Joseph Adam BUJOL (BUJOLD)

Joseph Adam BUJOL (BUJOLD)

Masculin 1861 - 1933  (72 ans)

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  • Nom Joseph Adam BUJOL (BUJOLD) 
    Naissance 15 Sept 1861  Donaldsonville, Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu 
    Genre Masculin 
    Décès 21 decembre 1933  Louisiana USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu 
    • Adam J Bujal

      Name: Adam J Bujal
      Event Type: Death
      Event Date: 12 Dec 1933
      Event Place: Hohn Solans, Ascension, Louisiana
      Sex: Male
      Age: 71
      Age: 71y 3m
      Marital Status: Married
      Race: White
      Birth Date: 1862
      Birth Year (Estimated): 1862
      Birthplace: Modeste, Louisiana

      Father's Name: Edmond Bujal
      Mother's Name: Herm?Ia Brouyere
      Spouse's Name: Rosalie Medise Bujal
      Spouse's Sex: Female
      Certificate Number: 14091


      Year Age Month Day Name Parish
      1933 71 12 12 BUJOL , ADAM J Ascension
    ID personne I13609  Bugeauld/Bujold
    Dernière modif. 5 août 2023 

    Père Joseph Edmond BUJOL (BUJOLD),   n. 20 nov 1838, Ascension, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. avant 1900, ED 1 Ward 1 Ascension Louisiana Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 61 ans) 
    Relation géniteur / génitrice 
    Mère Mary Hermina BRUYERE,   n. 4 mai 1840, Donaldsonville, Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. 25 déc 1904, Hohen Solms, Ascension, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 64 ans) 
    Relation géniteur / génitrice 
    Mariage 21 oct 1857  Donaldsonville, Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu 
    • Hermina Bruyere in entry for Joseph Edmond Buyol, "Louisiana, Ascension Parish, Index of Marriages, 1773-1963"
    Age au mariage Lui : 18 ans et 11 mois - Elle : ~ 17 ans et 10 mois. 
    Documents

    1900 census Ascension ED1 Ward 1

    #88 Almena Bujol head may 1840 60 yrs widow
    #89 Eve daughter oct 1865 35 yrs
    #90 Adam son sept 1866 33 yrs farmer
    #91 Agustus son aug 1867 33 yrs
    #92 Bruce son july 1869 30 yrs clerk grocer
    #93 H. P. son june 1870 29 yrs merchant

    Mrs. Rosalie Bruyere, Edmond Bujol
    United States, Freedmen's Bureau Labor Contracts, Indenture and Apprenticeship Records, 1865-1872

    Name: Mrs. Rosalie Bruyere
    Plantation: Point Fine Hope
    Event Type: Employment
    Event Date: Sept 30 1865
    Event Place: New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana, United States


    Name: Edmond Bujol
    Plantation: Bujol
    Event Type: Employment
    Event Date: 01 Jul 1865
    Event Place: New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana, United States

    1865 Plantation Agreement with freedmen

    1865 Plantation Agreement with freedmen

    1867 after Civil War (1861-1865), Inspection of Bujol Plantation in St-James Donaldson LA

    #9 Theo Bujol
    Plantation name: Pelico plantation in Modest La.
    Freedmen: 9 male 1 Boy, 1 female
    30 acres- sugar
    22 acres cotton
    60 acres corn
    mthly wage: $10.00


    #12 Edmond Bujol Jr.
    Plantation name: Bujol
    Freedmen: 13 male 2 Boy, 2 female
    80 acres- sugar
    80 acres corn
    mthly wage: $8.00

    1900 census ward 1 Ascension La

    #88 Mrs Amenia Bujol head 60 yrs - widow
    #89 Eve 35 yrs
    #90 Adam 34 yrs
    #91 Augustus 33 yrs
    #92 Bruce 30 yrs
    #93 H.P. 29 yrs

    North west side of DonaldsonVille La. in 1858 also known as Modeste (southern part of region) La. The map was made in 1858 and published in 1859.

    Shows the land owned by Edmond Bijol in Modeste / Donalsonville La in 1858. We see 4 parcels of land with Edmond Bujol name on it. It is possible that the larger section (1) is Edmond Bijol(father 1818) Pelico Plantation, and the smaller portions are Edmond (2, 3, 4) (son 1838). We presume this, since the sons land is beside the land of Henry Bruyere (4) which happens to be his father-in-law. Did he get that portion of land from his father-in-law?

