Scott v. IL Lyons & Co., Ltd.

329 So. 2d 795
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 1976
Docket6881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 329 So. 2d 795 (Scott v. IL Lyons & Co., Ltd.) 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
Scott v. IL Lyons & Co., Ltd., 329 So. 2d 795 (La. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

329 So.2d 795 (1976)

O'Neal Walter SCOTT
v.
I. L. LYONS & COMPANY, LTD., et al.

No. 6881.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

March 16, 1976.
Rehearings Denied April 13, 1976.
Writs Refused June 2, 1976.

*796 Meyer Sabludowsky, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Drury, Lozes & Curry, James H. Drury and Madison C. Moseley, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.

Christovich & Kearney, C. Edgar Cloutier, New Orleans, for intervenor-appellant, Ranger Ins. Co.

Before SAMUEL, REDMANN, LEMMON, SCHOTT and BEER, JJ.

LEMMON, Judge.

Plaintiff has appealed from the dismissal, after a trial on the merits, of his tort suit based on a premises defect which allegedly caused him to fall while alighting from a truck.

The accident occurred when plaintiff, a truck driver, was delivering freight to a warehouse owned and leased by the two defendants. As instructed by defendant lessee's employee, plaintiff had backed his truck into the warehouse door at an angle in order to keep the alley clear and to get as close as possible to the stationary conveyor, which was located just inside the door. After plaintiff had unloaded the freight, he began a two-step descent from the stationary apron across the rear of the truck. The height of the apron was about four feet above ground level outside the warehouse and about three feet above the level of the raised warehouse floor. In the second step he caught his left knee on a *797 hook on the inside frame of the warehouse door and was thrown onto the warehouse floor, landing on both knees.

The principal issues on appeal are whether the object which caused plaintiff's fall constituted a defect or hazard and whether plaintiff was himself negligent in failing to discover the object or in descending from the truck in the manner he did.

The following photograph, depicting plaintiff and the truck in question, illustrates the first phase of the two-step descent:

*798 In the position shown in the photograph plaintiff had already closed the curtain and, holding onto the chain with his left hand, had stepped down from the apron of the truck and placed his right foot on an iron rail or step, which was located between the apron and ground level.

After stepping down with his right foot, as shown, and completing the first phase of the two-step maneuver, plaintiff attempted to complete the second phase by moving his left leg down. This second step would normally have placed plaintiff's left foot on the ground; however, with the rear of his truck angled inside the door of defendants' warehouse, plaintiff intended by this second step to place his left foot on the warehouse floor and then to go to a desk just inside the door, where defendant lessee's employee had to sign the delivery ticket.

The following photograph shows another truck (without a projecting apron) backed into the warehouse door and further shows the hook (circled) protruding from a metal plate, which is attached to the brick that forms the side of the door opening: [1]

*799

The distance between the conveyor and the side of the door was approximately 2½ feet. The L-shaped hook, two to three inches long and three feet above the ground (two feet above the raised warehouse floor) had been in that location during the many years that defendant lessee occupied the building, but had never been used.

I

Defendants admittedly had a duty to keep the premises reasonably safe and *800 free of hazards for plaintiff and other truck drivers who delivered freight on the premises. They contend, however, that the hook was not a hazard which rendered the premises unsafe and that no duty was therefore imposed upon them to correct the known condition or to warn plaintiff of its existence.

Plaintiff would not have fallen if the hook had not been in that location. The punctate type of injury to the knee supports the factual finding that he hit the hook and not the wall. Therefore, there is no real dispute as to whether the hook was a cause-in-fact of the fall. The key inquiry is whether an ease of association exists between the injury and the duty which plaintiff asks us to apply to defendants. Hill v. Lundin & Associates, Inc., 260 La. 542, 256 So.2d 620 (1972). This inquiry involves the determination as to whether a truck driver could reasonably be anticipated to alight from the truck in close proximity to the hook so that the hook would present a risk of injury during the descending maneuver. And in argument before this court defendants pointed out that if plaintiff had followed the more reasonable procedure of descending onto the ground and then walking through the warehouse door, instead of jumping 3½ to 4 feet from the rear of the truck directly onto the warehouse floor in the proximity of the hook, the injury would not have occurred.

Plaintiff testified he did not jump, but rather stepped down, and that he did not have room to step on the ground between the truck and the warehouse floor. There is some conflict in the testimony as to the distance from the back of the truck to the warehouse floor. Defendant lessee's employee (who did not witness the incident) estimated that a truck could only get within 3½ to 4 feet of the warehouse floor. The second photograph above, however, shows the doorjamb to be two bricks wide, so that if plaintiff had backed his truck straight into the doorway, the apron of the truck would have been only the width of two bricks plus the width of the protecting post from the warehouse floor. This photograph and others appear to be more supportive of plaintiff's estimate that he was about two feet from the warehouse floor when he stepped from the iron rail in the second phase of his two-step descent, and a two-foot long step from a height of one foot above the raised floor can hardly be considered a jump. We conclude that the rear of plaintiff's truck was near enough to the raised floor for him to reach the floor with a reasonable descending maneuver.

In our opinion the hook constituted a hazard which involved an unreasonable risk of harm to plaintiff. Defendants should have reasonably anticipated that a truck driver, once the unloading of his truck was completed, might descend from the rear of the truck in close proximity to the hook, which was located near the freight-receiving desk, and might pass close enough to the hook to become entangled with it during his descent or during his entry into the warehouse.[2]

The fact that the hook protruded only three inches lessened the likelihood of an occurrence such as befell plaintiff. Nevertheless, since a descending maneuver such as that undertaken by plaintiff was reasonably to be expected when a truck driver made a delivery at this door, defendants (with actual knowledge of the hook) had a duty to remedy the hazard or to take other steps to protect plaintiff against the danger. We hold that defendants' failure to discharge this duty was a legal cause of the accident.

*801 II

Defendants also pleaded contributory negligence, alleging that the "hook was in full view . . . ."

Contributory negligence is conduct on the part of the plaintiff which falls below the standard to which he should conform for his own protection, the standard being that of a reasonable man under like circumstances. Smolinski v. Taulli, La., 276 So.2d 286 (1973). Defendant bears the burden of proving contributory negligence.

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Related

Brown v. Winn-Dixie Louisiana, Inc.
460 So. 2d 6 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1984)
Cardwell v. Jefferson Rentals Division
379 So. 2d 255 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Scott v. I. L. Lyons & Co.
333 So. 2d 239 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1976)

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329 So. 2d 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-il-lyons-co-ltd-lactapp-1976.