Vogts v. Schwegmann

56 So. 2d 177, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 422
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1952
Docket19590
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 56 So. 2d 177 (Vogts v. Schwegmann) 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
Vogts v. Schwegmann, 56 So. 2d 177, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 422 (La. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

56 So.2d 177 (1952)

VOGTS et ux.
v.
SCHWEGMANN et al.

No. 19590.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

January 7, 1952.

*178 May & Carrere, New Orleans, for appellants.

Julian B. Humphrey, New Orleans, for appellees.

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Hughey Vogts, instituted this suit against defendants, John W. and Anthony Schwegmann, who conduct a super market under the trade name of John W. Schwegmann & Son and the Travelers Insurance Company, their liability insurers, endeavoring to recover on behalf of Mrs. Vogts for personal injuries the sum of $16,000.00 incurred as a result of having stumbled over a "box" in a passageway of the super market and, on behalf of Mr. Vogts for medical expenses incurred and anticipated by him as a result of his wife's injuries, the sum of $1250.00.

Defendants answered and admitted the occurrence of the accident by virtue of the existence of the "box" at the place and time indicated "which had just been placed on the floor" by an unknown customer, but denied that they were guilty of any negligence in the premises and, in the alternative, pleaded the contributory negligence of Mrs. Vogts, whom we shall refer to hereinafter as plaintiff.

From a judgment in favor of Mrs. Vogts in the sum of $4,000.00 and her husband in the sum of $750.00 defendants initiated this appeal. Plaintiff has answered the appeal requesting an increase in the judgment to $10,000.00.

The record reveals simple but rather difficult facts to assemble so graphically that the reader will possess a vivid mental picture of the geometric location of the obstruction in the passageway of defendant's super market; with this literary problem in mind we shall endeavor to delineate the facts.

Plaintiff, accompanied by her eleven year old son, Henry A. Vogts, visited defendants' super market on the morning of Saturday, March 20th, 1948, which is located within the boundaries of the downtown corner of Piety & Burgundy Streets in this City, to "shop for groceries". She entered the store and walked through a passageway, measuring seven feet, three inches in width, until she arrived at a turnstile which afforded her an entrance into a more spacious area designated as the self-service portion of the store where she made a selection of miscellaneous groceries. When plaintiff had consummated her "shopping", she returned to a section near the entrance of the store in which five cashiers are segregated. She was "checked out" by one of them and simultaneously the thought occurred to her that she had inadvertently forgotten to purchase one item reflected on her shopping list and she, therefore, reentered the service portion of the store and secured this article. Several minutes later she returned but to a different cashier's *179 counter, where her attention was absorbed in paying for and receiving the forgotten item. She then endeavored to leave the cashier's aisle by turning left at the end of the counter in order to exit into the passageway which she had originally used upon entering the store. At this point, as she emerged from the cashier's aisle and into the exit or entrance passageway, which it is conceded was provided for both purposes, she stumbled over a box located against the end or widthway of the cashier's counter. The box, as we understand the record, was a "home made" beer case containing a variety of beer bottles.

Plaintiff testified that after entering the store it was necessary for her to walk within the vicinity of the front end of the cashier's counter where the box was located but, at that time, she did not observe it in the entrance or passage area of the store which, as we stated hereinabove, measures from the front ends of the cashier's counters to a side of the store approximately seven feet, three inches in width; that she did not observe the box as she emerged from the cashier's counter as it had been placed in contact with the front end or widthway of the counter which effectively obstructed her view thereof; and finally that the injuries with which she is now afflicted were caused as a result of this accident.

Plaintiff's son testified he was eleven years of age; that he attended St. Vincent de Paul School where he matriculated in the Fifth Grade and was fully aware of the implications of an oath "to tell the truth"; that he opened the entrance door for his mother and she walked straight to the turnstile while he, in conformity with the established rules of the store, placed their own market basket beneath or upon shelves provided for this purpose and which are located to one side of the entrance area of the store. Plaintiff's son more pertinently testified that upon entering the store, he noticed the "beer box" in the exact location where his mother ultimately fell; that it protruded into the cashier's aisle about three inches; that the time consumed by his mother in completing her "shopping" was approximately thirty to forty minutes (this period of time is not in dispute) and that as his mother emerged from the cashier's aisle, measuring nineteen inches in width, she turned at the end thereof into the entrance or exit passageway and stumbled or fell because of the existence therein of the beer case. The record reflects that the lad, under persistent interrogation, appeared confused at this point whether his mother made a right or left turn as she emerged from the cashier's aisle, however, he tenaciously reiterated and his testimony was unshaken on cross-examination, that when he entered the store he positively noticed the "beer box" in the same location where his mother was injured, thirty or forty minutes later.

The trial judge adjourned court to visit the scene of the accident and, at this time, Henry Vogts was requested to place the box in the position which it had occupied on the floor of the store at the moment of the accident. The original box was not available for the demonstration since defendant had laboriously explained during the trial that it had mysteriously disappeared within one and a half minutes after the accident, therefore, a cardboard box, similar in size, was substituted and offered to the lad to recreate the factual conditions which existed on the day of the accident. He then voluntarily placed the box in position on its side, but his father, who had accompanied the litigants on this occasion, endeavored to surreptiously advise his son that he was in error and the box should be placed on its bottom. Henry Vogts then placed the box on its bottom in conformity with his father's instructions.

The trial judge was fully cognizant of what transpired and his reasons for judgment reveal that he wisely evaluated this situation and relegated it to its evidentiary category.

In order to rebut the very positive testimony of Henry Vogts, Anthony Schwegmann, one of the proprietors of the super market, Mrs. Claude Magnon, a former employee and Mrs. Mary Martino, a present employee of the defendants, testified that they did not observe the presence of Henry Vogts on the day of the accident inasmuch as their undivided attention was devoted to *180 assisting the plaintiff. Mrs. Magnon and Mrs. Martino, both of whom were employed as cashiers at the time of the accident, further stated that "they did not see the box either before or after the accident" and that they were engaged in servicing customers at their respective counters, a distance of about six feet from the location of the box which was at the end of Mrs. Magnon's counter and, therefore, obscured from their vision because of the relative height of the counter and the small size of the box.

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56 So. 2d 177, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogts-v-schwegmann-lactapp-1952.