Kennedy v. Columbia Casualty Co.

174 So. 2d 869, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4377
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 1965
DocketNo. 6378
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 174 So. 2d 869 (Kennedy v. Columbia Casualty 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
Kennedy v. Columbia Casualty Co., 174 So. 2d 869, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4377 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

LANDRY, Judge.

This is an action ex delicto wherein plaintiffs, Harvey E. Kennedy and his wife, Albertha Kennedy, seek damages for personal injuries sustained by Mrs. Kennedy and medical expense incurred by Mr. Kennedy in treatment thereof as the result of an accident which befell Mrs. Kennedy on the grounds of “Cottage Plantation”, West Feliciana Parish. The accident in question occurred April 22, 1961, when Mrs. Kennedy, a member of the faculty of Gonzales High School, and Mr. Melvin Bruss, an associate faculty member, were escorting a group of elementary grade students on a tour of the aforesaid plantation which is the site of an antebellum home known as “The Cottage”, a restored mansion open to visitation by the public for a stipulated fee. As Mrs. Kennedy was traversing a swinging footbridge suspended by cables over a creek or ravine, the structure collapsed precipitating her violently to the ground several feet below causing serious injuries to her person. The trial court rejected plaintiffs’ demands and plaintiffs have appealed.

Named defendants herein are J. E. Brown and his wife, Eudora, owners of Cottage Plantation, and their liability insurer, Columbia Casualty Company, from whom recovery is sought in solido.

Appellants plead the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur and alternatively allege defendant owners and their agents and employees were negligent in failing to properly construct and maintain the footbridge, neglecting to caution guests and invitees against its use, failing to post signs warning guests of the structure’s load limitation and maintaining the bridge as an attractive nuisance.

Defendants’ answer denies any negligence on the part of the aforesaid owners or their agents and employees and alleges the accident occurred solely due to the negligence of plaintiff. In the alternative, defendants plead assumption of risk and contributory negligence on the part of appellant wife. In a third party petition defendants, in the event of their being cast, pray for judgment over against Bruss (who made arrangements for the tour), and Travelers Insurance Company, liability insurer of the school busses in which the touring students were transported from Gonzales High School to defendants’ premises.

Generally the facts and circumstances giving rise to the instant litigation are not in dispute. All material differences are hereinafter expressly noted and, excepting therefor the ensuing chronology of pertinent events preceded and attended the accident in question.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Kennedy, and her associate, Melvin Bruss, each taught a section of the eighth grade of Gonzales Pligh. [871]*871School. In such capacities, each desired to arrange a field trip to nearby antebellum homes and plantations as a cultural and educational project designed to enlighten and edify their respective classes. After discussing the matter, it was decided each class would make its own arrangement for transportation and the field trips would he made on the same day. Bruss volunteered to make arrangements with the homes to be visited and for this purpose went to The Cottage approximately one week prior to the accident.

The grounds of Cottage Plantation front on Highway 61 where a rather elaborate and inviting entrance consisting of an attractive gate has been erected. The home is reached by means of a private gravel road extending from the highway to the main house over a circuitous route covering .9 of a mile. In the front and rear of the main house are situated parking areas to accommodate the automobiles of visitors, the rear parking area being larger than the front was ordinarily used for the parking of busses, trailers and other large vehicles because it afforded a greater turning space. Shortly before reaching the mansion the road crosses Alexander Creek over which passage is afforded by means of a vehicle bridge. Between the creek and the house the road forks, one prong thereof being marked with a sign indicating “To the Cottage.” At the highway entrance a large sign proclaims the premises to be the Cottage, advertises that it is open to tour during the hours 9:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and states the fees charged visitors. Excepting the two signs noted, a visitor encounters no other signs on the roadway between the entrance gate and the house saving only a sign at the front of the house reading “Blow your horn” which is intended to alert guides and attendants to the arrival of guests and tourists.

The suspension footbridge from which plaintiff fell spans Alexander Creek approximately ISO feet north of the aforementioned automobile bridge. Its eastern end (which is nearest the main house) is approximately 120 yards from The Cottage. There is some dispute whether the footbridge can be seen from the road at any point other than the automobile bridge because of intervening trees, vegetation and underbrush which allegedly blocks one’s view. There is also some dispute whether a well defined path led from the roadway to the footbridge near the point where the school busses are hereinafter shown to have parked and disembarked the children.

On the day Bruss visited The Cottage to arrange the tour, he was received by a negress guide, Estelle Munson, who conducted him on a curtailed “tour” to demonstrate what the children would be shown. Bruss was steadfast in the statement that on this occasion he made specific inquiry of Mrs. Munson whether the children would be permitted to cross the footbridge and she replied that they could. According to Bruss, Mrs. Munson not only gave permis-' sion for the children to cross the suspension' bridge but also suggested that after disembarking the children on the road the busses should then proceed to the rear of the main house and park. Mrs. Munson, however, contradicted Bruss in that she denied giving him permission to take the children across the footbridge. Her repeated testimony was that she did not tell Bruss he could cross the footbridge and neither did she inform him not to cross but that she told him in effect “we would take them across,” it being her intention, in keeping with management policy, to provide guides to supervise any use of the footbridge by visiting tourists.

On the day of the accident plaintiff and Bruss arrived with their classes in the school busses engaged for the trip, the vehicle occupied by Bruss being in the lead. Upon entering the grounds of Cottage Plantation, the driver proceeded along the gravel road toward the main house and upon Brass’s direction stopped the vehicle an undisclosed distance before reaching the-automobile bridge, the point where he stopped being near a path which lead from [872]*872the road to the footbridge. The bus occupied by plaintiff and her class stopped to the rear of the lead bus and all occupants disembarked excepting the respective drivers. Brass then led his class up the path to the western end of the footbridge and proceeded to the center of the structure at which point he stationed himself in order to supervise the crossing. In plain view near the bridge was a sign which read “Enter on bridge at own risk.” The students in Brass's class then began to cross in single and double file approximately three feet apart according to Bruss’s prior instructions. Plaintiff and her class reached the western end of the bridge after a portion of the first class had crossed or were already upon the bridge.

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 2d 869, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-columbia-casualty-co-lactapp-1965.