Willis v. Cahn

164 So. 452
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 13, 1935
DocketNo. 5119.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 164 So. 452 (Willis v. Cahn) 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
Willis v. Cahn, 164 So. 452 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff was seriously injured when the balustrade of the porch of a tenement house (420 Caddo street) in the city of Shreveport, on which he was leaning, gave way, precipitating him bodily to the ground, a distance of six feet below the floor level. He brings this suit against defendants, owners of the property, to recover a large amount in damages on account of his injuries, which are alleged to be permanent in character, totally disabling him for any sort of work. He alleges, and we think has proven, that he went to the house,, occupied by one Levi Thomas as lessee, on the afternoon of Saturday, March 3, 1934, to deliver to Thomas some money which his employer had sent to him; that he knocked on the front door, or rang the door bell, and called Thomas, and, hearing no response, talked to the end of the porch to look down the side of the house in the hope of seeing him; that in following out this purpose, he leaned forward with his hands on the balustrade in order to look around and down the side of the house, and while doing this the balustrade suddenly collapsed from rottenness and decay, and he fell with it head-on to the ground. He had a legal right to be on the porch at the .time. Fie avers that said balustrade was insecurely nailed to the corner post and the wall of the building; that its decayed, unsafe, and dangerous condition was not apparent to him; and that he had no knowledge of its real condition. He further alleges that defendants were negligent in permitting said balustrade to decay and become unsafe for persons lawfully on the premises, and avers, as a conclusion, that they are responsible to him in damages for the pain and suffering endured and injury sustained by him because of their negligence.

Defendants admit ownership of the building and that they had leased it to Levi Thomas, but, for lack of information, other allegations of' the petition are denied. They affirmatively plead that they did not know that the balustrade need repairing and did not know plaintiff was injured by its falling for some two months thereafter; and, after investigating the facts of the accident, have this to say: That if plaintiff had not negligently and in an abnormal manner used said balustrade it would not have fallen and he would not have been injured; that in so using the balustrade he *453 was guilty of gross negligence. In the alternative, should it be found and held that said balustrade was in a defective condition, and under the law they were negligent in not keeping it in a better state of repair, then, and in that event, the contributory negligence of plaintiff, in the following respects, is pleaded in bar of his right to recover:

(1) That on the afternoon when the accident occurred, he was intoxicated and drunk, and while in that condition staggered up the steps of the leased premises, and, spying a colored girl in the adjoining yard, he immediately rushed to the balustrade on that side of the house to engage said girl in conversation, and “at the same time throwing himself with a reckless, drunken force against the balustrade, grasping the top rail with both hands, and then, after bringing his torso and hips to a position of almost right angles, threw his body and entire weight across said top rail with so much force as to cause the balustrade to give way and break, and precipitate him to the ground”; which negligence, they specially plead, was- the proximate cause of the accident, and not the negligence, if any, of defendants.

(2) That the decayed condition of the balustrade was plainly visible and apparent to plaintiff or any one else; that there were no coverings or obstructions to prevent him observing its true condition if he had tried to do so; and that he often visited the place and had ample opportunity to observe the defective and decayed condition of the balustrade.

From a judgment for plaintiff for $7,-076.85, defendants appeal.

Opinion.

We are satisfied from a close study of the testimony that plaintiff was not intoxicated at the time he was injured. Several members of his race gave testimony indicating that he was drunk at the time,, and the woman next door is positive he was in this condition, and says he offered her a drink from a bottle he had in his hand when the balustrade fell; but he positively denies this, and swears that he was not even drinking at the time. In this he is measurably corroborated by two or three negro men who hastened to his relief. Two white men, in the ambulance which hurried him to a sanitarium, say he was sober, and Dr. Mason, who first examined and administered to him at the sanitarium, is positive he was then sober. He took a statement from plaintiff at the time. Plaintiff says he had no liquor with him, but did have a can containing some beef. Such a can was found on the ground after the accident, but no bottle of liquor was found.

We are also convinced that the balustrade did not give way from any unusual pressure against it by plaintiff. Only two persons saw the accident. They were plaintiff and the negro woman on the porch or in the yard of the adjoining cottage. Plaintiff says he “didn’t much more than touch it, went to lean over, had my hand like that (indicating), leaned over to call Levi,” and the balustrade gave way before he actually called him. The negro woman (Nellie Haynes) states she never knew plaintiff before this occasion, but had seen him on the four previous Saturdays. However, later on in her testimony she states that on each of the previous four Saturdays she was with plaintiff, drank with him and his friends in the home of Levi Thomas. Thomas positively denies this woman’s statement, and says so far as he could recall she had never been in his home at 420 Caddo street, and his wife corroborates his testimony in this respect. The testimony of this Haynes woman does not impress us as being entirely fair and unbiased. However, her evidence does not support defendants’ contention that plaintiff threw his weight unduly against the balustrade when it fell. In describing the accident, she says:

“A. When he leaned on the porch, he asked me if the people were at home, and I says, T do not know; if they are they are in the back.’ He looked around like that (illustrating) and I kept on sweeping. He leaned on the porch and says, ‘You want a drink?’, and I says, T do when I get through sweeping,’ and he says, ‘Drink now’, and he leaned on the balustrade like this (illustrating) and then he took one hand off of the balustrade and reached in his pocket and pulled out a bottle, and then is when he fell.
“Q. When he put his weight on the balustrade, show how he did that? A. He had both hands on the balustrade, like this (illustrating) and when he asked me if I wanted a drink, then he put his weight like this (illustrating) and got the bottle with the other hand, and that is when he fell.”

This testimony shows, if true, that plaintiff at first rested both hands on the bal *454 ustrade, and then only one as he reached for the alleged bottle of liquor. It negatives the contention that he lunged forward after resting his hands thereon. The top rail of the balustrade was 26 inches above the floor. Plaintiff is S feet, 9 inches tall. Therefore, it was but natural, as he states, for him to have rested both hands on the top rail as he prepared to lean forward to call or look for Thomas who was in bed in a room towards the rear of the house.

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-cahn-lactapp-1935.