Weiland v. King

262 So. 2d 50, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6454
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1972
DocketNo. 8775
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 262 So. 2d 50 (Weiland v. King) 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
Weiland v. King, 262 So. 2d 50, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6454 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

CRAIN, Judge.

This suit involves a claim by Mrs. Nellie Webb Weiland against defendant G. Harold King, Jr., and his insurer, Continental Insurance Company for personal injuries she sustained in a fall on a stairway in a building owned by the defendant and being leased by him to the employer of petitioner, the Louisiana Department of Education.

The plaintiff’s accident occurred on October 16, 1967. She filed suit claiming damages for personal injuries on October 15, 1968. Houston Fire and Casualty Company, the compensation insurer of the Department of Education, intervened claiming reimbursement for compensation and medical benefits paid by it to plaintiff as a result of the accident. Plaintiff requested a jury trial and the case came on for trial on February 18, 1971. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff against the defendants, G. Harold King, Jr. and the Continental Insurance Company for the full sum of $25,000.00.

The record reveals that on October 16, 1967, plaintiff was employed by the Louisiana Department of Education who at that time was leasing the third floor of the building in question from the owner, G. Harold King, Jr. The building has since burned. It was located at the corner of Lafayette Street and Laurel Street in the City of Baton Rouge. Laurel Street and the portion of the building adjacent to it slopes downward from the intersection with Lafayette Street toward the Mississippi River so that the building when viewing it from Lafayette Street appears to have two stories, with one story being hidden below the Lafayette Street level. The Department of Education leased the third story level and the Department of Youth Opportunity leased the second floor level. The building had two entrances and exits, one, the front or main entrance, on Lafayette Street, and the other, a back entrance on the far side of the building on Laurel Street. Above this exit was a stairwell which consisted of two sets of stairs, the first leading from the ground floor at the exit on Laurel Street to a landing at the level of the second floor, and the second, leading from this landing to the landing on the third floor.

The Louisiana Department of Education entered into its lease covering the third floor of the building on February 11, 1966, with the then owner, Mr. Louis Welch. Mr. Welch subsequently sold the building [52]*52to the defendant, G. Harold King, Jr., the original lease between the Department of Education and Welch remaining in existence without alteration.

The accident in question occurred after normal working hours on October 16, 1967. Plaintiff, Mrs. Weiland, had been working late cleaning off her desk. She testified that several other employees were working on the third story level when she decided to leave. She started out toward the front entrance on Lafayette Street; however, she was halted by Mrs. Audrey George who was a supervisor employed by the Department of Education. Mrs. George advised her that the front door had been locked by Mr. Alex Eugene Langford, a supervisor also employed by the Department of Education, whose apparent job it was to be generally in charge of obtaining supplies and providing maintenance for the third story level. It was his duty to make sure that the front door was locked. The plaintiff then turned to leave the building through the back stairway which led to the exit on Laurel Street.

At the entrance to the exit from the third floor was a large door which swung open into the stairway landing. The plaintiff testified that she opened this door, traversed the first set of stairs, and upon reaching the second story landing found herself suddenly in complete darkness when the door closed behind her. She testified that she had used the stairway only twice since her employment one month prior to the accident to reach the third floor from the ground level, and had never descended the stairway at all. When she realized her predicament, she tried to call to Mrs. George who was on the third floor level, but her efforts met no success. Then she attempted to go down the stairway landing to the exit on Laurel Street, thinking that it would be less dangerous than going up the stairway toward the third story level. There were no railings on the second story landing although there were railings on the stairways themselves. In attempting to locate the railing to descend the stairway, she fell down the stairway, landing at the base of the stairway on the ground level.

Witnesses were produced by both plaintiff and defendants testifying to the general description of the stairway including the type steps, railing and lighting fixtures. The main lighting source for the stairway was three ordinary lighting fixtures, one fixture being located over each landing. The switch for the light fixture on the third level was just inside the office portion of-the third level, and was not in the stairwell or on the landing itself. The switch for the light on the second landing was inside the office area on the second level.

Plaintiff produced several witnesses to testify as to the dangerous nature of the stairway.

Audrey George, employed by the Department of Education as a Supervisor at the time of the accident, testified that in the past she had descended the stairway many times. She was accustomed to parking her car in the parking lot adjacent to the Laurel Street exit and it was a much shorter walk from the Laurel Street exit to her car than from the Lafayette Street exit. She stated that she had difficulty descending the steps because of the fact that except on rare occasions the lights were not burning. On the night of the accident, she was at work on the third floor when she heard noise on the ground level. She descended the stairway to see the cause of the commotion and found the plaintiff lying at the bottom of the:.landing and several other people attempting to render assistance. When she entered the stairway descending toward the plaintiff, none of the lights were burning, and she was only able to proceed down the stairway because the door on the ground level was open and some light was entering from outside. According to her testimony, the lights in the stairway were as a rule not burning and that she had reported this to the janitor. She'stated that the janitor complained that [53]*53she was unable to replace burned out bulbs because the lights on the ceiling were impossible for her to reach.

Mrs. Sophie D. Schopp had been employed by the Department of Education for several years at the time of this accident. She stated that she had used the stairway on one occasion and that the steps were rather irregular in depth causing her difficulty in descending.

Another employee of the Department of Education, Mrs. Karren Territo, testified that she was on the third floor level at the time of the accident. She further testified that she had complained about the lack of lighting on the stairway to her immediate supervisor, Mrs. George, but that she had never talked to the defendant.

Mr. Alex Eugene Langford, who testified on behalf of plaintiff, described the physical appearance of the stair as being “Ordinary steps”. He further stated that the steps were no different than any others “except when the lights were off it was dark, and sometimes they were off”. He testified that he had personally replaced the bulb in the light on the third floor fixture once at the request of the maid. The Department of Education, the lessee, paid for the maid and he in general supervised her activities.

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Related

Templin v. Traders & General Insurance Company
288 So. 2d 660 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Weiland v. King
281 So. 2d 688 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 So. 2d 50, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiland-v-king-lactapp-1972.