Piper v. Spiro

188 So. 665, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 228
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1939
DocketNo. 17080.
StatusPublished

This text of 188 So. 665 (Piper v. Spiro) 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
Piper v. Spiro, 188 So. 665, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 228 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*666 WESTERFIELD, Judge.

The plaintiff, Henrietta Arnaud Piper, brought this suit against Louis Spiro and Mrs. Ruby Spiro Pick, alleging that the defendants were the owners of the premises, No. 2530 Jena Street, which plaintiff occupied as a tenant on May 22, 1935, when she fell through the flooring on the rear gallery, injuring her leg and back. She alleges that her fall was due to the rotten and unsound condition of the gallery flooring caused by the neglect of the owners of the property. By original and supplemental petition-the sum of $15,555.75 is claimed as damages which she itemizes as follows:—

Hospital bills. $ 25.00
11 X-ray treatments at $5.00 each (yet to be had). 55.00
Drugstore bills . 48.75
Doctor bills to date. 400.00
Doctor bills in the future, estimated . 500.00
Medicine bills in future. 75.00
For the balance of h.er life for twelve years and 3 months, at $7.00 per week, in accordance with the American Insurance Experience Table of Mortality, and inability to work . 4,452.00
Pain arid suffering, both physical and mental^ for the future 5,000.00
$15,555.75

After various preliminary defenses by way of exceptions, defendants answered, denying the existence of the defect in the gallery flooring and averred that the property was in good order and condition when the plaintiff entered into possession, and averred that if any defect developed in the leased premises during the occupancy of the plaintiff they had received no notice thereof, a consideration which relieved them of responsibility in damages because plaintiff had acquiesced in a clause contained in the rent receipt given her, reading as follows: — “Tenant rents this property with the understanding that no damages will be due by cause of fallen plaster or other-unforeseen defects in steps or railing, balcony or if any defect appear in the house it should be reported at once for repairs in writing.”

Following a trial upon the merits judgment was rendered in favor of defendants dismissing plaintiffs suit. She has appealed.

’ Henrietta Piper had been a tenant in the leased premises for four or five years. She lived there with her son, Joseph Piper, She was a washerwoman and earned about $7 per week. On the day that the accident is alleged to have occurred, according to her testimony, she had been washing clothes in her yard and, after hanging them on the line, was returning to her kitchen, with a small basin in her hand, when as she ascended the steps to the back gallery and after she had placed her foot on the flooring, two of the boards gave way- and her left knee went through the flooring.

No one saw the accident except Mattie McDemmond, a friend of plaintiff, who was in her kitchen. She came to plaintiff’s assistance, phoned Mrs. Pick and called plaintiff’s son, Joseph Piper, who was working in the neighborhood, and told him of his mother’s accident. When Mattie was asked whether plaintiff’s leg was caught in the flooring when she went to her assistance she was unable to say because “I didn’t pay that much attention”. Subsequently, however, when asked how many boards were broken and having answered “two”, she added “and her (plaintiff’s) leg bent in there”.

Plaintiff was on the witness stand a number of times and often described the manner in which the accident happened. She also demonstrated to the Judge and counsel, who went to the leased premises .for the purpose of viewing the scene and having plaintiff give a more graphic description of the manner in which she was injured. Nevertheless, after carefully reading her testimony, we are unable to say whether plaintiff claims that her entire leg went through the floor to a point above the knee, or whether her knee aloné went into the hole. In view of the statement of her friend, who was the first one to reach her after the accident, it would appear that only the knee, and not the foot and leg, went into the opening and we will, therefore, consider the case as though 'that were the contention of the plaintiff.

The first question which presents itself concerns the alleged fall of plaintiff. Was there a fall P and, if so, is plaintiff s condition due to and was it caused by the fall. The nature of plaintiff’s injuries is of importance in the consideration of this question.

The doctor who first saw the plaintiff after the accident, Dr. Thomas E. Clements, paid six or eight visits and diagnosed her *667 trouble as a sprained knee, with “good prognosis”. She was thereafter treated by Doctors Goldberg and Haydel and examined by Doctors O’Ferrall, Oakley and Rodick, and her condition diagnosed as “osteogenic sarcoma” of the left femur between . the middle and upper portion. The femur is the bone in the leg between the hip and the knee. Osteogenic sarcoma is, we understand, cancer of the bone.

Many pages in the record have been devoted to expert evidence on the subject of whether osteogenic sarcoma can be caused by traumatic injury. The net result of this testimony is confusing. It seems to preponderate a little in favor of the affirmative and to the effect that that disease may be caused by trauma, but all of the experts agree that plaintiff’s condition could be due to syphilitic infection and that is what defendants contend is the matter with her.

There is a blood test known as the “Was-serman” test in common use by the medical profession for the purpose of ascertaining whether a suspected patient is afflicted with syphilis. Dr. Martin O. Miller, who examined plaintiff on behalf of defendants, testified that he had found she had a diseased heart with a murmur at the apex, which he diagnosed as an aneurism. An X-ray was recommended and performed by Dr. Ama-dee Granger and two Wassermans taken which showed a “four plus positive”. Dr. Miller was of opinion that the clinical findings, the aneurism, together with the condition revealed by the X-ray of the plaintiff’s left femur and the positive Wasser-mans, showed conclusively that plaintiff’s condition was due to syphilis and that there was no connection whatever between the syphilitic bone lesion and the alleged fall. He also testified that the modern thought in the profession was away from the idea that sarcoma could be caused by trauma, but in any event a traumatic sarcoma “must appear at the site of the trauma, which, in this instance, was plaintiff’s knee, whereas the diseased bone area was several inches above the knee”.

Dr. Aldea Maher testified that on March IS,' 1938, she took a Wasserman test of plaintiff’s blood with “strongly positive reaction”.

Dr. Carl J. Tripoli, Assistant Professor of Medicine at Louisiana State University Medical School, examined plaintiff at the request of defendants’ counsel. He testified that plaintiff’s condition was due to some blood disease, which he believed to be syphilis, and not to cancer.

Dr. Louis Fortier made X-ray pictures of plaintiff on March IS, 1938, and testified that these pictures showed a definite bone lesion in the region of the inner side of the left thigh of the upper and middle third.

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Bluebook (online)
188 So. 665, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piper-v-spiro-lactapp-1939.