Belshe v. Gant

92 So. 2d 719, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 637
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 4, 1957
DocketNo. 20756
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 So. 2d 719 (Belshe v. Gant) 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
Belshe v. Gant, 92 So. 2d 719, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 637 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Euna McEIveen Belshe, wife of William Harvey Belshe, who is the other plaintiff, sustained serious physical injuries when she and a taxicab came into violent contact shortly after midnight in the early morning of September 24, 1953, near the neutral ground of Tulane Avenue at the intersection of South Claiborne Avenue, in New Orleans.

The taxicab was owned by Woodrow Wilson Gant and was being operated by Edward Gant, and in accordance with the [720]*720requirements of Municipal Ordinance No. 16,605, C.C.S., there had been posted with the authorities a bond under which Nola Cabs, Inc., assumed liability to pay to such person or persons as might be injured by the negligent operation of the said cab not more than $5,000 to any one person nor more than $10,000 to any two or more persons.

Alleging that the accident had been caused solely by negligence of Edward Gant, the driver of the cab, in failing to avoid striking Mrs. Belshe, she and her husband brought suit against him, as well as against Woodrow Wilson Gant and Nola Cabs, Inc., praying for solidary judgment against all three in the sum of $42,-700. They prayed for trial by jury.

The three defendants admitted the ownership of the cab by Woodrow Wilson Gant, its operation by Edward Gant, the posting of the bond by Nola Cabs, Inc., and the occurrence of the accident. Nola Cabs, Inc., however, especially setting forth the bond limits already stated and all defendants denying any negligence on the part of the operator of the cab, and averring, in the alternative, that if there was any such negligence the true cause of the accident was the contributory negligence of Mrs. Belshe in walking into the side or into the path of the oncoming taxicab when it was no longer possible for it to be brought to a stop.

There was a verdict in favor of Mrs. Belshe alone and against all three defendants in the sum of $8,200. Mrs. Belshe then filed a motion to remit up to the sum of $3,200 insofar as the verdict was against Nola Cabs, Inc., reducing the amount thereof as against that company to the limit of $5,000 for the injury of any one person as fixed in the bond. All defendants filed a-rule for a new trial. A new trial was granted and the matter was transferred for the second trial to another division of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans. At this second trial, because of the absence of an important witness, it was agreed that the attorneys would readh to the jury the evidence which had beeni taken and transcribed at the first trial.. This was done and the matter was submitted to the second jury on this record.. There resulted a divided verdict of ten to' two in favor of both plaintiffs in the sum of $4,300 solidarily against all three defendants. The District Judge refused to' grant a new trial and signed the judgment, in accordance with the jury verdict. Aik defendants have appealed suspensively.

Shortly after midnight Mrs. Belshe, an!', unusually stout woman 60 years of age,, left the rear entrance of the Charity Hospital in New Orleans and walked down the riverside sidewalk of South Claiborne Avenue towards Tulane Avenue, intending' to cross to the lower side of Tulane Avenue. She was. accompanied by her nephew,. Spencer McMillin. South Claiborne Avenue is an extremely wide main traffic artery having two wide roadways separated by a very broad neutral ground. Tulane Avenue is also a much used thoroughfare having two fairly wide roadways and a neutral ground which, however, is much narrower than is the neutral ground of Claiborne-Avenue. At the intersection are several automatic semaphore signal lights, one of which, on the neutral ground of Tulane-Avenue, directly faced Mrs. Belshe as she entered the roadway on the upper side of' Tulane Avenue. Mrs. Belshe and her nephew both say that as they neared the-curb line of Tulane Avenue, they looked; to their left and saw the headlights of two-approaching automobiles which were on. the upper roadway of Tulane Avenue and; were going towards the Mississippi River,, one in the lane nearest the neutral ground, and the other in the second lane, and that, these two cars were apparently a block or a block and a half away. This is corroborated by the driver of the two cars.

C. J. Henrichs, who is a witness, was-operating the cab which was in the second lane and Edward Gant was driving the cab which was near the neutral ground„It was raining at the time. Some of the: [721]*721witnesses say that tHere was only a drizzle. Henrichs says that it was raining “very heavily * * * but it wasn’t a downpour.”

Mrs. Belshe and her nephew stepped into the roadway of Tulane Avenue — whether alongside each other is a disputed question — some saying that they were together and others that McMillin must have crossed first with Mrs. Belshe following some distance behind him. It is evident that when the accident occurred McMillin had reached the neutral ground and was standing on it when his aunt was struck by or walked into the side of the second cab which was driven by Gant. Henrichs, the driver of the first cab, which was in the second or middle lane of Tulane Avenue, says that he saw Mrs. Belshe as she approached the lane in which he was driving his car and that he thought that she would stop as pedestrians so often do and would allow his car to pass, but that when he realized that she was not. going to stop, he swerved his car to its right in order to pass around her as she continued on her way towards the neutral ground. This maneuver on the part of Henrichs exposed Mrs. Belshe to the view of Gant, the operator of the other cab, and before it could be brought to a stop, Mrs. Belshe had either walked into its right side near the front or had been struck by the front of Gant’s cab. She was knocked into the air damaging the right end of the outside sun visor with which that car was equipped and' shattering the right side of the glass windshield.

The impact occurred so soon after Henrichs had swerved his car that Gant apparently did not see Mrs. Belshe. He says that Henrichs swerved “to his right * * * and just then I heard a noise.” He applied his brakes and, as already stated, the only damage sustained by his car was bending of the right end of the sun visor and the shattering of the right end of the windshield, both of which are five or six feet from the front end of’ the car.

Counsel for plaintiffs argues that Mrs. Belshe must have been struck by the front bumper of the car since her left leg was fractured. This is not necessarily so. As shown she is a very heavy person and the impact with the car must have caused her to fall across the rear end of the hood and then to the ground and it is possible that the leg was fractured by impact with the side of the car or when she struck the ground rather than by the front bumper.

Gant brought this cab to a stop when about nine feet beyond the point at which the impact took place.

It is not contended that the speed of either car was excessive, it being shown that they were running at about the same speed, which was about 20 or 25 miles per hour. In fact, the claim of' Mrs. Belshe is largely based on the contention that the speed of the Gant cab was so moderate that if Gant had been on the alert he would have seen Mrs. Belshe, would have realized her peril and could have stopped his car before it came into contact with her.

The principal arguments on behalf of Mrs.

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Related

Martinez ex rel. Martinez v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
327 S.W.2d 855 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1959)
McElveen v. Gant
102 So. 2d 477 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
92 So. 2d 719, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belshe-v-gant-lactapp-1957.