Tharpe v. Sibley Lake Bisteneau & Southern Ry. Co.

144 So. 274
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1932
DocketNo. 4405.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 144 So. 274 (Tharpe v. Sibley Lake Bisteneau & Southern Ry. 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
Tharpe v. Sibley Lake Bisteneau & Southern Ry. Co., 144 So. 274 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

McGregor, j.

The Sibley Lake Bisteneau & Southern Railway Company is the lessee of a certain right of way and spur track in the village of Lanesville, which crosses a street or road in the said village known as Tharpe road. At, the intersection of this spur track with Tharpe road, the defendant railroad has maintained a public crossing for many years. Por drainage purposes wooden culverts were placed under this crossing, one on each side *275 of the tract, close to the ends of the cross-ties. Tharpe road has been maintained as a public thoroughfare by the Tillage of Lanes-ville almost ever since the village received its charter from the state. There is no proof in the record that it was ever formally dedicated or accepted as a public street, but it has been worked,, graded, graveled, and used just the same as if it had been formally dedicated.

The wooden culverts referred to extended across the entire width of the road and were buried or covered several inches with dirt or gravel. It is uncertain as to just when these culverts were placed under the ground, but from the evidence it must have been several years ago.

On November-' 19, 1931, Mrs. Sheba O. Tharpe, the plaintiff, a young married woman, who lived on Tharpe road, had occasion to go to town to make some purchases. The railroad crossing was between her home and pie Dusiness houses of the village, so that' in making a trip of this kind.it was necessary for her to cross this crossing twice. As she was returning home on this occasion, at about 10:30 o’clock a. m., and as she reached the ■culvert on the north side of the crossing on the opposite side of the railroad from her home, the ground underneath her left foo.t suddenly gave way and she fell unconscious to the ground, with her left foot'going through the top of the wooden culvert to its bottom. The cause of the fall was the decayed and rotten condition of the plank which formed the top of the. culvert.

Eriends and relatives soon discovered the plight of the plaintiff and ran to her assistance. They picked her up, unconscious, and carried her to her home nearby. A physician was summoned at "once, but it was several hours before he was able, to respond to the ■call. : ;

At the time of the accident plaintiff was a bride of ■•nearly three months and'was,'and had been, pregnant with child for two months. In .addition to the pain caused by her foot and limb.going through the hole made in the top of. the culvert when her weight caused it to break through, her entire body was twisted and turned and that naturally caused ‘her severe pain and intense suffering. In the course of a few days she suffered a miscarriage, as a direct result of her fall. She required the attention of her physician so.often it became "necessary to place her in the sanitarium at Minden, where she remained for two weeks.. In order to give her relief from intense pain in her back, it was necessáry to immobilize those parts with tape and bandages.

In her petition the plaintiff alleges in addition to causing her to miscarry, the fall caused a displacement of and injury to her female organs, and that she ; has' been reduced from a robust and healthy woman to an invalid for life. Whether she is in a state of invalidism or not it was agreed by physicians . on both sides that an abdominal operation would be required to restore her to a normal woman.

This suit is brought against, the railroad company and the village of, Lanesville, in solido, for the sum of $11,757, for damages growing out of the accident. Plaintiff’s husband, Ernest Tharpe, joined her-as party plaintiff as representing the community which bore the expense incurred on account Of the accident.

At the trial in the lower court there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff Mrs. Sheba 0. Tharpe -for the sum of $2,250, and in’ favor of Ernest Tharpe,' the husband,' as representing the community, for the sum of $257. The judgment as -rendered was against the two defendants in solido. They have appealed and the plaintiffs have answered the.appeal and ask that the judgment be amended and .raised to. the sum originally prayed for.' '

■ ■ -Opinion.

In their brief and argument, counsel for the defendant' railroad' make a three-fold defense, viz.: (1) That plaintiff was riot hurt in the way and manner in which she alleges she received her injury; (2) that if: she-was hurt at all, as she says she was; the injury was not serious; (3) that the defendant, being the lessee and not the-owner of the track, is not liable for the damage. . ■

We do not see how any -one can doubt that the-plaintiff was injured in the way that she claims. It is unquestioned that she did-'fall through a hole made in the rotten culvert, and that her husband and mother-in-law rushed to her assistance and found her uñconstíipus. "They pulled her foot and leg out of the hole ¿nd carried her to her' home pearby. She •suffered-greatly and'was not able!,tb'move herself for several days. While sfe’ was suffering from the immediate results, of 'the'fall and •the injuries to her body, ⅜ miscarriage game 'on her. Her physiciáp,' wlio is a,'reputable, 'high class; experienced'practitioner,\says. she had a miscarriage and that .it'.was caused ■from the fall.’,' We .are bound to'take his testimony as true, for we do not think he .can'be mistaken in his diagnosis. ' ,. ' . '

A Jarge part of plaintiff’s claim for damages is based upon her' allegations that the “injured condition of her ' organs wás caused by the fall. We do not think the proof warrants us in holding that this -condition was caused in the "first instance by the fall, though it may have been' aggrávated by ib. From the evidence in the easel we think it is more than likely thát- the plaintiff had a considerable displa'cemefit; of those parts- before the accident, though she may not have' b'éen *276 aware of it. While her physician testified that at the time of the trial she had this condition, he never sáid at any time that it was the result of the accident. Two physicians testifying for the defendants said that the condition shows every indication of having existed for a much longer time than since the accident. It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff has not carried the burden of proving this portion of her claim.

As to the liability of the railroad company, we do not see how it can escape under the evidence contained in the record. This track was under its complete control for years. Its section foreman and track men had maintained it at all times. The very wooden culvert which caused the plaintiff to fall is shown to have been placed in position by its agents and employees.

These culverts were made and placed, one on each side of the track, at the crossing several years ago, and covered with dirt and gravel. From the time they were first placed until the accident they served to drain the water from that spot. There is no evidence that they were ever inspected or repaired. The fact that plaintiff’s foot pushed a hole through the top proves how rotten they were, and the pieces produced as evidence bear out this conclusion.

It is a matter of common knowledge that ordinary wood buried in the ground, as were those culverts, rots in a relatively short time.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tharpe-v-sibley-lake-bisteneau-southern-ry-co-lactapp-1932.