Guidroz v. Travelers Insurance Co.

99 So. 2d 916, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 472
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 1958
DocketNo. 20915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 99 So. 2d 916 (Guidroz v. Travelers Insurance Co.) 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
Guidroz v. Travelers Insurance Co., 99 So. 2d 916, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 472 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

McBRIDE, Judge.

This is a suit brought by Valsin A. Guidroz against The Travelers Insurance Company, the liability insurer of the Ionian Club and its Krewe of Omardz, and National Surety Corporation, the liability insurer of the Municipal Auditorium, in which he claims of said defendants, in solido, the aggregate sum of $40,469, for personal injuries which he alleges he sustained as a result of a fall while attending the carnival ball of the Krewe of Omardz on the evening of February 12, 1955, in the Municipal Auditorium in New Orleans. From a judgment dismissing his demands, plaintiff has appealed.

The lower court, in deciding the case in favor of the defendants, handed down well-prepared and comprehensive reasons for judgment in which he stated his appreciation of the facts as he saw them. Finding them fully supported by the preponderance of the evidence, we are fully in accord with the factual findings and now quote the pertinent parts of the reasons given below and adopt the same as our own, viz.:

“ * * * The Travelers Insurance Company is the insurer of the Carnival organization which ball the plaintiff was attending, and the National Surety Company is the insurer of the Auditorium. The Travelers Insurance Company has placed [917]*917in the record its policy, and there is a stipulation of counsel that the National Surety Company is the insurer of the Auditorium in an amount in excess of the amount claimed in this suit; to wit: $40,469. The plaintiff is a resident of Thibodaux, Louisiana, of age at the present time of 71, and in company with friends, he attended the ball in question at the Auditorium on February 12, 1955, arriving there previous to the time of the tableau, which began sometime between 7:00 and 7:30 in the evening, while he, in addition to being invited to the ball, was also a member of the committee of committeemen of the ball and even being invited to participate as such; which committee is not made plain by his own testimony, but a committee. He testifies that he performed no functions, and reported to no one on this particular committee.
“During the course of the evening, he was seated in a call-out section under the balcony known as Section K, or so designated as Section K. The call-out seat of the Auditorium consists of platforms with six-inch risers from the floor, going back six rows. The plaintiff, previous to the time of the accident, was seated on Row C, which by his own testimony and by the record in the case is an 18-inch elevation from the floor level of the Auditorium. He was seated there talking to the ladies of his party previous to the accident, and had been talking to a gentleman who also testified in the case who accompanied him here from Thibodaux.
“ * * * During the tableau of the ball, the plaintiff sometime later, with the intention of going into the corridor to smoke, left his seat and proceeded on Row C towards the Canal Street or stage end of the platform. This end of the platform is generally guarded by chain, which chain is strung between iron stanchions or pipes from the rear of the platform to the first step of the platform. The chain is a removable chain, the same type normally used in harnesses of horses and which has a clip which can be manually operated by anyone, and the chain can be removed or the clip can be removed from the eye to which it is attached. It is well here to say that there are eyes in the stanchion to which each end of the chain is attached. On the night in question, at the time of accident, the record convinces the Court that the chain had been removed from the first three rows; that is, it was hanging down from the stanchions just above or at the end of Row C; in other words, there was no chain for the first three rows, A, B, and C. The record shows that these call-out seats are located under the balconies and that the lighting system of the Auditorium, which is controlled during a carnival ball by an electrician who is an employee of the Auditorium, consists of under-balcony ceiling lights described by one witness as pan lights, and under-balcony bracket lights. The evidence shows that these lights contain bulbs of 150 and 100 watts respectively. In addition, at the end of the vestibule, near Row K, there is what is known as a vomitory light, or light in the vestibule, which is at the end of the runway leading out of the Auditorium. As previously stated, the plaintiff testified that he was going out into the corridor to smoke, 'that he had seen enough of the ball’; and that he was going to smoke preparatory to joining his party or having the lady guests of his party and the ball party leave the Auditorium and go home. Instead of taking the aisle provided for guests in his call-out section, he proceeded towards Canal Street in the place where the platform was unguarded by chain, which according to his testimony, he took cognizance of, and he testified that he walked to the end of the platform; that he thought that he was stepping down nine inches, and that he actually stepped down 18 inches, causing him to fall and to break his hip. He was conscious of the fact that he was at the end of the row, and he was conscious of the fact that he was stepping down to the floor; that he looked to see whether there was a step-off, which he conceived to be about nine inches, and he was mistaken, it was 18 inches.
[918]*918“He testified that at the time he was leaving- his seat to go to the corridor, that it was rather dark or dim,- and that he did not know whether - the lights under the balcony, which -have .been described, were on or off; to quote him exactly,' he said if they were, he did not notice them.
“He further testified that at the time that he left, here was a spot light on the dance floor, and it was bright, and the aisle was not ‘so bright/ and the inference from his testimony is that at the time that he was leaving the Auditorium, the tableau of the ball was not completed. This testimony is in conflict with the other testimony in the record of the plaintiff’s own witnesses because Mrs. Constant, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that at the time that the plaintiff left his seat, that the tableau was over; ‘that the people were dancing in front of us/ that there was dancing going on. She further testified that she was not brought to Section K until the tableau was over; that she was seated elsewhere, and was brought there to join a party which had come down from Thibodaux. So, the Court must believe that at the time that the plaintiff left his seat, that the tableau of the ball was over.
“The employees of the Auditorium, both superintendent and the electrician, testified that immediately upon the tableau of the ball being over, and particularly on this night, that the lights under the balcony were turned on as well as other lights on the proscenium, which are in the nature of spot lights, and orchestra lights were on; that the chandeliers in the Auditorium were on although they were set for color. The record further shows that an outside electrician, which is customary at Carnival balls, was there to operate the lighting effects for the ball itself. The record further shows that the plaintiff in this case had been to the Auditorium to attend some of the functions quite a few times, and if not two to three times in the Year of 19SS when this accident happened.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 2d 916, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guidroz-v-travelers-insurance-co-lactapp-1958.