    Source:Norman B. Leventhal Map Center Collection
    Map of the parishes of Pointe Coupee, West Baton Rouge and Iberville : including parts of the parishes of St. Martins and Ascension, Louisiana

    1865-1872 Employment contract for Plantation staff
    New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana, United States

    E J Bujol
    United States, Freedmen's Bureau Labor Contracts, Indenture and Apprenticeship Records, 1865-1872

    J E Bujol
    United States, Freedmen's Bureau Labor Contracts, Indenture and Apprenticeship Records, 1865-1872






    1870 census Ascension LA
    #1 Joseph Bujol 32 Farmer
    #2 Hermina 30
    #3 Marie 9
    #4 Gustave 5
    #5 Samson 2
    #6 Paul 2/12

    #27 Lise Bujol 47 (Keeping house)
    #28 Joseph 25 (at home lame)
    #29 Louise 19
    #30 Leonce 17
    #31 Rosalie 16
    #32 Francoise 14
    #33 Edmond 23
    #34 Amelia 23
    #35 James 1
    Photos

    Signature de Edmond Joseph Bujol et son fils Joseph Edmond Bujol prise vers 1865-1872 sur le contrat "United States, Freedmen's Bureau Labor Contracts"pour les employer de leur plantation
    ID Famille F4465  Feuille familiale  |  Tableau familial

    Famille Rosaline Elizabeth MEDINE,   n. vers 1886, Ascension, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. 22 juillet 1951, Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 65 ans) 
    Mariage 28 Avril 1897  Smoke Bend, Ascension, Louisiana Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu 
    • Rosalie Medine
      Louisiana Parish Marriages, 1837-1957

      Name:
      Joseph Adam Bryol (Bujol)
      Event Type: Marriage
      Event Place: Ascension, Louisiana, United States
      Event Place (Original): Ascension
      Gender: Male
      Spouse's Name: Rosalie Medine
      Spouse's Gender: Female


      Joseph Adam Bujol
      Louisiana, Ascension Parish, Index of Marriages, 1773-1963

      Name: Joseph Adam Bujol
      Event Type: Marriage
      Event Date: 1897
      Event Place: Ascension, Louisiana, United States
      Event Place (Original): Ascension Parish, Louisiana
      Gender: Male
      Spouse's Name: Rosalie Medine
      Spouse's Gender:Female
      Page Number: 358
      Volume Number: 6

      Marriage Joseph Adam Bujol married Rosalie Elizabeth Medina, daughter of Lorenzo Carlos Medina and Antoinette Falcon, on 28 Apr 1897 at St. Francis of Assisi at Smoke Bend, Ascension Parish, LA. Witnesses were Desire Medine, H. P. Bujol, and Ida Knoblock.
      [S18] Diocese of Baton Rouge, Catholic Church Records 1707-1900. BRDA : Baton Rouge, LA, 1978-2007.
    Age au mariage Lui : ~ 35 ans et 3 mois - Elle : ~ 11 ans
    Recensement 1920  Ascension, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu 
    Adam Bujol
    Census • United States Census, 1920

    Event Type Census
    Name Adam Bujol
    Sex Male
    Age 57
    Event Date 1920
    Event Place Ascension, Louisiana, United States
    Event Place (Original) Louisiana, Ascension
    Birth Year (Estimated) 1863
    Birthplace Louisiana
    Marital Status Married
    Race White
    Relationship to Head of Household Head
    Father's Birthplace Louisiana
    Mother's Birthplace Louisiana
    Household Identifier 186
    Line Number 79
    Sheet Letter B
    Sheet Number 8
    Sheet Number and Letter 8B

    The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)

    Adam Bujol's Spouses and Children
    Rosalie Bujol Wife F 42 Louisiana
    Olga Bujol Daughter F 22 Louisiana
    Arcol Bujol Son M 17 Louisiana
    Lynda Bujol Daughter F 12 Louisiana
    Ena Bujol Daughter F 9 Louisiana
    Lynden Bujol Son M 7 Louisiana
    Clifton Bujol Son M 3 Louisiana

     
    Événement 17 avr 1933  Jennings, La Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu 
    Bujol v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 147 So. 545 (La. Ct. App. 1933)
    Louisiana Court of Appeal

    Filed: April 17th, 1933

    Precedential Status: Precedential

    Citations: 147 So. 545

    Docket Number: No. 1116.

    Author: Bbanc


    Linden Bujol, eighteen years of age, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bujol, was killed by electrocution by a high-tension wire of the defendant company, Gulf States Utilities Company, in the town of Jennings, La., at about 6:30 o'clock in the evening of June 5, 1931.

    He was an employee of the Couch Porter Construction Company, which was engaged in building a paved highway in Jefferson Davis parish; his particular duty on the day on which he was killed being to connect a water pipe line along the proposed highway to furnish water with which to mix the concrete. His parents were awarded compensation for his death under the Employers' Liability Statute (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended), and the employer has intervened in this proceeding claiming the right to recover payments it has made, and is obligated to make, against the defendant.

