LeBlanc v. Continental Grain Co., Inc.

672 So. 2d 951, 1996 WL 107790
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 13, 1996
Docket95-CA-813
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 672 So. 2d 951 (LeBlanc v. Continental Grain Co., Inc.) 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
LeBlanc v. Continental Grain Co., Inc., 672 So. 2d 951, 1996 WL 107790 (La. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

672 So.2d 951 (1996)

Lee LeBLANC
v.
CONTINENTAL GRAIN COMPANY, INC. and the Port Commission of South Louisiana.

No. 95-CA-813.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

March 13, 1996.
Rehearing Denied May 17, 1996.

*953 Victor L. Marcello, Talbot, Carmouche, Marchand & Marcello, Gonzales, for Plaintiff/Appellee, Lee LeBlanc.

James H. Daigle, Kenneth M. Klemm, Lemle & Kelleher, New Orleans, for Defendant/Appellant, Continental Reserve Elevator Corporation.

Sidney W. Degan, III, Foster P. Nash, III, Patricia M. Crowley, Degan, Blanchard & Nash, New Orleans, for Defendants/Appellees, Louis Dreyfus Corporation and National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa.

Before BOWES, GRISBAUM and WICKER, JJ.

BOWES, Judge.

Defendant, Continental Reserve Elevator Corporation (originally named and sued simply as "Continental Grain Company"), appeals a judgment in favor of plaintiff, Lee LeBlanc, for injuries received in an industrial accident. For the reasons to follow hereinafter, we amend the judgment in part and, as amended, affirm.

At the outset, it is necessary to explain the relationship of the various parties to the proceedings. The South Louisiana Port Commission ("Port Commission") leased the subject grain facility to Bayside Warehouse Company a/k/a Cook Industries, Inc. ("Bayside"), a company not a party to these proceedings; in 1978, Mitsui and Company (U.S.A.) ("Mitsui") purchased the lease, and subsequently formed La Place Elevator Company ("La Place") to assume the lease from the Port Commission. La Place thereafter entered into a sublease agreement with Continental Reserve Elevator Corporation ("Continental") in 1978, which terminated in 1984, allowing the facility to revert to La Place. Mitsui formed a second subsidiary, Reserve Elevator Corporation ("Reserve") to operate and manage the facility until 1987, at which time the Louis Dreyfus Corporation ("Dreyfus") assumed the lease of the grain facility. Thus, in 1991, Dreyfus was the lessee.

On November 18, 1991, plaintiff was employed by Dreyfus at the dock on the Mississippi River where the grain facility was located, and was instructed to grease a chain on a Carter-Day Dust System while the system was operating. While plaintiff was in the process of so doing, a vessel struck the dock, shaking it and causing plaintiff to lose balance, fall forward and catch his right hand in the chain and sprocket. As a result, plaintiff's fingers were partially amputated and his hand was injured.

Plaintiff initially filed suit against Continental and the Port Commission. In the petition, LeBlanc alleged that the Port Commission was liable as the owner of the property, and that Continental, the former sublessee of La Place, was negligent because during its occupancy of the premises, it had:

1. altered the safety system on the dock at the time it had custody of the facility;

2. destroyed a guarding system;

3. failed to properly repair the guard; and

4. failed to post proper warnings after it had destroyed the guarding system.

Numerous third party complaints and cross claims were filed by each of the parties, and all such complaints and claims were subsequently dismissed by joint motion. Plaintiff amended his original petition to include Mitsui and Dreyfus as direct defendants, and to substitute Continental Reserve for Continental Grain.

*954 Dreyfus filed a petition of intervention, seeking indemnity for compensation benefits paid.

Prior to trial, plaintiff settled his claims against the Port Commission, Dreyfus, Mitsui, La Place Elevator and Reserve Elevator Corporation. The third party complaints and cross-claims were dismissed, so that by the time the jury trial commenced, the only remaining defendant was Continental Reserve Elevator Corp. with Dreyfus participating as intervenor on its worker's compensation claim. After the trial concluded, the jury rendered its verdict finding Continental liable in negligence, and apportioned fault as follows:

Lee LeBlanc-------------------------6%
Continental------------------------51%
Port Commission---------------------7%
Mitsui/Reserve/La Place-------------7%
Dreyfus----------------------------29%
                                 ______
Total-----------------------------100%

The jury awarded general damages in the amount of $183,000.00; in addition, the parties had stipulated to past wage loss of $9,810.00, as well as to medical expenses of $16,664.77. The judgment ultimately entered, therefore, totaled $209,474.77. In accordance with Gauthier v. O'Brien, 618 So.2d 825 (La.1993), infra, the trial judge apportioned liability thusly:

LeBlanc-----------------------------8.4%
Continental------------------------71.8%
Port Commission---------------------9.8%
Mitsui/Reserve/La Place-------------9.8%
Dreyfus-------------------------------0%

Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against Continental for 71.8% of the total principal judgment, or $150,402.88, with legal interest; Dreyfus and National Union recovered $62,922.70 on their intervention, plus interest. The judgment dismissed the plaintiff's claims for future lost wages or earning capacity, and the loss of consortium claims of Mrs. LeBlanc were also dismissed. It is from this judgment that Continental has appealed.

EVIDENCE AND TESTIMONY

Joseph LeBlanc (no relation to plaintiff) testified at trial that he was taught how to maintain and operate the dust systems by Mr. Gene Becnel, and was shown how to grease the chains in the systems by Henry Stein. The chains had to be kept lubricated at least once a week in order to prevent them from becoming worn out. There was a hole of about three by four (inches) cut in the chain guards, patched with another, slightly larger piece of metal creating a flap on the guard.

Stein told LeBlanc that Bernard Adams of Continental had cut the holes so that grease could be pumped in the chains. The flap would be turned up and the chain greased with a grease gun as it was running. Ordinarily, when a machine was to be worked on, he was to put a lock on the machine switch, turn the power off and pull the fuses, tagging the machine for repair. However, this lock and tag procedure was not to be carried out when the chains on the locks were greased, because the elevator would have to be shut down too long.

LeBlanc thought that the way the company wanted them to grease the chains (i.e., to stick something like a grease gun inside a piece of moving equipment) was unsafe. If there had been no hole in the guard, a finger could not have been caught in it. All the dust systems had similar holes, and, subsequent to the accident, the holes were repaired. LeBlanc helped to train plaintiff to work on and maintain the dust systems.

Henry Stein was a maintenance supervisor at the Reserve Grain Elevator. (Plaintiff is the son-in-law of his wife). Stein had been employed at the elevator during the occupancy of Continental in 1980 or 1981, so Stein knew that Bernard Adams had cut the holes in each of the chain guards (presumably in order to make it easier to grease the chains). Only twice in twenty-five years had the Port Commission inspected the facilities, and an inspector would not have noticed the holes with the flaps down unless he was looking for it.

Stein filled out the accident report, which states that plaintiff had put his hand inside the guard, and which did not mention that the barge hit the dock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
672 So. 2d 951, 1996 WL 107790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leblanc-v-continental-grain-co-inc-lactapp-1996.