dismissing the suit and plaintiff has appealed.

Numerically the witnesses who say that plaintiff stepped into a hole and those who say that there was no hole where the bus stopped and that she did .not step into a hole are about equal. And there is little from which we can say that any one witness is entitled to any greater credence than is any other. In such a state of the record we ordinarily follow the well established rule that on questions of fact the findings of the trial court, based on his evaluation of the testimony of the witnesses and his judgment as to the effect of physical facts, should not be disturbed unless found to be manifestly erroneous. And ordinarily we conclude that the District Court must have determined that the testimony on the physical facts preponderated in favor of defendant.

We find here, however, a rather unusual situation, and on it counsel for defendant [404]*404depend in their demand far a reversal. They vehemently argue that, because of defendant’s failure to offer certain available evidence, it must be presumed that had it been offered it would have been unfavorable, and that if that unfavorable evidence had been added to the testimony already in the record in support of plaintiff's contention, her evidence would have then been found to preponderate substantially.

After the occurrence an investigator for the defendant corporation interviewed those witneses whose names were given to him and secured statements from them. Among them were persons who had witnessed the accident from the street and also some of the passengers. One of the- passengers was produced as a witness, but five persons who had been passengers and from whom statements had been obtained were not placed on the witness stand by the defendant, nor subpoenaed to appear as witnesses. The testimony of the witnesses who were called, including that of a passenger, was to the effect that the plaintiff had not fallen as a result of a hole and, in fact, that there was no hole near where the bus had been stopped.

At, the completion of the taking of the testimony, when the investigator of defendant corporation was on the witness stand, he was asked on cross-examination whether he had taken statements from the five persons named by counsel for defendant, and he answered that he had taken such statements from those witnesses, saying that they had given statements “from as much as they knew.” The investigator was then asked whether he knew why those five witnesses had not been called and he answered that in such matters the attorneys made the decision. The attorney for the defendant then said that in such cases: “A number of names are taken down. Some know something. Some know nothing.” And a little later he said:

“If they had any knowledge of it to my way of thinking, I would have had them, but I didn’t want ten witnesses to all say the same thing.”

There is nothing in the record to show that any of these persons had the slightest knowledge as. to how the accident occurred, and the record convinces us that there was not sufficient excitement to create the assumption that all of these passengers, who were in the bus, must have gone to the front end to see what had caused the accident.

It was shown that one of the witnesses had left the city and was not available and that another of these five witnesses was a very young girl and apparently the reason for the failure to produce her was understood. But it was the failure to place the other three witnesses on the stand which has been pointed to by counsel for plaintiff who argue that we must assume that the testimony of those three witnesses would have been unfavorable.

We think it obvious that the Judge a quo concluded, as did counsel for defendant, that since at least one other passenger had been placed on the stand, and since other witnesses had also given testimony to the effect that the bus did not stop alongside a hole and that the plaintiff had not stepped into a hole, it was not incumbent on defendant to produce a host of other witnesses who would have offered testimony which would have been cumulative and repetitive.

Surely it cannot be suggested that in any case in which there are a host of persons who may have some slight knowledge as to the cause of an accident, the party who knows who those witnesses are and produced some, but not all, of them runs the risk of having it assumed that the testimony which the others would have given would have been unfavorable.

All that is necessary under the rule relied on by plaintiff is that he produce a sufficient number of those witnesses to show that in all probability the testimony of the host of other witnesses would have been merely corroborative. And we think that even this is necessary only where it is shown that the witness or witnesses not produced had some peculiar knowledge which made it necessary that, the evidence, which they would have offered, be tendered to the Court. This was recognized by Judge Hardy who, in Anders v. Employers Liability Assur. Corp., Limited, La.App., 50 So.2d 87, 89, said:

[405]*405" * * * Concededly it is not necessary for a litigant to produce every available witness, . * * .

Furthermore, it should be noted that - the names of all of those witnesses were given to counsel for plaintiff and therefore the witnesses were equally available to plaintiff. Duet v. Tramontana, La.App., 26 So.2d 324.

Here we feel that the defendant has produced sufficient evidence to show that the version given by the defendant is the correct one—that plaintiff did not fall into a hole.

In reaching this conclusion we have not overlooked the fact that our Supreme Court, in Cusimano v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc., 170 La. 95, 127 So. 376, 378, and in other cases therein cited, hás held that:

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 2d 402, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ensminger-v-new-orleans-public-service-inc-lactapp-1953.