    Plaintiffs allege in their petition that their son was killed through the gross carelessness and negligence of the defendant company, specifying numerous acts thereof, the most important of which only it is necessary here to note as follows: (1) That it failed to properly protect and guard its high-powered wires by insulation; (2) that it gave no signs of warning by posting or otherwise of the potential danger lying in its lines; (3) that it unnecessarily overcharged its wires and permitted them to sag, and especially at the place where this accident occurred they sagged to such a point as to have made it extremely dangerous to workmen, travelers, and pedestrians who had to be in that vicinity.

    Alleging that their son was the only member of their family to whom they could look for support in their declining years, and that because they will be deprived thereof as well as of his love, affection, and companionship, plaintiffs each ask to be awarded damages against the defendant in the sum of $25,000.

    The defendant, for answer to plaintiffs' petition, denies all the acts of carelessness and negligence charged against it, and avers that its power line was constructed, maintained, and operated in the usual prescribed and proper manner, and that the accident and subsequent death of their son was caused through his own carelessness and negligence "in attempting to perform the work for which he was employed in a manner known to him to be unsafe and dangerous and, contrary to the positive instructions of his employer." As an alternative, defendant specially pleads contributory negligence. The petition of the construction company was also answered by the defendant and the intervention thus put at issue.

    From a judgment in the district court rejecting the demands of the plaintiffs and of the intervener, they have all taken this appeal.

    The place where this accident occurred is within the corporate limits of the town of Jennings, but, from the fact as it appears in the record that defendant's power line ran through an abandoned rice field inclosed within a barbed wire fence, it can readily be assumed that it was an uninhabited part of the city.

    Plaintiffs' son had only been working with the construction company a few days before he was killed. He was in a crew of three men engaged in connecting pipes with which to lay down a water line as heretofore stated. The pipes they were using were old and rusty, and, before being connected, had to be cleared of the accumulated rust on the inside. To do this, it was necessary to hammer them on the outside so as to loosen the rust and then to stand them on end, so that they could be cleared of the particles. Of the crew of three, young Bujol was the only educated man, and, whilst it cannot be said from the testimony as we read it that he was the foreman, still he seemed to have more to do and say on the job than the two others who were illiterate.

    Just before the accident they had been hammering a length of pipe measuring 22 feet 2½ inches long, and were standing it on end to clear it of the rust. At this moment they were inside the barbed wire fence which inclosed the rice field, standing either on top or on the side of a small dam or levee formerly used to hold the water in the rice field. This levee was almost directly under the power lines of the defendant company, and, as they raised the pipe, the top end of it either came in direct contact with or so near a high voltage line as to attract the current from it, and the result was that the two other men who were holding the standing pipe with Bujol were severely shocked, and he was killed almost instantly.

    Taking up the charges of negligence in the order in which we have stated them, we might say right here that we do not believe that there is any testimony to support either of the first two.

    It is not disputed that the wires of the defendant company at this point in its line were not insulated, but the evidence shows that a line of this kind is not generally insulated, *Page 547 and that the National Bureau of Standards whose rulings govern in their construction does not require that they be. The duty of insulation seems to be limited, according to the authorities as we read them, "to those points or places where there is reason to apprehend that persons may come in contact with the wires, and the law does not compel electric companies to insulate their wires everywhere, but only at places where people may go for work, business or pleasure, that is, where they may reasonably be expected to go." Ruling Case Law, vol. 9, p. 1213, par. 31. From 20 Corpus Juris, p. 355, par. 42, we quote the following:

    "The exercise of a sufficient degree of care requires a careful and proper insulation of all wires and appliances in places where there is likelihood or reasonable probability of human contact therewith. * * *

    "The duty to insulate does not extend to the entire system or to parts of the line where no one could reasonably be expected to come in contact with it."

    Here it is shown that the wire which carried the charge of electricity that killed young Bujol was 20 feet 2½ inches above the top of the rice levee, which itself is shown to have been as much as 2 feet high. Moreover, as also shown, it ran through an old rice field, where we hardly believe it could be contended that there was reasonable likelihood or probability of people coming in contact with the wires. The nature of the work Bujol was engaged in and the circumstances under which he came in contact with the wire in this case furnishes, in our opinion, an exceptional case, which certainly was not in the contemplation of the rule announced in the authorities cited.

    It is not disputed either that defendant posted no signs or warnings of danger in the vicinity where this accident occurred, but we think that what has been said with reference to the lack of insulation of the wires applies with equal, if not greater, force, in regard to the placing of warning signs. We have not been referred to any law or custom which requires the posting of such signs in places like this, where it is not reasonable to expect people to come in contact with the heavily loaded wires.

