Warner v. De Britton.

151 So. 239
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 4, 1933
DocketNo. 1254.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 151 So. 239 (Warner v. De Britton.) 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
Warner v. De Britton., 151 So. 239 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LB BLANC, Judge.

A Model T Ford coupé ran into a canal that had been dug across a public road known as the Broussard road in the parish of East Baton Rouge between the hours of 1 and 2 o’clock of the morning on November 1, 1931. The car belonged to Brooks Welch and was being driven at the time by Sidney Welch, his brother. Seated on the same seat with Sidney and Brooks was Alex Welch, another brother. As a result of the accident, Sidney Welch was killed, Alex and Brooks Welch both sustained injuries to their backs, and the Ford car was entirely demolished.

Sidney Welch was unmarried and had no children. His mother, Mrs. Estelle Garrison Warner, instituted this suit against Newman H. DeBritton, contractor engaged in digging the canal which crossed the Broussard road for the police jury of East Baton Rouge. She seeks to recover $10,000 damages for ' the death of her son. Alex Welch and Brooks Welch each filed a separate suit against De-Britton, the former seeking to recover the sum of $1,000 fox the injuries he sustained and the latter $1,800, of which $1,500 is claimed as damages for personal injuries and $300 for the loss of his automobile.

The plaintiffs charge gross fault and negligence on the part of the defendant in having failed to place a barricade on the side of the road from which they were approaching the canal on the night of the accident and in having failed also to place lights in the. road to warn persons who might be driving along the same that the said canal had been dug across the road.

The defendant for answer to each petition averred that the canal which was being dug by his subcontractor, one Sam Maggio, at the point where it traversed the Broussard road, had been completed and the police jury of the parish had assumed control over it by having already started to erect a bridge over it at that point, and, consequently, he was not liable in damages that may have resulted to any one for failure to have properly guarded the road. He otherwise denies the negligence alleged against him by all three of the plaintiffs in failing to have properly barricaded the road, and, in the alternative, he pleads contributory negligence on the part of Sidney Welch for his failure to have seen the barricade in time or in having his car under such control as to have been able to stop it within the distance projected in front of it by his headlights. As against the other two plaintiffs, he pleads contributory negligence in their failure to have warned Sidney Welch of the danger in time for him to have stopped the car and averted the accident..

The three cases were consolidated for the purpose of trial in the lower court, and a separate judgment was rendered in each suit rejecting each of the demands of the respective plaintiffs. All three have taken an appeal to this court where the cases were again consolidated for the purpose of argument. Brooks Welch v. DeBritton (La. App.) 151 So. 241; Alex Welch v. DeBritton (La. App.) 151 So. 241.

We are not informed on which ground the claims were rejected by the district judge as he did not hand down written reasons for judgment, but under the evidence, as we view it, we are of the opinion that the de-fondant was properly exonerated from liability, and the ground on which we think he was, rests on the proposition that the police jury of the parish, by its action in having gone to the place where this canal crossed the road and having already begun the erection and construction of a bridge over it two days before the accident occurred, had in effect assumed control over the road at that point and was therefore charged with the responsibility of properly guarding it.

The defendant’s contract with the police jury contemplated the digging of a canal from the Baton Rouge-Hammond highway near Millerville to Hunnieut creek in the seventh ward of the parish. The work was to be done in conformity with certain plans and specifications, and under the direction and approval of the engineer representing the police jury. The contractor had nothing to do with regard to bridging over that part of the canal which *240 was to cross the Broussard road. This seems to he borne out by the testimony to the effect that on the Wednesday preceding’ the aeei-. dent, when the drag-line machine was nearing the eastern edge of the Broussard road, Mr. John J. Mundinger, the engineer representing the police jury, gave instructions not to cross the road that night as he saw that they were not prepared to barricade it. His instructions were carried out by Maggio,-tha subcontractor, who stopped work that evening and did not start again until the following morning at about 9 o’clock. It. took him just two hours to dig across the road, and all that afternoon and night,he took necessary steps to guard the road by placing one of his workmen there as a watchman. On Friday morning, the police jury began work erecting the bridge by placing some of the heavy timbers which were to provide the foundation therefor. . Friday evening, Mr. Wax, member of the police jury for the ward, asked Mr. Cambre, the operator of the drag-line, machine, to place a barricade across the road so as to guard it during the night. This request was in the nature of a favor, as Cambre says that Wax, in asking him to place the barricade, told him that, if he did not do it, he (Wax) would then have to go “all the way to town” (meaning Baton Rouge) to get a man to do it for him. Cambre, in compliance with the request made of him, had one of his men named Johnnie Aimes place a barricade consisting of four empty gasoline drums across the road south of the pile of dirt that had been excavated from the canal and thrown upon the embankment. These áre facts' as testified to by Cambre and Aimes and they are not disputed. On Friday and Saturday the drag-line machine continued its operation, and on Saturday night,'the night of the accident, it had reached a point some 800 to 1000 feet west of the Broussard road. The fact that the parish, through the police jury, had begun the construction of the bridge over the canal where it crossed the road is not disputed either and can be no better evidenced than by the photographs introduced in the record which show the work that had already been done.'

Under such a state of facts, it looks to us as though the police jury had, to all intents and purposes, assumed control over that part of the canal at the point where it crossed the Broussard road and had become responsible for the road being properly guarded and protected until the bridge'was opened to traffic. On the Saturday on which this accident occurred, the obstruction in the road was no longer caused by the digging of the canal, but by the construction of the bridge that had been undertaken by the police jury. The defendant’s contract, as we have said, was for the digging of a canal. That this canal was to cross this particular road was incidental, and, whilst it may be that during the time that the contractor in pursuing his contract was crossing the road, he had the duty to guard and protect traffic over it, his duty ceased when the police jury came in and assumed control over the situation by the two acts which we have cited, the first being the erection of the bridge and the second to see that, the road was properly barricaded.

Plaintiffs have not stressed this issue and do not discuss it at any great length, and yet it is the important point in the case. Their counsel seemed to content themselves by saying that the police jury had not accepted the canal and that, as long as it had not, the contractor was responsible for the guarding of the road.

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Related

King v. Mason
95 So. 2d 705 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1957)
Nichols v. Craven
78 S.E.2d 376 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1953)
Welch v. De Britton
151 So. 241 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)

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151 So. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-de-britton-lactapp-1933.