Lawson v. Shreveport Waterworks Co.

35 So. 390, 111 La. 73, 1903 La. LEXIS 491
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 2, 1903
DocketNo. 14,510
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 35 So. 390 (Lawson v. Shreveport Waterworks Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawson v. Shreveport Waterworks Co., 35 So. 390, 111 La. 73, 1903 La. LEXIS 491 (La. 1903).

Opinions

BLANCHARD, J.

This is an'action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff, occasioned by the collapse of a small bridge erected by the defendant company over a canal or ditch it had excavated across a country road near the City of Shreveport.

Plaintiff was at the time riding a mule along the road aforesaid and his contention is that in crossing the bridge it gave way beneath him, throwing the mule and himself off the bridge into the ditch, so severely injuring the mule that it, shortly afterwards, died, and injuring himself to that extent that one of his hands is permanently disabled.

Defendant company denies liability both on the facts and law of the case.

Its contention is that the road in question was not a public road and that plaintiff, in traveling it, was a trespasser; that it owed him no duty in respect to the bridge, in crossing which he claims to have been injured; and that if it did owe him any such duty, and there was negligence on its part in [75]*75discharging same (which is denied), and injury resulted to plaintiff, he still cannot recover because of his own contributory fault and negligence.

The case was tried by jury who found for plaintiff, awarding him a judgment for $600.-00. He had sued for $2,600.00.

From a judgment based on this verdict defendant appeals, and in this Court, by answer filed to the appeal, plaintiff asks that the judgment be increased to $2,600.00.

Billing—Plaintiff, a colored man, lives six and a half miles north of Shreveport and is a farmer by occupation.

The road he traveled to town was generally looked upon and used as a public road. This road crossed a stream known as Cross Bayou, just at the north boundary line of the City of Shreveport.

Over this stream the Police Jury had established a public ferry. This ferry had been established some six or seven years prior to the time of the occurrence which gave rise to this litigation. It was known as Dock’s Ferry.

From the time the ferry was established the Police Jury recognized, and the public used, the road leading across the ferry and northward of it as a public road, and it was one of the minor highways leading into and out of the town. It was much traveled.

The owners of the" soil over which the road ran never objected to its use as a public highway; never objected to the Police Jury treating it as one of the public roads of the Parish and making provision for it as such.

This was the situation when the defendant company, which owns and conducts a waterworks system in Shreveport, desiring to enlarge its supply of water, conceived the idea of connecting a stream called Twelve Mile Bayou, shown on the maps of that country to be the connecting link between Soda Lake and the Red River, with Cross Bayou, which is the outlet of Cross Lake, and which flows into Red River at the upper corporate line of Shreveport.

The company’s supply of water is obtained from the lower reach of Cfoss Bayou.

The distance between Twelve Mile Bayou and Cross Bayou at the point, a short distance north of Shreveport, where it was proposed to connect the two streams, is about a mile.

Across this intervening space was a small bayou called Blind Bayou, which originally ran from Cross Bayou towards and into Twelve Mile Bayou. Blind Bayou had filled considerably and in its upper reach had become more or less a depression in • the soil of cultivated fields.

The idea of the Waterworks Company was to dig a canal in and through Blind Bayou, so as to drain the water from Twelve Mile Bayou into Cross Bayou, and to facilitate this purpose a dam was to be constructed in and across Twelve Mile Bayou just below where Blind Bayou had its connection with Twelve Mile Bayou.

In order to execute the plans it had formed, the company purchased strips of land from various owners whose holdings bordered upon Blind Bayou. In this way it acquired the soil through which ran Blind Bayou. It then proceeded with the work of excavating the canal through the bayou.

At the time the company purchased the strips of land aforesaid, the dirt road heretofore referred to, coming southward to Shreveport, crossed Blind Bayou twice.

The second crossing was a few hundred feet from where Dock’s Ferry is established over Cross Bayou.

Here the company, having a good deal of hauling of its own to do in connection with its work of excavating the canal and erecting the dam in Twelve Mile Bayou, constructed a bridge.

This bridge was put where the road leading to the ferry crossed Blind Bayou.

It seems that before the company put the bridge there the road crossed Blind Bayou, or the depression known as such at that point, without the use of a bridge. The bayou could be crossed there without a bridge, and people traveling the road managed to get over though no bridge was there.

The company, it would seem, in compliance with the obligation it assumed in the deed executed to it by John Dixon for the strip of land at that point, and to facilitate its own hauling, did away with the old crossing and substituted the bridge.

It ditched the bayou at that point, put in a culvert to act as a drain, and constructed the bridge over the culvert.

Dixon, who owned the land there, in sell[77]*77ing a strip to the company, put in the act of sale this stipulation, to-wit:

“The Shreveport Water Works Company further agree to construct and maintain across Blind Bayou, or any canal to be hereafter built by them, a bridge and approaches at a point not to exceed 300 feet from where Blind Bayou now intersects Cross Bayou-said bridge to be strong enough and sufficient to meet the demands of ordinary wagon traffic. And to grant a right of way to and from said bridge across any property that the Shreveport Water Works Company may own, to their boundary line, or public thoroughfare.”

This is to be viewed as a recognition by the owner of the land of the then existing public character of the road passing along there and leading to Dock’s Perry, and as making provision to secure the maintenance of that status.

It was a clause embodying a reservation in favor of the general public. This is apparent from the general terms used. The building and maintenance of a bridge and a roadway at that point was not merely stipulated for on behalf of the owner of the adjacent soil.

It was a stipulation pour autrui—for the general public. Up to that time the road, for years, had been used by the traveling public. When, therefore, the owner of the soil over which it passed, in selling the soil, stipulated for the road to be kept open and a bridge constructed and maintained for its use over Blind Bayou, he could have meant nothing less than that the then existing status should, continue.

And the public’s assent to this stipulation in its favor was continuously signified by its use of the road and of the bridge constructed over the bayou, which use was to the knowledge of, and without objection from, the Waterworks Company, the vendee of Dixon.

It seems that just before the suit was tried in the court a qua the company asked and obtained from Dixon his signature to a paper which set forth that the stipulation in the deed from him to the company, under discussion, was not intended for the benefit of the public, but for his own benefit.

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 390, 111 La. 73, 1903 La. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-shreveport-waterworks-co-la-1903.