    This brings us to a consideration of the third and most serious charge of negligence against this defendant. This charge involves the sagging of the line and its being overcharged with electricity. Counsel for the plaintiff's stresses very strongly the point that the pipe which Bujol was handling did not come in actual contact with the wire, but that the electric current flowing through the wire was of such force that it reached out and ran into the pipe, thus bringing on the shock which killed him. The allegation made in the petition is that "the current leaped out several feet" and threw its full force into the pipe that the deceased was handling, causing his horrible death. The purport of this allegation of course is to impress upon the court the excessiveness of the load of electric current in the wire, as it is further alleged that it "was overcharged beyond the necessary needs and uses for its purpose."

    To support their charge of negligence that the wire was overloaded as they alleged, plaintiffs rely on the testimony of a young man named Chiasson, who says that at the time of the accident he was about 400 feet from the spot at which Bujol was killed, that he was attracted by the flash emitted from the wire, and estimates the distance between the pipe and wire at from 6 to 18 inches. He seems to be positive that they never came into actual contact with each other. This witness, on cross-examination, says that from the place and position in which he was standing the pipe was between him and the wire, and whilst he is made to say further on that there was nothing to obscure his view, and insists that the pipe and the wire did not touch, it would seem impossible, considering his position and the distance at which he was, which really is shown to be more than the 400 feet estimated by him, that he could tell with such positiveness that there was no actual contact, much less measure the length of the flash or spark that was thrown from the wire.

    The testimony shows that the wire used by defendant is what is known as No. 4 (meaning its size), and is sufficient to carry the current of 33,000 volts, which was being transmitted through it. Defendant also produced an expert witness, Professor C.W. Ricker, who holds a degree as master of science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a degree of master of electrical engineering from Harvard University, not to mention other admitted qualifications, who testifies positively that a spark could not possibly jump more than 2 inches from a 33,000 volt line to another conductor, "Under the worst possible condition," he says, "it would be less than two inches." By "the worst possible conditions" we understand him to mean conditions favorable to the easy conduct of electric current, and no such conditions are shown to have existed on the evening of this accident. After an actual contact between the wire and a conductor, however, as we understand his testimony further, and on their separation, there is a spark created; "an arc drawn out," as he states, "anywhere from six inches to three to five feet long." That most probably is what occurred in this case and was the flash observed by the witness Chiasson.

    A comparison between the length of the pipe which was 22 feet, 2½ inches long, and the clearance between the top of the levee on which Bujol and the other employees were handling it, and the sagging wire directly over the very spot at which they were, which *Page 548 is shown to have been 20 feet 2½ inches, shows that it would have been possible for the pipe to have come in actual contact with the wire as, had it been standing perpendicularly, it would have extended 2 feet and 6 inches above it.

    The testimony shows that at the spot where the accident took place, about midway between two poles 300 feet apart, the wire sagged about 3 feet 6 inches. This, it appears, is not more than the usual sag that occurs in a line constructed as was this one according to the requirements of the Bureau of National Standards.

    Our consideration of the facts as they appear in the record leaves us with grave doubt as to whether plaintiffs have shown any negligence whatever on the part of the defendant. Viewing the case from the standpoint most unfavorable to the defendant, however, we do not see how, under the testimony, plaintiffs can hope to overcome the plea of contributory negligence on which the lower court rejected their demands.

    W.H. Glaskow, assistant superintendent of the Porter Construction Company, young Bujol's employer, and who had charge of the laying down the water pipe line on which his crew was working, testifies that he told him to be careful of the wires above. He had observed, he says, that in raising the first two or three pipes he was getting close to the wires, and he told him to take them in the street to knock the rust out of them, and then throw them back again to connect the joints. Later during the day, he says that his attention was called by Mr. Norman, an officer of the construction company, to the fact that the pipes were being raised on the sidewalk, apparently too near the wires, and that he again tried to impress upon the deceased, this time a little harder, that the wire was dangerous, telling him rather emphatically that the wires would "kill the hell out of him" if he did not stay far away enough from it. C. M. Goodwin, foreman for the construction company, also swears that he cautioned him about the danger of the wires, and heard Glaskow warn him and instruct him to go out to the middle of the road before standing the pipes up.

    Willie Goudeau, who worked in the same crew with Bujol, testifies that he knew of the danger in working too near the wires, and told him that they had better be careful. John Guedry, negro helper, also in the same crew, says that he knew enough about electricity to realize that the power lines were dangerous if anything came in contact with them, and he admits that a statement given by him some time after the accident to the effect that he heard Goudeau tell Bujol to be careful is correct. These last two were witnesses for the plaintiffs.

    Such testimony is convincing that the deceased had ample warning, if not positive instructions, on the subject. The fact is that he hardly needed any, as from the testimony it appears that he was an intelligent young man ready to enter the eleventh grade in high school at Donaldsonville, and had had working experience in an oil refinery at Goodhope, a few miles out of New Orleans. Because of his education, it is reasonable to presume that he was better able to appreciate the danger involved around these high voltage lines than were, in this respect, his less fortunate fellow workmen.

