Kernstock v. City of New Orleans

147 So. 371, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1614
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1933
DocketNo. 14202.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 147 So. 371 (Kernstock v. City of New Orleans) 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
Kernstock v. City of New Orleans, 147 So. 371, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1614 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiff and a young friend, Henry Richard Nuss, were injured when the bridge rail, against which they were leaning, gave way and they fell to the bottom of the drainage canal which was under the bridge.

Charging that the municipality was negli *372 gent in failing to maintain the said rail in good condition plaintiff seeks judgment- for $5,693.

Defendant municipality contends that it had no knowledge, either actual or constructive, of the condition of the rail of the bridge and that, therefore, it is not liable, and. it also asserts that if there was negligence in the failure to discover that the rail was de-. fective plaintiff, himself, was eontributorily negligent because he leaned against a manifestly defective rail and, because, -he had gone upon the bridge in spite of the fact that there was a partial barricade erected across one end of it on which barricade was a sign bearing the warning “S. & W. B. Bridge Gl-osed.”

Erom a judgment against it in the sum of §2,100, the city of New Orleans has appealed.

There is no evidence that the municipal authorities had actual knowledge that the rail was defective and, since the time during which the rail was defective is not shown, the argument is made that in the absence of evidence showing that the condition had existed for such time as would charge the municipal authorities with constructive knowledge, there can be no recovery because of the well-settled jurisprudence to the effect that municipalities are not rendered liable for accidents resulting from defects in streets, bridges, crossings, .or other structures! except where it is made to appear that there was knowledge either actual or constructive in those charged with the duty of maintaining such structures. As authority for such doctrine our attention is called to the following decisions in this state: Wiltz v. City of New Orleans, 2 La. App. 444; Minor v. City of New Orleans, 3 La. App. 448; Brown v. City of New Orleans, 7 La. App. 611; Collins v. Lyons, 9 La. App. 736, 120 So. 418.

It appears, however, that some two and one-half or three months prior to the accident, the superintendent of canal bridges in the employ of defendant went to the bridge in question to make repairs to the surface portion of it and, it also appears from his testimony that, at that time, he saw no defect in the rail in question, although he states that he made a superficial examination. It is impossible to believe, however, that the rail in the condition in which it was at the time of the accident could, some two and one-half or three months earlier, have shown no apparent defect.

We conclude that had the superintendent made an examination of the rail he could not have failed to discover its true condition. It will not suffice for-a city to set up as a defense a want of actual knowledge where it is shown that a reasonable compliance by any particular employee with the requirements of his position would have afforded such knowledge.

We do not mean to say that it is necessary that inspections be made at any particular intervals, though in some cases constructive knoVledge could easily result from failing to make inspections with reasonable frequency, but we do say that where an inspection is made the city must be charged with knowledge of such condition as any competent inspector should have discovered. It will not do for such inspector to merely say that he did not see the defect.

Defendant is thus bound by such knowledge as its superintendent should have acquired when he inspected the rail, and we think that he should have, by that inspection, received knowledge of the defect here complained of.

Even if no such inspection had been made, liability might well have resulted from failure to inspect. Where structures are made of wood or other perishable materials and as a .result of the natural decay in those materials defects manifest themselves, in order to escape liability, a municipality must show that it made reasonable inspections and at proper intervals and that in spite of such inspections the defects, nevertheless, came into existence. The doctrine contended 'for by the city to the effect that there is no liability unless the municipality has either actual or constructive knowledge may well be applied to holes in sidewalks, or in street pavement which may not appear as the result of normal and expected wear and tear, but where the city uses material which must, in the ordinary course of events, either wear away or rot, then the city must make such periodical inspections as the nature of. the material renders advisable.

In Elliott — Roads & Streets, vol. 1, page 95, we. find: “The law requires that the governmental corporation owning or controlling a bridge, under a legal duty to keep its bridges safe for travel, shall exercise a reasonable supervision over it and cause such inspections to be made as ordinary care and diligence demand and this requires that due regard be had in conducting inspections to the liability of timber to decay.”

In Corpus Juris, vol. 43, “Municipal Corporations,” page 1053, the rule is stated as follows: “Common prudence dictates that a city in the exercise of its duty to care for the safety of the streets should look after the effects of long wear upon a structure in a street, which is likely to become dangerous in the course of time, and the knowledge of the action of the elements on structures of wood, and of the liability of timber to decay under certain conditions, is to be attributed to municipalities, just as to natural persons: It necessarily follows that it is the duty of a municipality to exercise ordinary or reasonable care by sufficient inspection to anticipate and detect such natural deterioration or decay and to guard against injuries thérefrom.”

That the jurisprudence in this state coin *373 cides with the above general statement is manifest from a reading of the decision of the Supreme Court in Smith v. City of New Orleans, 135 La. 980, 66 So. 319, in the syllabus of which, written by the court, appears the following: “The law imposes upon the city of New Orleans the mandatory duty of keeping its streets, and the bridges and coverings over gutters and ditches which form parts of the streets, in such condition as not to endanger the lives and limbs of those who use them; and, as such bridges and coverings, when made of wood, are subject to rapid decay, the proper discharge of that duty requires that they should be inspected periodically, and that the ascertainment of their dangerous condition should not be left either to chance observation or to resulting accidents ; hence the failure to make such inspection is negligence, for which the city may be held liable, in damages, to one sustaining injury thereby.”

In the body of the opinion the court said: “And it is obvious that, inasmuch as the ‘bridges,’ as they are called, or crossings, of the gutters and the coverings of the ditches, which extend across many of the streets, are of wood, subject to rapid decay, the only way by which it can be known whether they are safe' or not, save through the accidents by which people are injured, is through periodical inspections.”

In Lorenz v. City of New Orleans, 114 La. 802, 38 So.

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147 So. 371, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kernstock-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1933.