Thomas v. Buquet & Le Blanc, Inc.

119 So. 2d 129, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 1395
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 21, 1960
DocketNo. 4966
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 So. 2d 129 (Thomas v. Buquet & Le Blanc, Inc.) 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
Thomas v. Buquet & Le Blanc, Inc., 119 So. 2d 129, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 1395 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

FRUGÉ, Judge ad hoc.

Plaintiff, Ennis Thomas, instituted suit in tort against Our Lady of the Lake Hospital, Inc. and its insurer, The Travelers Insurance Company, for damages sustained when he was allegedly struck on the head by an oxygen cylinder cap as he entered, in the status of an invitee, a rest room on the defendant hospital’s premises. Buquet Surety Corporation, were joined as party defendants inasmuch as the construction firm was performing certain alterations and repairs near the scene of the accident at the time.

In his petition, as amended, plaintiff attributes his alleged injuries to the negligence of the defendants and/or their agents and/or employees in placing an oxygen cap in such a position in a rest room so that it could and did fall; in negligently handling and storing oxygen tanks; and in carrying on construction, maintenance and [131]*131repairs in a negligent manner. Plaintiff specifically charged the defendánt hospital with negligence in failing to adequately inspect its premises. Plaintiff entered an alternative plea urging the Court, in the absence of any specific finding of negligence attributable to the defendant, to apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in awarding a judgment in his favor.

At the time of the alleged accident, plaintiff was an employee of the Zetz 7-Up Bottling Company and thereafter, obtained workmen’s compensation benefits from his company’s insurer. Said insurer, Mas-sachusets Bonding & Insurance Company, filed a petition of intervention in the instant suit to recover the amount of compensation and medical benefits paid by it to plaintiff.

The defendants, Our Lady of the Lake Hospital, Inc. and The Travelers Insurance Company, answered plaintiff’s petition, as amended, denying the occurrence of the alleged accident and injury and specifically denied that the alleged accident, if any such . accident did occur, was caused by a negligent act or omission to act attributable to either of them or any one for whom they could be held legally responsible. Further answering the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, as amended, said defendants entered an alternative plea alleging that in the event either of them, or any of their agents or employees, were guilty of any negligence proximately causing the said accident, then, and in that event, any such acts of negligence were in the nature of “Horseplay” and were done outside the course and scope of employment by any of said defendant’s agents or employees. Lastly, and in the further alternative, said defendants asserted the affirmative defense of contributory negligence.

There was trial on the merits after which the trial judge rejected plaintiff’s demands on all defendants and dismissed his suit from which a devolutive appeal was perfected. The main point on which the judge dismissed this suit was that the plaintiff was not an invitee to that portion of defendant’s hospital premises where the alleged accident supposedly occurred.

The trial judge said:

“Barksdale and LeBlanc (Eugene Barksdale and W. P. LeBlanc, individually and doing business as Barks-dale and LeBlanc, a commercial partnership) were made defendants in this case inasmuch as they were at that time constructing an addition to Our Lady of the Lake Hospital.
“On the trial of the case the evidence failed to show who, if anyone, placed the metal object above the door entrance, which allegedly fell on the Plaintiff when he opened the door to enter the restroom. Certainly there is no evidence to show that an employee of Barksdale and LeBlanc placed the object above the door entrance, if it were so placed. Therefore, I am of the opinion that there is no liability whatever on the part of the defendants, Eugene Barksdale and W. P. LeBlanc, individually and doing business as a commercial partnership, Barksdale and LeBlanc, or their insurer, The National Surety Corporation.”

A careful study of the testimony reflects the correctness of this ruling. We see no manifest error.

A careful study of the transcript reveals among others the following pertinent facts: Plaintiff, Ennis Thomas, on the morning of July 29, 1957, while in the employ of the Zetz 7-Up Bottling Company, accompanied a supervisor to Our Lady of the Lake Hospital to replenish their soft drinks. After loading the 7-Up box, he, the plaintiff, requested and obtained directions from a colored porter as to the location of a colored rest room. He testified that upon entering the rest room door something struck him on the head and he was rendered senseless for approximately 20 minutes. He further testified that the falling [132]*132object was a metal cap and that it fell from over the door and knocked him to his knees, and that the metal object remained on his head until he shook it off. Then he further testified that he staggered back to the colored porter and was physically assisted to a nurse’s office. While he further testified that as a result of the blow plaintiff alleged that he experienced headaches and has continued to experience blind spells and severe headaches, the district court must have entertained serious doubt as to the value of plaintiff’s testimony.

The facts further show that while the plaintiff made bi-weekly deliveries to this hospital for the entire year immediately preceding this alleged accident, that he never did use a colored bathroom there.

In testing the credibility of the plaintiff, counsel for defendant cross-examining him on various points in which the plaintiff denied back-aches, temporary blindness, blind staggers, epileptic fits, and specifically denied any prior accidents. He further denied that he and his wife had been separated for seven or eight months and it was further brought out in the testimony that in a deposition given by him four days prior to the trial, he affirmatively stated that he, his wife and four children were living together at 2029 Caroline Street, Baton Rouge. He further stated that subsequent to the accident, he worked for J. B. Ganier, and experienced blind staggers in the presence of said employer. We are of the opinion that the defendant successfully impeached and discredited the testimony of plaintiff Thomas. His wife Mamie Lee Thomas testified that she had not lived with him for eight months prior to the trial; that she had caused him to be arrested several times for criminal nonsupport of family; that her husband sustained several injuries of a serious nature prior to July, 1957; that he had complained to temporary blindness after being hit over the eye by a 2 x 4; and that he had sustained an epileptic fit in her presence. Further, J. B. Ganier, a saw mill owner, stated that plaintiff had worked for him for three months in the fall of 1958 and that he had done so under his direct supervision and that at no time he complained of dizzy spells or headaches. He further contradicted Ennis Thomas in two or three other points at issue. Plaintiff worked under the supervision of Mr. John Wellbanks thereafter from April through the middle of May 1959 at the Southern Granite Company and at the Royal Poole Company. Claimant worked with a hand shovel, ran a mixer and assisted in loading and that he was a good worker and that at no time complained of a headache or dizzy spells. In addition to that a report of the Baton Rouge General Hospital was filed to show that Ennis Thomas was admitted at said hospital on July 15, 1951, for injuries sustained when he was struck over the left temple by a 2 x 4. At that time plaintiff complained of pain in the head, weak spells and inability to see from his left eye.

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 2d 129, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 1395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-buquet-le-blanc-inc-lactapp-1960.