    Under the facts as they appear, the deceased can be said to have voluntarily exposed himself to a danger of which he had been apprised, and in fact which he personally must have realized, and he must be held to have contributed to the accident which caused his unfortunate death. We think that the following cases cited by the district judge support his finding on this point: Borell v. Cumberland Telegraph Telephone Co., 133 La. 630, 63 So. 247, L.R.A. 1916D, 1064; Bouchon v. New Orleans Railway Light Co.,154 La. 397, 97 So. 587; Boudreaux v. Louisiana Power Light Co., 16 La. App. 664, 135 So. 90. Counsel for plaintiffs cites with confidence the case of Card v. Wenatchee Valley Gas Electric Co., from the state of Washington, reported in77 Wash. 564, 137 P. 1047, 1048, in which it appears that the high voltage wire hung 3 feet 6 inches nearer the ground than did the wires in this case, and there was no evidence that the deceased "knew of the extreme high power of the current, nor of its deadly effect to one coming in contact with it." In this case, young Bujol not only knew of the danger, as he had been told by Goudeau to be careful, but he had been positively warned and cautioned about it by his employers. We have carefully considered the other authorities cited by counsel, but find that, considered in connection with the facts here involved, they have no application.

    Counsel for plaintiffs also invokes the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, but we are of the opinion that the rule laid down in the case of Boudreaux v. Louisiana Power Light Co., supra, to the effect that the doctrine has no place in the presence of direct evidence, applies with equal force in this case. As stated by the learned trial judge, "the doctrine allows a presumption of negligence, on the part of a defendant, as arising under certain circumstances, but has no application where it is clearly shown that the deceased was killed by his own negligence."

    We conclude that the judgment appealed from properly sustained the plea of contributory negligence and rejected the demands of the plaintiffs as well as of the intervener, and it is therefore affirmed. *Page 549 
    Enfants 
     1. Olga BUJOL (BUJOLD),   n. 28 jan 1898, Louisiana USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. 21 juin 1981, Modeste, Ascension, Louisiana, USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 83 ans)  [Père: géniteur / génitrice]  [Mère: géniteur / génitrice]
    +2. Orrin Joseph BUJOL (BUJOLD),   n. 15 Aout 1899, Louisiana USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. 7 Novembre 1982, Jennings, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana, USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 83 ans)  [Père: géniteur / génitrice]  [Mère: géniteur / génitrice]
    +3. Arcol Joseph BUJOLD,   n. 1 octobre 1903   d. 5 decembre 1979, Edgerly, Calcasieu, Louisiana Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 76 ans)  [Père: géniteur / génitrice]  [Mère: géniteur / génitrice]
     4. Linda BUJOL (BUJOLD),   n. 19 mars 1908, Modeste, Ascension, Louisiana, USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. 6 juil 1999, Norco, St. Charles, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 91 ans)  [Père: géniteur / génitrice]  [Mère: géniteur / génitrice]
     5. Anna Leonise dite Ena BUJOL (BUJOLD),   n. 1911  [Père: géniteur / génitrice]  [Mère: géniteur / génitrice]
     6. Linden Adam BUJOL (BUJOLD),   n. 19 Avril 1913, Modeste, Ascension, Louisiana, USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. 5 Juin 1931, Jennings, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana, USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 18 ans)  [Père: géniteur / génitrice]  [Mère: géniteur / génitrice]
    +7. Paul Clifton dit Sweet BUJOL,   n. 10 juin 1916, Louisiana USA Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieud. 11 Fev 1964, Donaldsonville, Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States Trouver tous les individus avec un évènement dans ce lieu (Âgé de 48 ans)  [Père: géniteur / génitrice]  [Mère: géniteur / génitrice]
    Documents

    1940 Census Ascension La

    #67 Rosalie Bujold (Medine) (head)
    #68 Olga ( daughter)
    #69 Modeste Medine (sister)
    #70 Laurence Medine (father)

    Adam Bujol
    United States Census, 1920

    Name: Adam Bujol
    Event Type:Census
    Event Date: 1920
    Event Place: Police Jury Ward 1, Ascension, Louisiana, United States
    Event Place (Original): Police Jury Ward 1, Ascension, Louisiana, United States
    Gender: Male
    Age: 57
    Marital Status: Married
    Race: White
    Race (Original): White
    Birth Year (Estimated): 1863
    Birthplace: Louisiana

    Father's Birthplace: Louisiana
    Mother's Birthplace: Louisiana
    Relationship to Head of Household:Head
    Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Head
    Sheet Letter: B
    Sheet Number: 8


    Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
    Adam Bujol Head Male 57 Louisiana
    Rosalie Bujol Wife Female 42 Louisiana
    Olga Bujol Daughter Female 22 Louisiana
    Arcol Bujol Son Male 17 Louisiana
    Lynda Bujol Daughter Female 12 Louisiana
    Ena Bujol Daughter Female 9 Louisiana
    Lynden Bujol Son Male 7 Louisiana
    Clifton Bujol Son Male 3 Louisiana
    ID Famille F4571  Feuille familiale  |  Tableau familial
    Dernière modif. 11 nov 2023 

  • Carte d'événements
    Lien Google MapNaissance - 15 Sept 1861 - Donaldsonville, Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States Lien Google Earth
    Lien Google MapMariage - 28 Avril 1897 - Smoke Bend, Ascension, Louisiana Lien Google Earth
    Lien Google MapRecensement - Adam Bujol Census • United States Census, 1920 Event Type Census Name Adam Bujol Sex Male Age 57 Event Date 1920 Event Place Ascension, Louisiana, United States Event Place (Original) Louisiana, Ascension Birth Year (Estimated) 1863 Birthplace Louisiana Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Head Father's Birthplace Louisiana Mother's Birthplace Louisiana Household Identifier 186 Line Number 79 Sheet Letter B Sheet Number 8 Sheet Number and Letter 8B The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) Adam Bujol's Spouses and Children Rosalie Bujol Wife F 42 Louisiana Olga Bujol Daughter F 22 Louisiana Arcol Bujol Son M 17 Louisiana Lynda Bujol Daughter F 12 Louisiana Ena Bujol Daughter F 9 Louisiana Lynden Bujol Son M 7 Louisiana Clifton Bujol Son M 3 Louisiana - 1920 - Ascension, Louisiana, United States Lien Google Earth
    Lien Google MapÉvénement - Bujol v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 147 So. 545 (La. Ct. App. 1933) Louisiana Court of Appeal Filed: April 17th, 1933 Precedential Status: Precedential Citations: 147 So. 545 Docket Number: No. 1116. Author: Bbanc Linden Bujol, eighteen years of age, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bujol, was killed by electrocution by a high-tension wire of the defendant company, Gulf States Utilities Company, in the town of Jennings, La., at about 6:30 o'clock in the evening of June 5, 1931. He was an employee of the Couch Porter Construction Company, which was engaged in building a paved highway in Jefferson Davis parish; his particular duty on the day on which he was killed being to connect a water pipe line along the proposed highway to furnish water with which to mix the concrete. His parents were awarded compensation for his death under the Employers' Liability Statute (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended), and the employer has intervened in this proceeding claiming the right to recover payments it has made, and is obligated to make, against the defendant. Plaintiffs allege in their petition that their son was killed through the gross carelessness and negligence of the defendant company, specifying numerous acts thereof, the most important of which only it is necessary here to note as follows: (1) That it failed to properly protect and guard its high-powered wires by insulation; (2) that it gave no signs of warning by posting or otherwise of the potential danger lying in its lines; (3) that it unnecessarily overcharged its wires and permitted them to sag, and especially at the place where this accident occurred they sagged to such a point as to have made it extremely dangerous to workmen, travelers, and pedestrians who had to be in that vicinity. Alleging that their son was the only member of their family to whom they could look for support in their declining years, and that because they will be deprived thereof as well as of his love, affection, and companionship, plaintiffs each ask to be awarded damages against the defendant in the sum of $25,000. The defendant, for answer to plaintiffs' petition, denies all the acts of carelessness and negligence charged against it, and avers that its power line was constructed, maintained, and operated in the usual prescribed and proper manner, and that the accident and subsequent death of their son was caused through his own carelessness and negligence "in attempting to perform the work for which he was employed in a manner known to him to be unsafe and dangerous and, contrary to the positive instructions of his employer." As an alternative, defendant specially pleads contributory negligence. The petition of the construction company was also answered by the defendant and the intervention thus put at issue. From a judgment in the district court rejecting the demands of the plaintiffs and of the intervener, they have all taken this appeal. The place where this accident occurred is within the corporate limits of the town of Jennings, but, from the fact as it appears in the record that defendant's power line ran through an abandoned rice field inclosed within a barbed wire fence, it can readily be assumed that it was an uninhabited part of the city. Plaintiffs' son had only been working with the construction company a few days before he was killed. He was in a crew of three men engaged in connecting pipes with which to lay down a water line as heretofore stated. The pipes they were using were old and rusty, and, before being connected, had to be cleared of the accumulated rust on the inside. To do this, it was necessary to hammer them on the outside so as to loosen the rust and then to stand them on end, so that they could be cleared of the particles. Of the crew of three, young Bujol was the only educated man, and, whilst it cannot be said from the testimony as we read it that he was the foreman, still he seemed to have more to do and say on the job than the two others who were illiterate. Just before the accident they had been hammering a length of pipe measuring 22 feet 2½ inches long, and were standing it on end to clear it of the rust. At this moment they were inside the barbed wire fence which inclosed the rice field, standing either on top or on the side of a small dam