Basey v. Louisiana Ry. & Navigation Co.

68 So. 824, 137 La. 451
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 24, 1915
DocketNo. 20087
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 So. 824 (Basey v. Louisiana Ry. & Navigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Basey v. Louisiana Ry. & Navigation Co., 68 So. 824, 137 La. 451 (La. 1915).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

Mrs. Basey, aided and assisted by her husband, sues in damages for the sufferings and death of Wilson Scallan, a son of hers by a former marriage^a young [453]*453man in his twenty-second year. The evidence as a whole leads us to believe that he died of tuberculosis, but the contention is that his death was brought on by a blow he received in the side through the negligence of the defendant company while a passenger on one of its trains. The negligence is alleged to have consistéd in that, although the defendant company knew, or ought to have known, that, owing to certain advertisements it had caused to be made, there would be that day a large increase in the number of passengers to be carried, it failed to provide additional accommodation; so that the overcrowded condition of the train forced the young man and others to ride standing in an open gondola, or coal, car, where he received the fatal injury by being thrown off his balance by a violent jerk of the train and precipitated against and upon a square post which served as a support for the side of the coal car.

The defendant company denies that there was any necessity for the young man to ride in the coal car' or in any other unsafe place on the train; denies that he was otherwise injured than by a trifling scratch on the hand, avers that'he died of tuberculosis, and denies that his death was brought on by any injury he may have received on the occasion in question.

The train was the regular train for that day. It consisted of freight cars and one passenger coach and a baggage car. This baggage car was. an ordinary box oar which had. been converted into a baggage and general utility car by the opening of windows and end doors in it. The gondola car< in question was the rearmost car of the train. Next to it, in the direction of the locomotive, was the passenger coach; then came the freight car converted into a baggage and general utility car; then the 'line of freight ears; and finally the locomotive.

There was to be on that day, the 14th of May, 1910, and the next, an aviation exhibition in the city of Alexandria, and the defendant company had advertised the event along its line and announced a reduced passenger rate and an excursion for those who should desire to attend. The train was a local, leaving Naples, in Avoyelles parish, in the morning, and going to Alexandria, a distance of 52 miles. The seating capacity of the coach was about 60, and there were two cushioned benches in the baggage car about 10 feet long. The passengers on the entire trip numbered 127. How many of these had already gotten off or had already come on board, at the time the jolt occurred from which the alleged injury is said to have been received, is uncertain. The distance from Hessmer, where plaintiff’s son boarded the train, to Alexandria, is not stated ; but, the number of stations between Naples and Hessmer being the same as between Hessmer and Alexandria, the probability is that Hessmer is halfway between the two termini, and that therefore the distance between it and Alexandria is 26 miles.

There were still vacant seats in the coach when the train reached Hessmer, and plaintiff’s son secured one. But when the train reached Echo, the second station from Hess mer, a crowd came aboard, among whom were ladies, and the young man gave up his seat. Tt is contended that he was ordered by the conductor to do so, and also to go into the baggage car; but the conductor denies this, and there is no other evidence of it but the halting testimony of one witness, A. M. Fontane, and that of another, Cyriaque Ducote, who admits he did not understand English, in which language the conductor spoke. One other witness, who testified to having given up his seat to the ladies when this crowd game on board, says that he did so because he .preferred it to seeing the ladies stand; and he does not say that he was forced to leave the coach for the box car, but that he did so of his own free will.

Of the 127 passengers, one of them, O. W. Wright, was the bridge inspector of the defendant company, who stood at the res» end [455]*455of the coal car in order to view the bridges as he passed over them; and another, E. E. Dearman, was his friend, who stood with him for the sake of his company. The other 124 had not yet all boarded the train at the time of the alleged accident; for the testimony is to the effect that passengers kept coming on board at every station. But assuming that none of those who had come on board that morning had left, and that all who came on board subsequently to the alleged accident were already on board, the whole number would have been 124; and we do not see that that number of persons could not have remained on the coach and the baggage car without the necessity of any one of them going into the coal car. The evidence shows, however, we think, that after the young man had given up his seat he could not have secured another seat.

While this is so, the evidence leaves it doubtful whether the going into the coal car was not more for the fun of it than from any actual necessity or even convenience. The son of plaintiff was with a crowd of other young men, most of them from the same neighborhood, and the trip was for pleasure, and all were in the spirit of having a good time. Some even climbed to the top of the baggage car. They were all very gay. Eor amusement they pushed and shoved each other about in horse play, and picked up pieces of coal from the floor of the coal car and threw them at the telegraph poles and whatever else appeared to be an inviting target as they went along.

It was not while so engaged, however, that the young man was injured, but while he stood leaning against the side of the car, and we have no reason to believe that he was in greater danger of being thrown down by a jolt of the train while standing there than he would have been if standing in the baggage car or even in the coach.

[1] Moreover, as the day was excessively warm, and the inside of the coach and baggage car was more or less uncomfortably crowded, there was some reason for these young men having recourse to this open air riding, and, if there was any serious danger in it, we think the duty rested upon the carrier, in fulfillment of its obligation to carry them safely, to give them more significant or pointed warning than was done of the danger. True, the conductor says that he told sonle of them that they should not go there; but nothing shows that this information reached plaintiff’s son, and the warning, if such it was, must have been of the most perfunctory kind, since the conductor admits that he collected fares from some of them while they were in this coal car, and he says nothing of his having notified them while so doing that they should not ride in there or that there was any greater danger in their doing so than in riding standing in the coach or in the baggage car; and we think that if such greater danger really existed, and the young men appeared to be unaware of it, it was the legal duty of the conductor to give them serious warning while collecting these fares. Under certain circumstances, it is the duty of the carrier to protect the passenger against his own negligence, under penalty of the failure to do so being regarded as the proximate cause of a resulting accident. 6 Oyc. 641. And all the'more imperative is this duty in a case where it has been the overcrowding of the train, resulting from the mismanagement of the carrier, that has forced the passenger to occupy the dangerous position. Jackson v. Natchez & W. Ry. Co., 114 La. 982, 38 South. 701, 70 L. R. A. 294, 108 Am. St. Rep. 366.

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Bluebook (online)
68 So. 824, 137 La. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basey-v-louisiana-ry-navigation-co-la-1915.