Rollins v. Elks Place Professional Plaza
This text of 505 So. 2d 149 (Rollins v. Elks Place Professional Plaza) 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.
Opinion
Avia ROLLINS
v.
ELKS PLACE PROFESSIONAL PLAZA, et al
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*150 Gerald J. Leydecker, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.
Madeleine Fischer, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, C. William Bradley, Jr., Lemle, Kelleher, Kohlmeyer, Dennery, Hunley, Moss & Frilot, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants.
Before GULOTTA, BARRY and WARD, JJ.
WARD, Judge.
On the afternoon of May 20, 1980, the fire alarm sounded in the Elks Place Professional Plaza, an office building in downtown New Orleans. Avia Rollins, who was in the reception room of her doctor's office on the fifteenth floor of the building, was advised by the doctor's staff to evacuate the building by means of a fireproof stairwell adjacent to the doctor's office. By design, the elevators had become inoperable when the fire alarm was pulled, and signs directed persons not to use the elevators in such a situation. While descending the stairway along with many other persons, Ms. Rollins fell down several stairs. Although Ms. Rollins could not say why she fell and was not sure exactly where the accident happened, she believed it occurred about midway between the fifteenth floor and the ground level. Ms. Rollins was helped the rest of the way down the stairs by other persons who were evacuating the building. There was no fire, and the cause of the false alarm was never found. Ms. Rollins sustained back injury; subsequent disc fusion surgery was unsuccessful. She sued the owners of Elks Place Professional Plaza, and the jury awarded damages of $211,000. Zurich Insurance Company appeals on behalf of its insured, the owners of Elks Place Professional Plaza. Unable to find manifest error, we affirm.
The jury found in answers to interrogatories that:
1) The building was defective;
2) The owners of the building were at fault in the construction or operation of the building; and
3) The condition of the building and/or the fault of the owner was a cause of the injury and damages sustained by Avia Rollins.
*151 We believe these findings may be summarized as stating that the evidence showed the building owners were both strictly liable to Ms. Rollins and liable to her for negligence.
Although the answers to the jury interrogatories did not indicate in what way the defendants were negligent or in what way the building was defective, in its appeal Zurich contends:
1) The building owners' alleged failure to promulgate an evacuation procedure to the tenants was not a cause of the accident because Ms. Rollins was in fact following the proper evacuation procedure;
2) Sounding of the false fire alarm by an unknown third person is not negligence attributable to the building owners;
3) The fire alarm system was not defective and unreasonably dangerous;
4) The stairway was not defective and unreasonably dangerous, and even if it was, that condition was not a cause of the accident;
5) The Trial Judge should have instructed the jury and submitted interrogatories regarding Ms. Rollins' negligence; and
6) The award of $211,000.00 was excessive.
We affirm the liability of the owners of the building because the evidence supports a finding that the variations in the height of the stair risers was a defect which rendered the stairs unreasonably dangerous to a person of reasonable prudence and caused Ms. Rollins' accident. We need not, therefore, examine the alternative bases of liability which Zurich contests in its appeal. We further hold that there was no evidence that Ms. Rollins was negligent and that the amount of the damages awarded was not an abuse of discretion.
The owner of a building is liable for damages due to personal injuries caused by defects in construction which pose an unreasonable risk of harm to a person exercising reasonable prudence in the use of the premises. La.C.C. art. 2317, 2322. The building owner can escape this strict liability only if he shows the harm was caused by the fault of the victim, by the fault of a third party, or by an irresistible force. Loescher v. Parr, 324 So.2d 441, 447 (La. 1975).
At trial Ms. Rollins presented the expert testimony of two architects to prove that the building was defective. One of them testified that the Building Code for the City of New Orleans, effective in 1974-75 when Elks Place Professional Plaza was built, provides that there shall be no more than three-sixteenths of an inch variation between the heights of successive stair risers. The purpose of this code provision, according to the architect's testimony, is to prevent falls on stairways because as a person traverses a long run of stairs, his or her gait becomes accustomed to a particular riser height and someone confronted with a sudden variation is prone to lose balance and fall. The architects visually examined the stairway upon which Ms. Rollins fell and measured the height of each step on the fifteen story stairway from Dr. Pailet's office to the ground floor. One of the architects testified that as he descended the stairs he almost fell twice because of the great variation in the height of the risers. From their measurements the architects prepared a diagram of the stairway which indicates the height of each riser. The diagram was admitted into evidence and shows that nearly one-third of the steps between the fifteenth and ground floors vary more than 3/16"` in height as compared with the one immediately above. It was the opinion of the senior architect that the variable heights "make the stairway very very dangerous in descending." The two architects who testified for the plaintiff were the only experts to give evidence on the issue of a defect in the building. The defendant building owners called no expert witnesses and offered no evidence to contradict the plaintiff's experts. We cannot say that, given the uncontroverted evidence presented by Ms. Rollins, the jury was wrong in finding the building defective.
*152 It is not every defect, however, which poses an unreasonable risk of harm. In determining whether a property owner should be held strictly liable for injuries caused by a defect in his building, our Supreme Court has said that such liability should be imposed only where it is warranted by moral, social and economic considerations as they relate to individuals and to society as a whole. Entrevia v. Hood, 427 So.2d 1146 (La.1983). In the case before us, Ms. Rollins was injured in a building from which the owners derive income in the form of rentals from tenants. The stairway on which she fell is in a common area of the building, accessible to all members of the public and directly under the control of the owners rather than being rented to a particular tenant. An additional factor weighing heavily in favor of imposing liability is that Ms. Rollins was forced, by an apparent emergency situation, to use the stairwayshe had no choice but to encounter the risk of harm from the defective steps. The fire proof stairway was to be used primarily by persons evacuating the building in a life-threatening situation. We believe that under these circumstances the risk of harm created by a defective stairway could be deemed an unreasonable risk. Hence, we cannot say the jury was wrong in finding the owners of the Elks Place Professional Plaza liable for a defect which posed an unreasonable risk of harm.
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505 So. 2d 149, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 8863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollins-v-elks-place-professional-plaza-lactapp-1987.