Wilson v. Hearn

150 So. 2d 911, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1430
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1963
DocketNo. 949
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 So. 2d 911 (Wilson v. Hearn) 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
Wilson v. Hearn, 150 So. 2d 911, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1430 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

CHASEZ, Judge.

Defendants, Jack L. Hearn and his wife are the owners of a building at 1555 N. Derbigny Street, New Orleans. Plaintiffs, William M. Wilson and his wife allege that they, as tenants, occupied an upstairs apart- ' ment in the said building. Mrs. Wilson avers that on January 26, 1957, because of ' the defective condition of the bannister of her porch, she fell to the ground below ' when the bannister rail gave way as she was leaning against it. She claims that she did not know, or have reason to suspect, ’ that the bannister was in any way dangerous or incapable of ■ supporting her - weight, which she alleged was a little over . 200 pounds. It is her contention that the accident resulted solely from the vice which - existed in the leased premises, for ■ which yice she maintains defendants, as owners . and lessors are liable. She claims she suffered six fractured ribs and hemo pneumothorax. In her petition she prayed • for judgment in the sum of $26,000.00.

Defendants answered denying that the bannister was in any way defective and that “plaintiff was merely leaning on the bannister at the time the bannister rail gave, but that when said bannister rail did give way, it was due to plaintiff’s intoxicated condition, which caused her to stagger and strike said bannister rail with such force, and being a very corpulent person of over two hundred pounds, caused said bannister rail to give way.” Defendants allege that they are free of fault and if damages were sustained by plaintiff Mildred Wilson “it was solely through her contributory negligence.”

From a judgment for defendants dismissing plaintiffs’ suit, plaintiffs have appealed.

The trial judge rested his judgment on-“the credibility of the witnesses, plaintiff and defendants as to how the plaintiff, Mrs. Wilson fell.” He accepted ’defendant Hearn’s version of the accident as the correct one. According to Hearn, Mildred Wilson told him she had been drinking all day as she was depressed because her brother was in Angola. Hearn stated that after their conversation was ended, she left the railing and then staggered back hitting the railing causing it to come loose from the supports and then fell into the yard. The testimony of the investigating police officers that Mrs. Wilson had been drinking substantiated Hearn’s testimony for the trial judge who refused to believe Mildred Wilson’s denial that she had been drinking.

The liability of the lessor in Louisiana for personal injuries to the tenant or third persons caused by the defective conditions of the -premises is set forth in the case of Mosher v. Burglass, La.App., 170 So. 416, in which the court states as follows :

“ * * * there is written by law into every contract of lease a warranty that [913]*913the leased property contains no defects and that the lessee and all other persons lawfully upon the premises may subject any part thereof to any of the uses for which the property is intended. Therefore, as we said in Brown v. Pons [La.App.], 147 So. 560, 561: ‘It follows that, if the rail gave way while it was being used for a purpose for which such rails are customarily used and plaintiff himself was not contributorily negligent in relying upon a manifestly defective rail, then the owner of the premises is liable, because “the lessor warranted the solidity of the balustrade for all legitimate purposes.” ’ Evans v. Hollander, 2 La.App. 409.”

Therefore, the question for our determination is whether plaintiff, Mildred Wilson, at the time of .the accident used the bannister in a normal manner or was negligent in subjecting it to a use for which it was not intended.

The record leaves no doubt that Mrs. Wilson was . an extremely heavy woman, the witnesses estimating her weight between 250 and 300 pounds at the time of the accident. The record further reveals that Mildred Wilson had been a tenant of defendant for ten years prior to her fall from the porch. Both Hearn and a carpenter’s helper (the carpenter being deceased) testified that within six months of the accident there were installed new rear steps, a landing and a railing and it was the opinion of the carpenter’s helper that the railing was in good, solid condition.

It is conceded that the bannister rail parted from the post to which it was attached. Plaintiff did not claim nor did the evidence show that there was any rotting of the wood or rusting of the nails which would have weakened the railing. Plaintiff avers that the railing should have been strong enough to hold her weight even though she was heavier than the average person while defendant urges that she staggered against the railing while in an intoxicated condition and that this was not a legitimate use of the railing.

We are satisfied that defendants have not proved that Mildred Wilson was intoxicated at the time she was injured. While we do not believe her statement that she had not been drinking at all, there is sufficient corroboration by the police officers who investigated the accident that Mildred Wilson was not intoxicated because of her ability to answer their questions relating to the fall. One officer thought she had been drinking a beer or two. The other stated that she had a heavy odor of alcohol on her breath but when asked whether she spoke like a person under the influence of intoxicants, answered that “she spoke as if she was in pain.” Hearn testified that before the accident Mildred Wilson told him,, “I’m getting high,” and Emmett Bouvier, a friend of Hearn’s who was working on the premises at the time, stated that he overheard Mildred Wilson make this statement. Bouvier, however, did not see Mildred Wilson at the time and was unable to state what her condition was prior to the fall. Although he saw her afterwards and helped Hearn cover her with a spread as she lay on the ground, he was not asked whether' or not she appeared then to be intoxicated.

The trial judge’s reasons for judgment in which he stated that Hearn testified that Mildred Wilson “left the rail on which she had been leaning and then fell, or staggered back, hitting the rail, causing it to break, and fell out into the yard,” reflect his belief that Hearn actually saw Mildred Wilson stagger against the railing causing it to part from its support. It is our appreciation of Hearn’s testimony that after he saw Mildred Wilson start to walk away from the bannister, he did not observe her movements again until she hollered as she began to fall. Both on direct and cross-examination he declared that “she hollered and I looked up.” He could not have seen her hit the bannister rail if he had to look up after she hollered since he was standing [914]*914in the yard below at the time she fell from the second story. There were no other witnesses who claimed to have seen the accident.

Defendants submitted testimony to the effect that the porch and railing had been rebuilt approximately six months prior to the accident and that new materials were used in the construction. It is their contention that plaintiffs did not prove that a vice in the construction caused the injuries. The court, in Evans v. Hollander, 2 La.App. 409, when confronted with this same situation, stated the following:

“If the balustrade fell while being used in the manner intended by its erection it was of no importance, what the evidence would have shown as to its condition unknown to the lessee. The lessor warranted the solidity of the balustrade for all legitimate purposes.

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Related

Wilson v. Hearn
153 So. 2d 414 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 2d 911, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-hearn-lactapp-1963.