Mosher v. Burglass

170 So. 416
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 4, 1936
DocketNo. 16400.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 170 So. 416 (Mosher v. Burglass) 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
Mosher v. Burglass, 170 So. 416 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Defendant, Abraham Burglass, is the owner of a tenement building at 1129 N. Rampart street, New Orleans. Plaintiff, Mrs. Frank Mosher, avers that she and her husband, as tenants, occupied an apartment in the said building and she charges that on October 5, 1935, because of the defective condition of the rail of a gallery used by the various occupants of the building, she fell to the ground below when the rail broke from its supports as she was leaning against it. She alleges that she did not know, or have reason to believe, that the rail was defective, and that the accident resulted solely from the vice which existed in the leased premises, for which vice, she maintains, defendant, as owner and lessor, is liable. She enumerates various serious injuries, which she alleges she sustained, the said injuries consisting principally of shortening of her right leg as the result of three fractures, internal injuries in the pelvic region and abdomen, injury to the head and loss of certain teeth and pain and suffering. In her original petition she prays for judgment in the sum of $22,000.

Defendant answered denying that the said rail was in any way defective and alleging that the fall had resulted from the fact “that petitioner carelessly and violently endeavored” to pull a certain squirrel cage “loose from its fastenings” and that, in doing so, she “put her whole weight and strength in the pull and when it came suddenly loose” she “fell very violently and threw her entire weight against said railing, which was not designed to receive said *417 ■shock” and that, as a result, the “said railing came loose and precipitated petitioner to the ground” and that “had said plaintiff acted in the usual manner, said accident would not have occurred, and that same was due entirely to the plaintiff’s violence and lacle of care.”

In a supplemental petition Mrs. Mosher and Frank Mosher set forth that they had become obligated to various doctors for medical and hospital attention in the sum of $1,093.50 and they prayed for this amount in addition to the amount at which Mrs. Mosher had estimated her damage in the original petition. In this supplemental petition Mrs. Mosher alleged that, in addition to the obligation to pay said doctors’ bills, medical expenses, et cetera, placed upon her husband as head and master of the com-ununity, she had personally contracted and bound herself for the payment of the services of one of the doctors in the sum of $1,000.

In a second supplemental and amended petition Mrs. Mosher alleged that since the accident she has been subject to attacks of unconsciousness and spells of dizziness, which overtake her frequently and unexpectedly, and, as compensation for this dam-, age, she prays for a further award in the sum of $10,000.

The Board of Administrators of the Charity Hospital of New Orleans intervened and prayed for judgment against Abraham Burglass in the sum of $475, alleging that to be the extent to which, by reason of the provisions of Act No. 230 of 1932, as’amended (Act No. 128 of 1934), he had become indebted to the hospital for services and attention rendered Mrs. Mosh-er.

The matter was tried by jury and a verdict for $8,000 was rendered in favor of Mrs. Mosher, but the suit, so far as Mr. Mosher was concerned, was dismissed. No action was taken on the intervention of the Charity Hospital and neither that institution nor Mr. Mosher has appealed. Defendant, however, has appealed and now maintains that there is no liability whatever 'in him for the reasons set forth in his answer, and he also contends that the amount awarded Mrs. Mosher, $8,000, is much in excess of the amount which should represent fair compensation for the injuries sustained.

It is conceded that the gallery rail in question broke away at one end and that Mrs. Mosher fell to the ground from a height of about 16 feet and that the injuries she sustained were serious. But it is contended that the breaking away of the rail was not due to inherent weakness nor to erosion, nor rusting of the nails holding it to the building, defendant relying, as substantiating this defense, upon certain evidence which tends to show that Mrs. Mosh-er was the owner of a squirrel which she kept in a cage,, which, at the time, had been hooked over the faucet above a slop sink located on the side of the building, and that, as Mrs. Mosher attempted to remove the said cage from its position, hanging upon the said faucet, it caught on the said faucet, and that, -as she pulled it away, she did so with such violence that, when it became unhooked, she fell upon, the adjacent rail with such force that the said rail gave way, it not being designed to withstand so unusual a force.

It is not necessary that we cite any of the numerous authorities which hold that, in this state, there is written by law into every contract of lease a warranty that the leased property contains no defects and that the lessee and all other persons lawfully upon the premises may subject any part thereof to any of the uses for which the property is intended. Therefore, as we said in Brown v. Pons, 147 So. 560, 561: “It follows that, if the rail gave way while it was being used for a purpose for which such rails are customarily used and plaintiff himself was not contributorily negligent in relying upon a manifestly defective rail, then the owner of the premises is liable, because ‘the lessor warranted' the solidity of the balustrade for all legitimate purposes.’ Evans v. Hollander, 2 La.App. 409.”

Thus, the primary question of liability, vel non, depends solely upon a question of fact, to wit: Was the rail being used in a normal manner, or was it subj ect-ed to a strain substantially greater than should have been placed upon it, because there is no liability resulting from the breaking of such a rail if the injured person was negligent in subjecting it to pressure or strain obviously greater than it was designed . to withstand. In that case we also said: “But the warranty which is by law written into every contract of lease does not go so far as to render the lessor liable for all injuries sustained, and his responsibility cannot be extended so as to include damages which result from abnormal and unexpected use of such portions of his building as rails, stairways, galleries, et *418 cetera, which, although they may be entirely safe if used in the manner in which the lessor is justified in assuming that they will be used, are entirely unsafe if.subjected to unreasonable and extraordinary stress or strain.”

To the same effect, the Supreme Court, in Glain v. Sparandeo, 119 La. 339, 44 So. 120, 121, said: “The use to which the railing of the gallery was subjected was not the ordinary use for which the lessor is presumed to have warranted it, and, whilst persons, in moving heavy articles, may choose to rely on such supports, they do so at their own risk when the customary and safer way is open to them.”

There is a mass of evidence concerning the condition of the rail which gave way, and from it, in spite of the conflicting opinions of various building experts and architects, we have no hesitation in reaching the conclusion that the rail was not in good condition and that, at the time, it was not susceptible of withstanding such reasonable strain as might have been placed upon it and that, although Mrs.

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170 So. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosher-v-burglass-lactapp-1936.