Leithman v. Vaught

38 So. 982, 115 La. 250, 1905 La. LEXIS 652
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 19, 1905
DocketNo. 15,583
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 So. 982 (Leithman v. Vaught) 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
Leithman v. Vaught, 38 So. 982, 115 La. 250, 1905 La. LEXIS 652 (La. 1905).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Plaintiff avers personal injury suffered, and claims $10,000 of the defendants on that account. The jury and the judge below allowed damages in the sum of $1,000. Defendants appeal.

The defendants are the owners in indivisión of property on Union street, in this city, running through the block within which it is situated to Perdido street (i. e., the building and the lot run through the block from street to street). The width of the building is 72 feet. The two-story portion fronts on Union street, and the remainder back of the two-story portion runs back to Perdido street, and is a one-story building. The property faces both streets — Union and Per-dido.

The plaintiff’s employer, the Southern Express Company, was defendant’s-tenant. He [139]*139(plaintiff) avers, in 'substance, that on the 17th day of March, 1901, between 5 and 6 o’clock in the afternoon, the roof of the building on the lot just referred to fell in— also the brick wall on Perdido street — while he was employed in the building, inflicting sevei’e and painful injuries as it fell.

Plaintiff charges that the building was in a defective condition, owing to the defects of construction, and asserts that knowledge of this fact was brought home to defendants prior to the accident. Going into the details of the alleged defects, plaintiff alleges that the roof of the building was not supported by a sufficient number of joists and rafters to equally sustain the weight of the roof and the accumulation of water during rains; that it was a wide structure, and therefore required unusually strong support. The plaintiff also inveighs against the brick wall, and says that it was not thick enough to sustain the weight of the building, and particularly the inadequately supported roof; that the roof did not have a sufficient number of outlets for the water that would accumulate on the roof, especially where the roof sagged; and, generally, plaintiff sets up that the building was unsafe on a number of other grounds.

It may serve to clear a way to a decision and assist the discussion to state that there was no contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff at the time' of the accident. He was where he had the right to be. He was working for his employer, and had just driven his wagon into the rear building on Perdido street to unload the freight on his wagon. He stepped down from his wagon, and as he came to his horse’s head the roof caved in, part of the building suddenly collapsed, and he was caught in the débris and thrown out to the outside, in front of the building.

He was badly battered up, and taken to the hospital, where he remained from the 17th day of March until the 21st day of April. Erysipelas set in on the fourth day after he was there, and from its effects he lost his hair. He had a doctor while he was at the hospital. Since he left the hospital he has had no occasion to consult a physician. He was paid his salary ($50 a month) while he was at the hospital and until he returned to his work, which was some little time after he had left the hospital. His salary has since been increased by $5 a month.

On the day of the fall it rained very hard and hailed. It was an exceptionally heavy rain and hail storm.

Plaintiff’s witnesses testify that there had been a depression in the roof of the building facing Perdido street (that part which fell), and that this depression held water. “It was almost like a plate between the first of the skylights and Perdido street, and it contained water almost continually,” said one of plaintiff’s witnesses.

This witness is the proprietor of the three or four story hotel near the Denecheaud, and from one of his upper stories could see the roof of the building. He, the proprietor of this hotel, called the attention of the architect of defendants to this roof after a heavy rain, and suggested that it would perhaps cause an early decay in the roof, to which the architect readied that it was a tar roof, and that the water standing could not have the effect that the witness expressed as possible.

The testimony of this witness, Denecheaud, further, is that since the building was rebuilt, after the storm in question, there is no sag in the roof. It is level, and the water drains off.

A brother of this witness, younger in years, also testified, and substantially corroborated his brother’s testimony. He also had seen the water on the building of defendants, which covered a large space, relatively to the roof. He was standing near when the roof fell. He said that it fell from about halfway the distance between front and rear, and in the fall it bore on the front brick wall, and [140]*140caused it to fall in .the direction of the street. He also testified that there was a hailstorm just preceding and at the moment of the fall. He went to where the debris was immediately after the fall, and saw no evidence that the building had been struck by lightning.

The seventh witness on the list of plaintiff’s witnesses was a member of the fire department, and standing at the engine house, immediately in front of, and across the street from, the house that collapsed, as before mentioned.

He saw the falling building, and, in the main, corroborates the other witnesses of plaintiff regarding the fall; also the heaviness of the rain and the water that fell or was falling at the moment.

The foregoing was substantially the testimony for plaintiff on direct examination, as relates to the fall of the building, and some of the immediate incidents of the fall.

On the part of defendants it was shown that the downfall of the water was even greater than sworn to by plaintiff’s witnesses; also the downfall of the hail. The Weather Bureau record, produced at the instance of, and introduced in evidence by, defendants, shows that on the 17th day of March, 1904, from 6:05 p. m. to 6:22 p. m., the ground was covered with hail from one inch to three-quarters of an inch in depth, and that it was several inches deep in the corners. It is, we think, proper to add that the time of the beginning of the storm and its ending as laid down in the Weather Bureau record was the seventy-fifth meridianal time, which is just one hour faster' than local time. This brings the precipitation to about the time the witnesses testified that the accident happened.

The first peal of the thunderstorm heard by any Weather Bureau observer was heard about 6:05, seventy-fifth meridianal time, and the last peal long after dark. The storm came from the north.

The rainfall was 2.14 inches in 53 minutes. The hail fall shown on the Bureau’s record at this place was an average of about once a year in 13 years.

The architect and builder (Julius Koch) under whose direction the building occupied by the Southern Express was constructed was examined as a witness. He testified that the reconstruction originally was left to his judgment. No limit was placed upon his action. He was instructed to comply with the direction of the agent of the Southern Express Company, who was to be the tenant. He made the sketches according to what he understood this company wanted done. He submitted them to its agent, and they were accepted.

He swore that the beams were large and strong enough to carry what they are usually to carry. Average lumber was used, and the front on Perdido street was of pressed brick. The lumber was mostly 2x12.

His compensation was 10 i>er cent, commission on the cost of. the building.

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121 So. 2d 575 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 982, 115 La. 250, 1905 La. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leithman-v-vaught-la-1905.