Soldano v. New York Life Ins. Co.

196 So. 521, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 82
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 1940
DocketNo. 17417.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 So. 521 (Soldano v. New York Life Ins. Co.) 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
Soldano v. New York Life Ins. Co., 196 So. 521, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 82 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

New York Life Insurance Company is the owner of a large office building in the City of New Orleans known as the Maritime Building and located on the uptown lake corner of Carondelet and Common Streets.

Macio Jones is a porter in the employ of the said life insurance company, his duties including the cleaning and caretak-ing of the floor of an arcade on the ground floor of this building.

Anthony Soldano, who had entered the building as a customer of a watchmaker, whose place of business was located in the arcade, sustained severe injuries at about 3 :35 o’clock on the afternoon of June 22, 1939, when he fell to the floor of the basement through a trapdoor in the floor of the arcade, which door had been left open by the porter, Jones.

Soldano alleges that his injuries resulted from negligence on the, part of Jones in leaving the trapdoor open and in not placing in front of it a barrier which would have prevented anyone from falling into it, and he also charges that there was negligence in the New York Life Insurance Company in letting to the watchmaker space so close to the trapdoor, in not providing a proper barrier to guard the said trapdoor, in not providing proper lights in the basement, and in not stationing a guard at the said trapdoor to warn anyone against the danger of approaching too close to it. It is also alleged that the negligent acts of Jones — already referred to — were committed by him in connection with his duties as an employee of the defendant life insurance company and that, therefore, the said company, as well as he, is liable for the results of those negligent acts.

Both defendants deny all the charges of negligence and they particularly assert that, on the floor of the arcade and in front of the trapdoor, there was “a heavy wooden balustrade three feet high, which rests on a broad base and which is not easily moved”, and they further aver that the cause of Soldano’s fall was his own negligence in not looking where he was walking and in pushing aside the barrier which was located in front of the trapdoor, and, in the alternative, they maintain that, if there was any negligence with which they are chargeable, that negligence was not the proximate cause of plaintiff’s fall, which said proximate cause was his own contributory negligence already referred to.

There was a trial by jury, which rendered a unanimous verdict for $3,000 in favor of plaintiff and against both defendants solidarily. From the judgment based on this verdict, Jones has appealed devolu-tively and the New York Life Insurance Company suspensively, and Soldano has answered the appeals praying that the award be increased to $14,646, as originally prayed for.

Defendants contend, first, that Soldano pushed aside the barrier which had been provided and which Jones had placed in position in front of the trap door and that, therefore, regardless of whether it was negligence to maintain the said opening so close to the side of the watchmaker’s establishment and regardless of whether the said basement or pit was properly lighted, and regardless, also, of whether it was negligence on the part of Jones to leave the door open at all, Soldano’s actions in pushing aside the barrier and in stepping into the space which was back of it — and particularly his failure, under those circumstances, to notice the open trapdoor — constituted acts of contributory negligence on his part which should be considered as having been the real and proximate cause of his fall.

At this point and in connection with the plea of contributory negligence, it might be well to call attention to a contention made by plaintiff to the effect that defendants should not be heard to urge the contributory negligence of plaintiff for the reason that in their answer they allege that, when he pushed aside the wooden barrier, he did it inadvertently. Plaintiff maintains that there can be no contributory negligence where the act, which would otherwise constitute contributory negligence, is the result of inadvertence. We may as .well say here that we cannot agree with this contention. Contributory negligence often results from careless inattention and, in fact, results from such inattention more often than from deliberate acts of negligence. Gustine v. Big Chain Stores, La.App., 180 So. 852; *523 Glatstein v. City of Shreveport, La.App., 149 So. 158.

Defendants also declare that, even if it appears that the barrier was not placed in position, or had been so placed that, without noticing- it, Soldano might have passed between its end and the wall of the watchmaker’s establishment, and even, therefore, if Soldano was not warned by contact with the said barrier that it was dangerous to go into that space or alcove, still it was unnecessary for him to do so, and therefore, when he entered it, he lost his riijht to claim the status of an invitee and became, at best, a licensee, and that, therefore, to him defendants owed no duty except that of not wantonly inflicting injury upon him; that under these circumstances it was his duty to protect himself against any dangers which might exist in that space into which he was not invited expressly or impliedly and into which he had ventured entirely at his own risk.

Before it can be determined just what legal status was occupied by Soldano, we must first determine why he had entered the arcade in the first place, just how the alcove — containing the trapdoor — was located with reference to the balance of the arcade of the building, and just why Soldano went into that alcove. The arcade — on the ground floor of the building —is a passageway extending from Caron-delet Street, on which the building fronts, to a cross-arcade in the rear of the building, which cross-arcade, now covered, is an extension of what is known as “Varieties Alley”. The main arcade is about 17 feet wide and, on its uptown side, there is located a row of small establishments in what may be called booths and which are about six feet in depth, leaving, as the open portion of the arcade, a space of about 11½ feet running from Carondclet Street to the rear of the building and there connecting with the cross-arcade which forms a part of Varieties Alley. On the other side of the main arcade are doors leading to stock and cotton brokerage offices located on the main portion of the ground floor of the building. Of the establishments in the narrow booths alongside the wall of the arcade, the last towards the rear of the building is one operated by James F. Roques as a watchmaker and repairer. Though this is the last establishment towards the rear of the arcade, the space occupied by it does not extend tó &e rear wall of the building, there' remaining;, between the rear wall and the end of the said watchmaker’s booth, an open space 6 feet 9 inches in width and about 6 feet in depth and which extends from the open passageway of the arcade to the side wall of the building.

In other words, as a pedestrian enters the arcade from Carondelet Street, he steps into the end of the open passageway, 11 feet wide and extending through the entire length of the building. On his left are the counters of the various booths, which, with an opening here and there, extend to a point 6 feet 9 inches from the other end of the building, and at that point the arcade widens an additional 6 feet and, with this further width, extends 6 feet 9 inches further to the rear doors of the arcade.

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196 So. 521, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soldano-v-new-york-life-ins-co-lactapp-1940.