Woodall v. Dickson Ice Cream Co.

180 So. 193
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1938
DocketNo. 5600.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 180 So. 193 (Woodall v. Dickson Ice Cream Co.) 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
Woodall v. Dickson Ice Cream Co., 180 So. 193 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Joe Woodall, a waitress in the Coffee Shop of the Caddo Hotel in the City of Shreveport, stumbled over or stepped into a metal milk carrier left by an employee of defendant, Dickson Ice Cream Co., Inc., on the tile floor of the Coffee Shop, lost her balance and fell heavily to the floor. She was seriously and painfully injured. £>he sues for damages for a large amount, and enumerates the elements thereof as being: Permanent injuries; pain, suffering, injuries to nervous system, and loss of earning power.

She alleges that at time of the accident she was in an early stage of pregnancy, and. that, because of this condition, the internal injuries she suffered were more serious than would otherwise have been. She specifically avers that her ovaries were injured, producing swelling to her left side, and that she sustained a sacroiliac strain; that she was confined to her bed practically all the period from the date of the accident until she gave birth to a child on August 11, 1936, during which time, and since, she has suffered intense pain, directly due to the effects of said accident; that her disability is of a permanent character, requiring her to use crutches in order to go about; that in *194 addition to all of the foregoing, she has become nervous and hypersensitive, and the condition resulting from these abnormalities is also of a permanent character.

Her husband joins in the suit and sues for expenses alleged to have been incurred for physicians and nurses’ services, medicine, X-rays, ambulance, crutches, etc.

The' accident occurred about 8 o’clock a. m., December 9, 1935.

The petition sets forth that a servant of defendant, after delivering milk to the shop, carelessly and negligently left said milk carrier on the floor at or. near the end of a long counter on which food is served to its customers, behind which plaintiff worked, and around the end of which she had to go to serve patrons who desired to eat at the small tables in the open floor of the shop; that she was unaware of the presence of said carrier until she stepped into it, and had no reason whatever to think that it had been left there, or that the path of travel from the end of the counter to the open part of the shop was obstructed or unsafe to any extent; that said carrier- was, from the nature of its construction, a trap for persons walking about or around the end of said counter, and particularly for those who carried food, etc., to patrons at the tables.

Defendant denied generally the allegations of fact alleged upon. It averred that if the carrier- was left on the Coffee Shop floor, as by plaintiff alleged, it was in open and plain view, and if plaintiff did not see it, she could have done so by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence ; that her failure to exercise such care and prudence constituted the proximate cause of any injury she sustained by her fall. Defendant further alleged that to the knowledge of Mrs. Woodall, placing the carrier on the floor, in the manner described in her petition, was' not an unusual occurrence and was one of which she should have taken notice, and otherwise exercised sufficient care to avoid stumbling or falling over it. Her negligence in these respects, in the alternative, is pleaded against recovery by her.

There was judgment for Mrs. Woodall in the sum of $3,000 and for her husband for $500. Defendant appealed.

The facts immediately preceding, at the time of and following the accident, are, in the main, undisputed.

The Coffee Shop of the Caddo Hotel is approximately 48 by 24 feet. A lunch counter, 39 inches high and 20 feet long, parallels and is a few feet from' one of the side walls. One end of this counter is connected with an end wall. The passageway from behind the counter into the open area is reduced to 2 feet 4 inches, on account of space covered by an ice box which is parallel to the counter. In front of the counter there is a line of stools for use of patrons who eat thereat. The open' space of the shop is occupied by tables - and chairs for guests. At the time of -the accident, some 7 feet intervened between the end of the counter and the tables nearest it, in a direct line. 'Waitresses coming from behind the counter with food, etc., for tables opposite its' front side, followed the narrow passageway between.it and the icebox, and turned at almost right angles at the counter’s end.

Defendant supplied the Coffee Shop with milk. Its employees would bring the bottles of milk in carriers and crates and place them in the icebox. The morning of the accident, defendant’s milk truck, in .charge of one J. W. Lewis, assisted by Roy Price, stopped in front of the hotel to make a milk delivery. A crate and a carrier laden with milk were brought in by Lewis and Price. The former put the bottles in the icebox as was the custom. Price took the empty crate with him into the kitchen to put empty bottles in. Lewis deposited the empty milk carrier on the floor at the end of and against the counter and sat on the stool nearest the counter’s end, while writing up a charge slip or ticket for the delivered milk. Having finished this, he left the carrier on the floor and sought a waitress in the kitchen to O. K. the ticket. He there assisted Price in gathering empty bottles. After the ticket was O. K.’d, Lewis 'returned to the Coffee Shop, passed by the carrier, made his exit through the front door, and joined Price, who had preceded him through the rear of the kitchen to the truck. They drove away and only missed the carrier some thirty minutes later. Price returned for it, but the accident had already occurred. Lewis said he expected Price to pick up the carrier and bring it to the truck. However, he must have known that Price had returned to the truck, as was his custom, via the rear exit, with a load of empty bottles in the crate.

*195 A patron entered the Coffee Shop, the exact time of which, with regard to the above related facts, does not clearly appear, and took a chair at a table in front of the lunch counter. Mrs. Woodall took his order. He wished coffee in advance of breakfast. She returned to the back side of the counter picked up a tray, glass, spoon, etc., drew the coffee from the urn, and began the trip back to serve the customer.

She held the tray with contents in both hands in front of her, and as she began the right turn at the counter’s end, she stepped into the carrier with one foot. It suddenly slid forward. She lost balance, and fell heavily to the tile floor, on right side and back. She was lifted to a chair. She soon resumed work, but after the lapse of an hour, her condition was such that the hotel manager advised her to go to bed in the hotel. A physician was summoned. She remained there for the night. She went to her home the following day and did not resume work until December 21st. She quit the job permanently on January 4th, following.

The carrier involved in the case is in basket form with handle eight inches high. It is constructed of heavy galvanized wire. It is 18 inches long, 9 inches wide, and 4% inches deep. Its capacity is eight quart bottles. Potentially, from the very nature of its construction, it is a most dangerous agency to life or limb, when left on the floor of any place open to use by the public or others. It was gross negligence to have left it in the Coffee Shop at the end of the counter.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodall-v-dickson-ice-cream-co-lactapp-1938.