Reine v. Pontchartrain Railroad

2 Pelt. 535
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 1919
DocketNo. 7596
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pelt. 535 (Reine v. Pontchartrain Railroad) 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
Reine v. Pontchartrain Railroad, 2 Pelt. 535 (La. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

CHARLES P. CLAIBORHE, JUDGE.

The plaintiff wasmlking on a wharf leading to defendant's train; he stumbled, fell, and received injuries for which he sues the defendant in damages.

The plaintiff alleged that on September 12th, 1915 at about 7 or 8 O’clock P. tí. on the arrival of the Steamer Hanover at the wharf of the Pontchartrain Railroad Company at Lake Pont-cbaxtrain, he was a passenger on the boat; that while walking on the wharf' for the purpose of taking defendant?train to come to the City, he met with an unseen obstruction placed in the path of the passengers, was knocked down, and striking on a bench, had his scalp severly cut, from which he suffered great pain for nearly a month and from which he is still suffering; that said wharf was under the care and control of said Railroad Company and that .it was through its negligence that said accident happened; that the Railroad Companyusjae vided no lights to guide the passengers and that it was by reason of the darkness, which prevented petitioner from seeing the obstruction,that he was knocked down; that he was treated at the Charity Hospital from September the 12th. to the 22d; that he estimates his damages at $2500 for the suffering and pain, not including the time lost by him during his treatment; that he is a cotton weigher.

He prayed for $2500 damages.

For answer, the defendant denied any indebtedness; it admitted that the plaintiff was a passenger on the boat and that he fell over an objeot while talking on the v/harf, but denies that said objeot was unseen^ and avers on the contrary that it oould and should have been seen by any one exeroising proper oare, [537]*537it denies that said object was an obstruction in the path of passengers(and avers that on the contrary it was behind a line of benches and separated thereby from the proper and usual path of passengers which was itself free from obstructions; defendant admits that plaintiff stumbled and fell, but denies that his scalp was cut by striking a bench; and avers that he struck his forehead on the wharf causirg only a slight wound; it denied that it had been guilty of ary negligence or that the accident happened through its negligence; it denied that it had provided no.lights to guide the passengers, but avers that on the contrary they were amply guided by three arc lights which were then burning along the path from the boat to the train, the nearest light being a few feet from the place where the accident occurred; it denied that it was by reason of any darkness due to failure to light the path of passengers that caused the plaintiff to fall; it averred on the contrary that such route was lighted sufficiently well to have enable the plaintiff .to avoid the aoddent by the use of reasonable care which he failed to exercise; it further averred that plaintiff’s injury, if he suffered any, was caused by his negligence in taking a route not provided for passengers thereby exposing himself to danger, and in failing to use his eyes to see the obstruction which was easily visible and he was therefore guilty of contributory negligence.

There was judgment for plaintiff for $250 and the defendant has appealed.

The place where the accident occurred is described as follows on a sketch made by 'F. A. Vienne, master of trains of defendant. The defendant runs a steam railroad from the head of Elysian Fields near the River to Kilwoburg on the shore of Lake Pnntchartrain; this road is a connecting link to a line of stBa» - boats running upon Lake Pontchartrain from Milneburg to Mande-vil le and other points. At the end of the railroad tracks at Milneburg and to reach the boats the Railroad controls a wharf for the use of its passengers; the wharf extends 300 feet over the waters of the Lake and is 22 feet wide; and is covered with a roof along its whole length and breath; along this wharf are [538]*538three electric lights, one at the beginning of the wharf near the shore line, another in the centre, and a third at about 25 feet from the extremity of the wharf; along the left hand side going out or West side of the wharf and ten feet from the western edge runs a continuous bench up to about 40 feet of the end of the wharf; the distance between the bench and the western or left edge of the wharf is about ten feet, and the distance between the bench and the right or East side of edge of the wharf is about eleven feet; on the left or Western side of the wharf are two slips used as landings for steamboats; the slip used by the Hanover on the night of this accident is No. 1 and is about 25 feet from the end of the wharf, the other is about 125 feet apart; one of the three lights stands immediately m front of this slip; and the second 62 feet away; the bench stops at a distance of about ten feet from this slip; the passengers land ■wt-from the boat over this slip No. 1 and walk eat upon the wharf to meet the PontOhartrain railroad cars in waiting on shore for the arrival of the boats to take the passengers to the city,’ as the passengers leave the boat they can walk along one of two routes to reach the train; one on the Eastern side of the benches which we may call the ^ast route, and the other on the West side of the benches which we may call the West route; it is usual and customary for the passengers to walk upon the East route, though there is no direction as to where they shall walk nor any impediment to prevent their walking upon thes Western route; nor is there any employee of the railroad to indicate to passengers the route upon the wharf from the boat to the train. Upon the evening of the accident^ and for may years prior/there was lying upon the wharf a little to the left or west side of the bench and near the end thereof and about 25 feet from the slip ko. 1 an obstruction in the shape of a cattle nm about ten feet long and between 3 and 4 feet high, used by the Hanover in unloading stock to the cars over the slip.

The plaintiff testifies that on the night of September 12th, 1915, after seven o'clock, he was coming from Kandevilie cn the boat ¡-anover; in walking from the Hanover to the train, the lights on the wharf were not all lit, and he struck himself agaiast [539]*539an obstruction and fell and hurt his forehead; Mr. Shiell held him by the arm and helped him to the car; when he got off the train be went to the Drug Store,; he then want with his son to the hospital to have his wound dressed; it took about one hour; he afterwards went to the hospital for ten days every two days; the wound in his forehead has left a scar; it took about a month to heal; he was among the first passengers to get off of the boat; it was so dark he could not see; there was a light burning where the boat landed and another at the end of the wharf; his accident occurred about 150 feet from the boat; there was no light there; the line of benches was to his right and upon his left was the edge of the wharf; thinks he fell over a stage plank, that was what he saw the day after he went out to look at it,‘ they had pulled it under the bench.

The plaintiff files two photograps of himself taken on Séptenber 20 and 29 showing the nature and extent of his injury.

’Silliam Shiell was one of the passengers on the Hanover on the night of the accident; he did not see lír. Reine fall; he was 20 or 30 feet behind him; but he saw the commotion in front; it was very dark; black dark; dark as Egyjot; he stated at the time that it was an outrage to land people at such a dark place; that anybody was liable to walk over the wharf; the plaintiff tripped over an abstraction sticking over the wharf; Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Pelt. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reine-v-pontchartrain-railroad-lactapp-1919.