Lognion v. Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc.

172 So. 439
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 12, 1937
DocketNo. 1676.
StatusPublished

This text of 172 So. 439 (Lognion v. Lake Charles Stevedores, 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
Lognion v. Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., 172 So. 439 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

* Rehearing denied March 5, 1937. Writ of error refused March 29, 1937. This is a suit brought under the workmen's compensation statute (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended), in which the plaintiff, George Lognion, who was accidently shot by the discharge of a rifle which he held in his hands, lost the use of his right eye, and seeks to recover compensation from his alleged employer, Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., and its insurance carrier, United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, in the sum of $2,000 payable weekly in installments of $20, beginning November 12, 1935, and the further sum of $250 for medical and other expenses incidental to the treatment of his injury.

Plaintiff alleges in his petition, that the defendant Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., his employer at the time of the accident, was engaged in the business of loading and unloading cargoes of vessels at the docks in the city of Lake Charles, in the parish of Calcasieu, which business is of a hazardous nature and one contemplated under the employer's liability law of this state. He alleges further that on November 12, 1935 (the day on which he sustained the injury on which his claim is based) and for some time prior thereto, he was employed as a laborer to carry on his employer's business, as aforesaid, and was paid for his work at a certain stipulated rate per day. The petition then goes on to recite that on November 12, 1935, he reported for work at the office of his employer, at its request, and that of its subcontractor and agent, at approximately 8 o'clock in the morning, and, while awaiting the arrival of a ship to be unloaded, he was instructed to procure guns and ammunition, to prepare the same for use and store them in defendant's office on the *Page 440 premises occupied by it on the docks. The purpose of having these guns, it appears from the petition, was because there were labor troubles going on at the docks due to a strike, all of which had brought on several gun battles, and that because of those conditions, the work was being carried on under constant fear of further hostilities.

Plaintiff alleges further that after having carried out the instructions given him to procure the guns and store them, and while attempting to load them, a cartridge in one of the rifles accidentally exploded while he was trying to remove it and a portion of the metal struck his right eye and completely and permanently destroyed his sight through it.

The defense, as appears from the joint answer filed in behalf of both defendants, is a denial that the plaintiff was employed by the Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., on November 12, 1935, the day on which he was injured, and whilst it is admitted that he suffered an accident on that day, it is denied that at the time, he was under the employ of the defendant Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., or was engaged under its instructions in handling firearms or that he was doing so with its knowledge or approval. As a consequence, it is denied, of course, that he was injured while in the scope or during the course of any employment by that defendant.

From a judgment below rejecting the demands of the plaintiff, this appeal was taken by him.

Briefly outlined, the manner in which a stevedore obtains his labor for the purpose of carrying on his work is as follows: After securing his contract to load or unload a ship, he ascertains as near as possible, the date and hour of its arrival. As he has to depend on longshoremen for his labor, and this labor is all organized, he contacts the business agent of the particular association he deals with, and gives him notice that he will require so many crews. The business agent then gets in touch with the gang foreman, and these in turn order the men to report at the docks at a given hour, prepared to go to work.

The plaintiff in this case belonged to the local unit of the Louisiana Longshoremen's Association in Lake Charles. There was another association operating in that city, known as the International Longshoreman's Association. For the sake of brevity, in this opinion, the latter will be referred to as the I. L. A. and the former as the L. L. A.

As appears from the pleadings and facts adduced in this case, there had been serious labor troubles at the docks, brought on by the rivalry between the two associations, the same culminating in riots which resulted in the killing and wounding of several persons.

Because of the existing conditions, work was practically tied up, and from the latter part of October, 1935, to the middle of November, there had been no work done at all. In November, the defendant herein Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., had petitioned the federal District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, for an injunction against the I. L. A., asking that court for an order restraining that organization from interfering with its operations "in loading and unloading vessels at the docks." The court issued a rule nisi, against the I. L. A., ordering it to show cause why the injunction should not issue, and made the same returnable on November 12, 1935, which is the day plaintiff was injured.

Under the plan of work outlined, it should be stated further, that under the rules governing the association, the men called to work are entitled to be paid for a two hours' stand-by. That is, if they report for work and are required to stand by two hours before actually beginning work, the stevedore has to pay them at the agreed wages for that time.

Plaintiff claims that he received a call to go to work on the morning of November 12, 1935, and reported at the docks, at the building where the Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., maintained its offices. His testimony as to who particularly gave the order is rather confusing, this being due, no doubt, to his desire to implicate some one connected with the Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., in the call for work. He starts out by stating that the order was given by Harry Harrison, who is shown to have been the president and business agent of the L. L. A., and yet, in another part of his testimony appears the statement that "on this particular thing I was going to work on, it was on Mr. Austin's call." There are three Austins who appear to be the principal officers and who manage the affairs of the Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc. They are C.H. Austin, Sr., C.H. Austin, Jr., and Horace Austin. *Page 441 We are satisfied from plaintiff's own testimony, however, as well as that of various other witnesses, that the order, if any, to report on the morning of November 12, 1935, was given by Henry Harrison and not by any of the Austins.

Granting that the order was issued by Harrison, however, the next important question which presents itself is whether Harrison had been given notice himself by any of the Austins on behalf of the Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., and had thus become their agent. Besides the statement quoted from plaintiff's own testimony and the surmises on the part of other witnesses that the call had come in the customary manner, from which plaintiff would want it to be inferred that Harrison had received his notice from one of the Austins, there is nothing in the record to show that he did. He says that he did not, and the three Austins testify positively that they gave no orders for a call to work. Without a notice from some one connected with the Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., Harrison had no authority to bind that defendant by simply issuing the order himself. His sole connection, as far as the record shows, was with the L. L. A., and he is in no way shown to have peen the representative of the Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc.

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172 So. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lognion-v-lake-charles-stevedores-inc-lactapp-1937.