Geismar v. City of Alexandria

142 So. 367
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 1932
DocketNo. 4330.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 So. 367 (Geismar v. City of Alexandria) 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
Geismar v. City of Alexandria, 142 So. 367 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PALMER, J.

Plaintiff sues to recover the sum of $300 as damages for personal injuries he alleges he received on the 26th day of September, 1931, as he undertook to cross Third street at its intersection with Jackson street in the city of Alexandria. He alleges “that he stepped upon a piece of casting whiqh is used as a cover for a gutter or drain which runs parallel with the curb along said Third Street; that the said piece of easting suddenly tilted and tripped or threw him, causing him to fall violently forward to the pavement, causing the injuries hereinafter set forth.”

Plaintiff makes the further allegations that the easting that tilted and tripped him forms a part of the thoroughfare, and that it bore no signs of being insecure in its position when he stepped upon it; that the city is charged with the maintenance of the thoroughfare, including ■ the said cast covering. He further avers that the casting was supported by concrete shoulders which had been broken or worn away, putting the casting in a dangerous condition of which condition the city had knowledge, or should have had knowledge, and, therefore, was negligent in permitting that condition to prevail.

Plaintiff further alleges that in the said fall he sustained serious injuries to his right knee, which was badly bruised and lacerated, and also to both his wrists, which were severely sprained; that as a result of his said injuries he was confined to his home for a period of twenty days, during which time he was completely incapacitated from doing any kind of work, and that thereafter he was partially incapacitated from doing his usual work as a salesman, carrying a grip of samples, and that due to his damaged wrists he has been hampered in pursuing his daily tasks. He asks for $200 for his pain; and. suffering and for $100 for loss of time and reduced earning capacity.

The defendant denies generally the allegations of negligence charged against it, as well as the extent of the injuries alleged. It avers further that the cast covering.over the drain or gutter was necessary and of a standard type and was maintained in good condition; that it was heavy and set in grooves or shoulders over the gutter, making it very difficult to remove without lifting it out of the grooves, but that occasionally an automobile will back into it with force so as to displace it; that it is impractical to fix said cast covering so that it cannot be thus displaced; that, if it was displaced, or if any part of the said gutter or covering was in any manner in a dangerous condition at the time of the alleged accident, it was unaware of it, and that such condition did not exist for a sufficient length of time to charge it with knowledge.

Defendant further avers that shortly before the alleged accident an automobile had backed into said east covering and displaced it; that, although the curb at the point in question is somewhat higher than the street level and the level of the drain covering, any one stepping from the sidewalk should look where he steps, and that plaintiff was negligent when he stepped upon this plate without first paying attention to its condition. It further avers that the accident complained of by *368 •plaintiff was caused solely by Ms own fault in stepping from the sidewalk onto the gutter covering without looking where he was going, but, in the alternative, defendant pleads contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff, barring his right to recover.

On these issues the case went to trial, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $185. Prom that judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal. Plaintiff has answered ■the appeal and asks for an increase of the .judgment to the amount sued for.

Opinion.

Defendant pleads that, if the defects in this east covering existed as alleged, which it denies, that it had no actual notice of such defects, and that they had not existed for a sufficient time for it to be charged with notice. To a very large extent a decision of the case turns upon this point.

There is very little dispute about the facts bearing upon the question of liability. The plaintiff makes the following statement as to the accident, which is not seriously disputed:

“I was standing on the East side of Jackson Street and intending to go west towards Hemenway’s Store, and the green light was on and I waited for the red light to go on. I had my .left foot standing on the plate over the culvert there and my right foot on the sidewalk,, and when the light came on I started to go across and when I went to go across the plate was way down in the inside and my right foot caught in that plate and throwed me about eight feet out in the street.
“Q. Explain to the Court what you mean by ‘that plate’? A. That is the cover across the little ditch there for crossing. It was perfectly loose. When I raised my right foot to go across it my right foot caught on it and threw me out in the street.
“Q. You say you stepped on it and — (interrupted)? A. The inside went down and the outside came up towards me and my right foot caught on that and threw me about eight feet outside in the street. * * * ”

The evidence of several witnesses shows that this iron plate had been out of place several times during the last day or two preceding the injury.. This fact is not disputed. The evidence further shows that a policeman, in patrolling this beat, frequently was at the corner where this cast covering is laid. He did not testify as to whether or not he had any knowledge of its displacement during that time. Robert Bringhurst, commissioner of streets and parks' of the city of Alexandria, testified that these plate coverings over the gutters could possibly be kept from being knocked out of place by automobiles backing into them, but it would take a lot of expensive work to do so, and that- it would not look good; however, he stated to do this the plates could not be removed when the gutters needed to be cleaned; that, as they are now fixed, they are removable, which is necessary in cleaning the gutters. On cross-examination he stated that the plate in question was replaced and reset on Monday following the accident because it had been knocked out so frequently. He further stated that when he took out the plate in question he built the shoulder up more, adding more cement to it ; that after this was done he had no further trouble with the plate at this point, or at least none had been reported. He was recalled for cross-examination in rebuttal, and gave the following testimony:

“Q. Why was the cement put there? A. It was put there to keep the automobiles from knocking those plates loose.
“Q. And you have had no further trouble since then? A. Not that I know of. * * *
“Q. Just where did you put concrete in repairing this? A. The new cement work, Judge, was done along this plate throughout its length, resting next to the concrete curb, the one nearest the street, and then along the edge of that place is a cement shoulder, some of which was rebuilt when this was set by the boys on Monday, some of this shoulder.
“Q. Now, then, if that shoulder is in good condition as it is at present, isn’t it more difficult for the plate to get out? A. Yes, sir, more difficult, but still very possible.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
142 So. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geismar-v-city-of-alexandria-lactapp-1932.