or levee formerly used to hold the water in the rice field. This levee was almost directly under the power lines of the defendant company, and, as they raised the pipe, the top end of it either came in direct contact with or so near a high voltage line as to attract the current from it, and the result was that the two other men who were holding the standing pipe with Bujol were severely shocked, and he was killed almost instantly. Taking up the charges of negligence in the order in which we have stated them, we might say right here that we do not believe that there is any testimony to support either of the first two. It is not disputed that the wires of the defendant company at this point in its line were not insulated, but the evidence shows that a line of this kind is not generally insulated, *Page 547 and that the National Bureau of Standards whose rulings govern in their construction does not require that they be. The duty of insulation seems to be limited, according to the authorities as we read them, "to those points or places where there is reason to apprehend that persons may come in contact with the wires, and the law does not compel electric companies to insulate their wires everywhere, but only at places where people may go for work, business or pleasure, that is, where they may reasonably be expected to go." Ruling Case Law, vol. 9, p. 1213, par. 31. From 20 Corpus Juris, p. 355, par. 42, we quote the following: "The exercise of a sufficient degree of care requires a careful and proper insulation of all wires and appliances in places where there is likelihood or reasonable probability of human contact therewith. * * * "The duty to insulate does not extend to the entire system or to parts of the line where no one could reasonably be expected to come in contact with it." Here it is shown that the wire which carried the charge of electricity that killed young Bujol was 20 feet 2½ inches above the top of the rice levee, which itself is shown to have been as much as 2 feet high. Moreover, as also shown, it ran through an old rice field, where we hardly believe it could be contended that there was reasonable likelihood or probability of people coming in contact with the wires. The nature of the work Bujol was engaged in and the circumstances under which he came in contact with the wire in this case furnishes, in our opinion, an exceptional case, which certainly was not in the contemplation of the rule announced in the authorities cited. It is not disputed either that defendant posted no signs or warnings of danger in the vicinity where this accident occurred, but we think that what has been said with reference to the lack of insulation of the wires applies with equal, if not greater, force, in regard to the placing of warning signs. We have not been referred to any law or custom which requires the posting of such signs in places like this, where it is not reasonable to expect people to come in contact with the heavily loaded wires. This brings us to a consideration of the third and most serious charge of negligence against this defendant. This charge involves the sagging of the line and its being overcharged with electricity. Counsel for the plaintiff's stresses very strongly the point that the pipe which Bujol was handling did not come in actual contact with the wire, but that the electric current flowing through the wire was of such force that it reached out and ran into the pipe, thus bringing on the shock which killed him. The allegation made in the petition is that "the current leaped out several feet" and threw its full force into the pipe that the deceased was handling, causing his horrible death. The purport of this allegation of course is to impress upon the court the excessiveness of the load of electric current in the wire, as it is further alleged that it "was overcharged beyond the necessary needs and uses for its purpose." To support their charge of negligence that the wire was overloaded as they alleged, plaintiffs rely on the testimony of a young man named Chiasson, who says that at the time of the accident he was about 400 feet from the spot at which Bujol was killed, that he was attracted by the flash emitted from the wire, and estimates the distance between the pipe and wire at from 6 to 18 inches. He seems to be positive that they never came into actual contact with each other. This witness, on cross-examination, says that from the place and position in which he was standing the pipe was between him and the wire, and whilst he is made to say further on that there was nothing to obscure his view, and insists that the pipe and the wire did not touch, it would seem impossible, considering his position and the distance at which he was, which really is shown to be more than the 400 feet estimated by him, that he could tell with such positiveness that there was no actual contact, much less measure the length of the flash or spark that was thrown from the wire. The testimony shows that the wire used by defendant is what is known as No. 4 (meaning its size), and is sufficient to carry the current of 33,000 volts, which was being transmitted through it. Defendant also produced an expert witness, Professor C.W. Ricker, who holds a degree as master of science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a degree of master of electrical engineering from Harvard University, not to mention other admitted qualifications, who testifies positively that a spark could not possibly jump more than 2 inches from a 33,000 volt line to another conductor, "Under the worst possible condition," he says, "it would be less than two inches." By "the worst possible conditions" we understand him to mean conditions favorable to the easy conduct of electric current, and no such conditions are shown to have existed on the evening of this accident. After an actual contact between the wire and a conductor, however, as we understand his testimony further, and on their separation, there is a spark