42 So. 193 | La. | 1906
Statement of the Case.
Plaintiff, duly authorized, seeks to recover damages for personal injuries which she attributes to the negligence of defendant in leaving insecurely covered a hole' which had been excavated by it in the sidewalk on Constance street, in New Orleans. The answer is a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The facts, as we find them from the record, are as follows: Defendant was engaged in the execution of a contract with the city of New Orleans which called for the paving and curbing of Constance street (between Calliope and Race and between Orange and Felicity); for certain subsurface drainage work, which necessitated the excavation of small pools, here and there, in the sidewalk; and for the replacing of the sidewalk where disturbed. The pools referred to, varying in depth from 12 to 36 inches, were to be so situated as to render necessary the disturbance, and hence the replacing, of the sidewalk for a distance of about 3 feet back from the curb. The openings of the pools were required to be protected by circular cast iron rims, with their tops countersunk for the reception of movable lids of the same material. As a matter of fact the castings for each pool weigh 70, and the lid 25 or 30, pounds, and the whole is so arranged that when the lids are in position they present a surface which is flush with, and in fact forms a part of, .the surface of the sidewalk, and is about as safe for pedestrians as any other part.
Defendant had completed the work of resetting the curb, excavating and equipping the pools, and replacing the sidewalk on the West side of the street (in the square between Calliope and Gaienne streets), and was engaged in accumulating the material necessary for the paving, and it is said that the inspector, representing the city, had approved of the work as thus done, though it is not
“If the cover was off, the sand would have-fallen in the hole. I don’t see how that could be. The cover was certainly placed on there, or the sand would not be there. We were-dumping sand in large cart loads, and it surely would have filled up the little hole, if the cover was off.”
It may be here remarked that this witness-was not very accurately informed as to-some of the facts. He never saw the particular hole, or the cast iron rim, or the lid, here in question. He testifies that the castings weigh together 60 pounds, and that the-lid weighs between 15 and 20 pounds, and' that the latter could easily be removed by a boy eight or ten years old. Upon the other-hand, the iron founder by whom the castings-were made testifies that they weigh 70 pounds, and that the lid itself weighs 25 or 30 pounds. The witnesses all agree that, the lid, when in position, rests, and fits, in a set-off, which is made in the rim for its-reception; but it does not follow that it may not be displaced sufficiently to tilt when trod on, and yet not sufficiently to allow the free passage of sand dumped or spread on it. It appears from the testimony that the pools are about in the middle of the 3-foot space in the banquette which the defend
At the time of the accident, plaintiff was in her thirty-fourth year, was the mother of three children, and was enceinte with the fourth — having been in that condition for about three months. The accident caused a miscarriage, and her family physician testifies that, whereas, she had previously been a perfectly healthy woman, the accident and miscarriage left her with certain lacerations and displacement, and subject periodically to excruciating pain, from which (in January, 1906) he saw no immediate prospect of relief. Another physician, who, on behalf of the defendant, examined the plaintiff about four months after the accident, seems to acquiesce in the statement, contained in a question propounded by defendant’s counsel, that “this lady has said that she suffers great pain and backache, and that her health has been weakened and impaired, as the result of an accident which brought on premature birth,” and he testifies that she was suffering from two distinct troubles, which, he believed, could be cured by surgical operations — the one caused- by the miscarriage; the other, in his opinion, having a more remote origin. This latter view is, however, distinctly at variance with that of plaintiff’s family physician, from whose testimony it appears that the trouble thus referred to did not exist prior to the accident.
The case was tried in the district court before a jury, which found for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,500, and the verdict was made the judgment of the court. Defendant has appealed, and plaintiff answers praying that the amount be increased to $7,500.
Opinion.
Whilst defendant’s contract required it, among other things, to excavate drain pools in a public thoroughfare, it also required it to provide the pools so excavated with covers, to be made according to specifications, and to turn them over to the city with the covers on them, and it did not contemplate that the pools should for a moment be left uncovered, or insecurely covered. Hence, conceding that, several weeks before the accident to the plaintiff, defendant had completed the pools, and as a finishing touch had placed the covers securely in position. Nevertheless, if the covers had thereafter been removed, whether by defendant or a third person, and the whole work called for by the contract, including the pools, had been tendered as completed, the city would have been under no obligation to accept it, because the pools, without the covers on them, would have been incomplete. As between the defendant and the city, the former was therefore obliged by its contract, not only to complete the work in all its parts, but to keep it in a completed condition until tendered for acceptance, and it would have been no answer to a demand for the fulfillment of that obligation for it to have said that its (once> completed work had been rendered incomplete by the pranks of mischievous boys. Upon the other hand, the defendant, having excavated the pools and having placed the covers on them all, as required by the contract, was under no greater obligation, so far as the public at large was concerned, to keep the covers in position than was any other corporation in the community. Any other corporation in the community would, however, be liable for the negligence of its agents,
The judgment appealed from is accordingly affirmed, at the cost of the appellant.