Hornsby v. Richard

460 So. 2d 735, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 10170
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1984
DocketNo. 83-1142
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 460 So. 2d 735 (Hornsby v. Richard) 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
Hornsby v. Richard, 460 So. 2d 735, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 10170 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

YELYERTON, Judge.

A mobile home being moved caught fire and burned while in transit, and the mover, Aldon Richard and his son, Danny Joe, d/b/a Danny Richard Mobile Home Movers, cast in judgment for the loss in a suit brought by the owner, Wallace Hornsby, appealed. Damages were stipulated, and the only issue in the trial court was whether the mover or the owner was responsible for the loss. Because no evidence was presented by either side to fix the cause of the fire, the trial judge determined liability in accordance with the rules of burden of proof. Finding that our Civil Code articles dealing with the obligations and liability of carriers govern the burden of proof in the case, and, finding, further, that the trial court was not clearly wrong in his assessment of what was proved and what was not proved, we affirm the judgment.

Some of the facts are undisputed. Hornsby hired the Richards to move his mobile home from Buras on the Gulf of Mexico to Washington, Louisiana, in the central part of the state. The move occurred on November 25, 1980, with Danny Joe Richard driving the moving truck, assisted by Randy Stelly, an employee of the movers. Plaintiff himself was a passenger in the towing vehicle. All parties knew the home had a bent frame toward the rear but the trip was nevertheless undertaken. At a weigh station enroute it was discovered that the frame was bent more, but the trip continued. Some four hours into the move, smoke was seen coming from the rear of the mobile unit. They stopped and used fire extinguishers, unsuccessfully. The home burned up.

Other facts are disputed. The plaintiff, Hornsby, testified that Danny Joe Richard told him it would not harm the mobile home to move it with a bent frame. Hornsby said Richard never told him that he would have to assume the risks of moving the home or that he would have to hold the defendants harmless from liability. He said no one warned him that they should stop the moving of the home. The movers only stopped once, at a weigh station, to check the trailer. At the weigh station the frame was bent a little more, but Danny Joe Richard told him it would not hurt it to keep moving it. No one checked the inside of the trailer at the weigh station. The only reason plaintiff came on the trip was to show the defendants where to move the trailer. After the fire occurred the defendants informed him he could have obtained insurance from them for an extra charge. This was the testimony of the plaintiff.

According to the testimony of Danny Joe Richard, the mobile home was still on blocks when he and Randy Stelly arrived in the towing vehicle at Buras. The plaintiff had disconnected the electricity. They unblocked the trailer and checked the inside, finding nothing wrong internally. On the outside they discovered that the frame was [737]*737damaged. The supporting structure on the back left of the trailer was bent down and not supporting the back end of the home correctly. He told the plaintiff that this might cause moving problems, and that if he wanted them to move it plaintiff would have to assume full responsibility. During the trip they checked the trailer several times including the inside of the trailer. During the trip the back end was hanging down more and getting considerably worse. At the weigh station he carefully checked the trailer and the frame was not rubbing on the tires. At the weigh station the plaintiff inspected the inside. This was the substance of the testimony of Danny Joe.

Aldon Richard, the owner, was not present at any time during the move. He testified that his son was in charge of the operation and that he had sent his son and Stelly to do the job.

Stelly did not help in resolving the conflicts in the testimony between plaintiff and Danny Joe Richard. He said that when they unblocked the trailer before starting the move, he thought that plaintiff had already disconnected the gas and electricity. He did not check the inside of the trailer but noticed that the frame was bent. He heard Danny Joe ask the plaintiff if he wanted the trailer pulled but he did not hear anything else. The only place they stopped was at the weigh station. The frame was bent worse and the plaintiff told them to continue to pull it. They did not check the inside, only the outside. They never told the plaintiff it was too dangerous to move but merely asked him if he wished them to keep pulling it. The witness, Stelly, perceived no trouble as a result of the bent frame since it was still above the wheel and the ground. He stated that plaintiff had nothing to do with the moving of the trailer.

There was nothing in writing. Before they arrived on the scene the morning of the move, the entire contract between plaintiff and the movers was an oral agreement to move the mobile home from Buras to Washington for $418. The trial judge made a credibility and fact determination that it was not proved that a new and supplementary contract was made after the discovery of the bent frame. Contrary to the contention of the appellant that the plaintiff agreed to hold appellant harmless for any damage that happened, and that plaintiff assumed the risk of the accident, the trial judge made the finding that there was no such agreement, saying that “[a]t the best for defendant, there is a standoff on whether plaintiff assumed responsibility for moving with the bent or damaged frame.”

There was no evidence presented in the case as to what caused the fire. While the bent frame was suspected as having had something to do with the loss (if we properly interpret the reason why it was the subject of so much discussion in the case) there was no evidence at all that it caused, or did not cause, the fire.

Since nothing was really proved, the issue comes down to which party failed to carry his burden of proof.

Because the defendants were in the business of moving mobile homes, by pulling them behind a truck from one location to another, we regard this type of business as included within the definition of a “common carrier by motor vehicles” as that term is defined by LSA-R.S. 45:162(5), which reads:

(5) “Common carrier by motor vehicle” means any person, the essential nature of whose business comprises engaging in, soliciting or accepting persons or property for transportation for hire, charge, or compensation as an employment or holding himself out as so available to the public generally and indiscriminately for such business, whether or not the business is conducted over a regular route, between fixed termini, within a defined area, or upon a regular or irregular schedule. There shall be two main classes of common carriers, “common carriers of commodities over regular routes”, and “common carriers of special commodities over irregular routes”. “Common carriers of special commodities over irregular routes” means any person, [738]*738as a common carrier, transporting commodities which require special equipment, service or handling over irregular routes and not between fixed termini. All certificates of public convenience and necessary now issued and validly outstanding shall continue in full force and effect until the further orders of the Commission. Any person who, with or without specific contracts, furnishes such transportation to more than five separate shippers of property or more than five passengers shall be, prima facie, held to be a common carrier and the burden shall rest upon him to show by a clear preponderance and to the satisfaction of the Commission that the character of his operations is not that of a common carrier.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
460 So. 2d 735, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 10170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornsby-v-richard-lactapp-1984.