Gosselin v. Stilwell

78 So. 2d 235, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 659
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1955
DocketNo. 20354
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 78 So. 2d 235 (Gosselin v. Stilwell) 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
Gosselin v. Stilwell, 78 So. 2d 235, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 659 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Mrs. Albert R. Gosselin, one of the plaintiffs, sustained physical injuries when she fell down the lower portion of a stairway [236]*236in the establishment in which she was employed in nonhazardous work by a partnership known as Gulf Welding Equipment Company of which Charles O. Stil-well and Donald M. Sarrat were the partners. She and her husband brought this suit for damages against the said partnership and the individual members thereof and, alleging that Stilwell is the owner of the building and, as such, is individually liable, also made him defendant in his individual capacity as owner of the building. Plaintiffs also alleged that Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Company had issued a policy of liability insurance to the said partnership, and they also made the said insurance company a party defendant.

Plaintiffs alleged that the fall of Mrs. Gosselin was caused by the dangerously defective design of the stairway and by improper lighting, and they prayed for judgment against all the defendants solidarily. Mrs. Gosselin, for her injuries and suffering prayed for judgment for $25,000. Mr. Gosselin, as head and master of the community existing between himself and his wife, prayed for judgment for amounts totaling about $25,000, made up of items for medical and hospital expenses incurred and to be incurred, and for the loss of future earnings of Mrs. Gosselin.

The defendants admitted the issuance by Houston Fire & Casualty Insurance Company of a policy of liability insurance to the defendant partnership, but averred that the face amount of the policy was limited to $25,000 “for each person,” and they further averred that, by the terms of the policy, there were excluded from coverage claims by employees of the said partnership.

The defendants also admitted the occurrence of the accident, but denied that it was caused by improper or dangerous design of the stairway or by defective lighting and they also denied that there was any fault or negligence on the part of the partnership or the individual members, or on the part of the owner of the building, and they especially averred that Mrs. Gosselin was not seriously injured in the accident.

In the alternative that it appear that there was anything dangerous in the design of the stairway or with the lighting, they averred that the proximate cause of the fall of Mrs. Gosselin was her own “negligence in not keeping the proper lookout for what she was doing,” and “in not exercising the care which she should have exercised while descending the stairway in view of all existing conditions.” They also made the following averments:

“(a) That plaintiff was familiar with the stairway and used same daily, during the three months she was in the employ of the defendant; that she was aware of its construction and of the lighting facilities; that she knew that there was a handrail along the stairway; that she suffered dizzy spells on occasions and particularly when looking down from any height such as a stairway; that for a long number of years, she had had trouble with her right knee; that her knee was weak and not always able to bear her weight, frequently giving way on her; that she wore high heels not suited for work in an office and dangerous because of her injured right knee;
“(b) That plaintiff, in spite of the foregoing, descended the steps in such a reckless and careless manner as to cause her to fall thereon; that she was not holding on to the handrail of the stairway which would have kept her from falling; that her knee gave way under her; that she caught her heel on the stair because of the. manner in which she was descending the stairway and not because of any defect therein; that she was not keeping a proper lookout for what she was doing and not exercising the care which she should have exercised while descending the stairway, in view of all the existing conditions.
“(c) That her independent and contributory negligence is a complete bar to a recovery herein, by plaintiffs.”

After a very lengthy trial in which there was made up one of the most voluminous records ever lodged in this Court, there was judgment in. favor of Mrs.. Gosselin solidarily against all defendants in the [237]*237sum of $3,750, and there was further-judgment in favor of Mr. Gosselin solidarity against all defendants in the sum of $1,250.

All defendants appealed devolutively and suspensively, and both plaintiffs also appealed seeking increases in the amounts awarded.

At the outset two things must be noted: First, the evidence is overwhelming that the lighting was adequate and this charge is, in effect, abandoned, and second, the claim is not based on any decay, or rotten or defective condition of the stairway, the entire charge being that it was improperly and dangerously designed, the allegation on this point reading as follows:

“That the condition of said stairs was in no wise the result of the deterioration or wear and tear, but is attributable to the faulty construction and had architecture used in the construction of said stairs.”

*It thus appears that there are presented for our consideration, so far as the question of liability is concerned, only two questions : Was the design of the stairway such that its use was dangerous to a reasonably prudent person, and, if it was dangerous, was Mrs. Gosselin herself negligent in the manner in which she was attempting to use the stairway?

It is well to note, at the very beginning of this opinion, that only a few days after the fall of Mrs. Gosselin, the stairway was reconstructed by the defendant partnership, or the owners of the building, and characteristics which formerly existed and which are pointed to by plaintiffs as having been dangerous were, to a large extent, eliminated. The fact that this change in design was made is relied upon by counsel for plaintiffs with considerable vehemence and plausibility as indicating, on the part of the defendant partnership, a realization of the dangerous prior design of the stairway and as evidencing possibly an intention to make it difficult to show just what was the prior condition.

The defendants, as we find from the record, were aware of the fact that, on certain prior occasions within the many years during which the stairway had existed, there had been a few other falls. Certainly there was one and possibly two or three others, though the evidence does not make the exact number nor the cause of any of them certain. It is argued from these falls that the steps, as they existed before this alteration, -constituted a threat even to the reasonably careful user.

It is explained by the defendants that it was realized that the stairway was somewhat more steep than was necessary and that it would be easily possible to slightly change the design and thus reduce the quite steep “gradient” which formerly existed and that since there was present at the time a carpenter who was doing other work, he was engaged to reconstruct the stairway and to make it a little less steep and to eliminate certain lack of uniformity which had existed in the widths of the steps and in the heights of the risers.

We are convinced that these changes were not made in any effort to hide anything from the plaintiffs nor from the courts which might later be called upon to consider the matter.

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Bluebook (online)
78 So. 2d 235, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gosselin-v-stilwell-lactapp-1955.