created; "an arc drawn out," as he states, "anywhere from six inches to three to five feet long." That most probably is what occurred in this case and was the flash observed by the witness Chiasson. A comparison between the length of the pipe which was 22 feet, 2½ inches long, and the clearance between the top of the levee on which Bujol and the other employees were handling it, and the sagging wire directly over the very spot at which they were, which *Page 548 is shown to have been 20 feet 2½ inches, shows that it would have been possible for the pipe to have come in actual contact with the wire as, had it been standing perpendicularly, it would have extended 2 feet and 6 inches above it. The testimony shows that at the spot where the accident took place, about midway between two poles 300 feet apart, the wire sagged about 3 feet 6 inches. This, it appears, is not more than the usual sag that occurs in a line constructed as was this one according to the requirements of the Bureau of National Standards. Our consideration of the facts as they appear in the record leaves us with grave doubt as to whether plaintiffs have shown any negligence whatever on the part of the defendant. Viewing the case from the standpoint most unfavorable to the defendant, however, we do not see how, under the testimony, plaintiffs can hope to overcome the plea of contributory negligence on which the lower court rejected their demands. W.H. Glaskow, assistant superintendent of the Porter Construction Company, young Bujol's employer, and who had charge of the laying down the water pipe line on which his crew was working, testifies that he told him to be careful of the wires above. He had observed, he says, that in raising the first two or three pipes he was getting close to the wires, and he told him to take them in the street to knock the rust out of them, and then throw them back again to connect the joints. Later during the day, he says that his attention was called by Mr. Norman, an officer of the construction company, to the fact that the pipes were being raised on the sidewalk, apparently too near the wires, and that he again tried to impress upon the deceased, this time a little harder, that the wire was dangerous, telling him rather emphatically that the wires would "kill the hell out of him" if he did not stay far away enough from it. C. M. Goodwin, foreman for the construction company, also swears that he cautioned him about the danger of the wires, and heard Glaskow warn him and instruct him to go out to the middle of the road before standing the pipes up. Willie Goudeau, who worked in the same crew with Bujol, testifies that he knew of the danger in working too near the wires, and told him that they had better be careful. John Guedry, negro helper, also in the same crew, says that he knew enough about electricity to realize that the power lines were dangerous if anything came in contact with them, and he admits that a statement given by him some time after the accident to the effect that he heard Goudeau tell Bujol to be careful is correct. These last two were witnesses for the plaintiffs. Such testimony is convincing that the deceased had ample warning, if not positive instructions, on the subject. The fact is that he hardly needed any, as from the testimony it appears that he was an intelligent young man ready to enter the eleventh grade in high school at Donaldsonville, and had had working experience in an oil refinery at Goodhope, a few miles out of New Orleans. Because of his education, it is reasonable to presume that he was better able to appreciate the danger involved around these high voltage lines than were, in this respect, his less fortunate fellow workmen. Under the facts as they appear, the deceased can be said to have voluntarily exposed himself to a danger of which he had been apprised, and in fact which he personally must have realized, and he must be held to have contributed to the accident which caused his unfortunate death. We think that the following cases cited by the district judge support his finding on this point: Borell v. Cumberland Telegraph Telephone Co., 133 La. 630, 63 So. 247, L.R.A. 1916D, 1064; Bouchon v. New Orleans Railway Light Co.,154 La. 397, 97 So. 587; Boudreaux v. Louisiana Power Light Co., 16 La. App. 664, 135 So. 90. Counsel for plaintiffs cites with confidence the case of Card v. Wenatchee Valley Gas Electric Co., from the state of Washington, reported in77 Wash. 564, 137 P. 1047, 1048, in which it appears that the high voltage wire hung 3 feet 6 inches nearer the ground than did the wires in this case, and there was no evidence that the deceased "knew of the extreme high power of the current, nor of its deadly effect to one coming in contact with it." In this case, young Bujol not only knew of the danger, as he had been told by Goudeau to be careful, but he had been positively warned and cautioned about it by his employers. We have carefully considered the other authorities cited by counsel, but find that, considered in connection with the facts here involved, they have no application. Counsel for plaintiffs also invokes the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, but we are of the opinion that the rule laid down in the case of Boudreaux v. Louisiana Power Light Co., supra, to the effect that the doctrine has no place in the presence of direct evidence, applies with equal force in this case. As stated by the learned trial judge, "the doctrine allows a presumption of negligence, on the part of a defendant, as arising under certain circumstances, but has no application where it is clearly shown that the deceased was killed by his own negligence." We conclude that the judgment appealed from properly sustained the plea of contributory negligence and rejected the demands of the plaintiffs as well as of the intervener, and it is therefore affirmed. *Page 549 - 17 avr 1933 - Jennings, La Lien Google Earth
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