Biaggini v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co.

163 So. 780
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 4, 1935
DocketNo. 16150.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 163 So. 780 (Biaggini v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab 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
Biaggini v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co., 163 So. 780 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.’

On April 23, 1933, Mrs. Anthony Biag-gini, age 78 or 79 years, received physical injuries as the result of a collision between a Chevrolet automobile in which she was riding and a taxicab belonging to Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company, Tpc., and operated by one of its employees, who at the time, was acting within the scope of his employment.

On May 5, 1933, twelve days after the •accident, Mrs. Biaggini died. Plaintiff, her surviving husband, averring that the death resulted from the injuries received in the *781 accident and that the accident resulted from negligence on the part of the operator of the taxicab, brought this action ex delicto against the said Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Co., Inc., seeking recovery for the loss sustained by him in the death of his wife, and also for such amount as his sa-id wife, had she lived, might have been entitled to recover for her suffering.

The National Surety Company and its receiver, and -also the National Surety Corporation, were made defendants under the allegation that either the former company or the present corporation had issued a bond or policy of liability insurance to defendant corporation. However, as to both the said defendants, the suit has now been dismissed, and only the main defendant remains in the case.

Defendant contends that the accident was not caused, or contributed to, by negligence of the taxicab driver, and that thus there is no liability in it, and it maintains that the death of Mrs. Biaggini resulted from natural causes not connected with or growing out of the accident, and that, therefore, even if there is liability, there can be no recovery for the loss sustained by plaintiff in the death of his wife.

In the district court there was judgment dismissing the suit, and plaintiff has appealed.

The accident occurred on a Sunday afternoon at the corner of Royal and St. Ferdinand streets. The Chevrolet in which Mrs. Biaggini was a passenger was proceeding up Royal street towards Canal street, and the taxicab driven by defendant’s employee and containing passengers, was on St. Ferdinand street, going towards Lake Pontchartrain, so that that taxicab approached the intersection from the left side of the Chevrolet.

Therefore, -if the vehicles reached the corner at approximately the same time, or if the Chevrolet reached it first, that vehicle was entitled to the right of way, because of the provisions of paragraph (a) of section 15 of article V of ordinance No. 13702, C. C. S., of the city of New Orleans. We have no doubt that either the Chevrolet did reach the intersection first, or that the two vehicles reached it at the same time, because the taxicab struck the Chevrolet on its left side and near its rear end, after the latter had traversed about half of the width of St. Ferdinand street, "and defendant’s contention that the' Chevrolet entered the intersection at great speed is refuted by the fact that that vehicle stopped almost immediately after the collision within a few feet of the point of impact.

Defendant maintains that the taxicab had stopped with its front only partially extending into Royal street and that the Chevrolet, at great speed, dashed in front of it and then skidded sidewise into the front of the taxicab. This contention is likewise shown to be not well founded by the weight of the verbal evidence and by the physical fact, as we have said, that the Chevrolet came to rest at the curb on' the upper, lake corner of the intersection, only a few feet from the point at which the crash occurred.

But, assuming for the moment that the Chevrolet was approaching at an excessive speed, as contended by the defendant, and that the taxicab driver brought his vehicle to a stop before entering the roadway of Royal street, we would be forced to conclude that his failure to see the approaching Chevrolet and to appreciate the danger of moving forward constituted negligence on his part, unless the speed of the Chevrolet was so great as to bring the situation within the rule which we followed in Fisher v. Levin, 16 La. App. 367, 368, 134 So. 439, in which we held that is is not negligence to attempt to proceed across an intersection in front of an on-coming automobile when the said on-coming car is so far away that it cannot possibly reach the intersection in time to collide, unless it is coming at such an extravagant speed as to confuse or mislead the driver of the other vehicle. In that case we said: “As appears from plaintiff’s statement, as quoted, he saw the other car, but at the time it was a considerable distance away, it was coming towards him head-on, and he could not judge its speed. He was thus justified in assuming that it was operated at a normal speed, and since, from the point of view of a reasonable, careful driver, it appears to us that there was no apparent danger in crossing, plaintiff was not negligent in attempting to do so.” See, also, Bethancourt v. Bayhi (La. App.) 141 So. 111.

Here, even if the speed of the other vehicle was somewhat in excess of the legal limit,- and we do not believe that it was, still it was certainly not so great as to be misleading or confusing to the driver of the taxicab.

*782 If, when he reached the corner, he stopped his vehicle, and looked down Royal street, as he says he did, then he should not have proceeded into Royal street at all, until the other vehicle had passed. Joseph Chalona Co. v. Smith (La. App.) 158 So. 237. We are convinced by the evidence that the taxicab reached the intersection a moment or two after the Chevrolet had already entered it, and that the driver of the taxicab, too late, realized the danger. This was negligence on his part.

It is unnecessary that we investigate the action of the driver of the Chevrolet. Even if he was at fault in some particulars, the negligence of the' driver of the taxicab obviously contributed to the unfortunate result, and renders defendant liable. Quatray v. Wicker, 16 La. App 515, 134 So. 313. Therefore, unless it can be shown that the negligence of the drive*of the Chevrolet, if there was negligence, may be imputed to Mrs. Biaggini or to plaintiff, or that either of them was guilty of independent negligence, then there must be a recovery.

There is nothing in the record whatever on which we can báse a conclusion that there was anything which the deceased, or which plaintiff, her husband, could have done to avoid the accident, nor is there any' reason for holding that the actions of the driver of the Chevrolet could be attributed to or imputed to the deceased, or to plaintiff.

It is contended that, even if there is liability for the accident, still there can be no recovery for the items of damage resulting from the death, because, so it is maintained, the death resulted from independent causes in no way related to the injuries sustained in the collision.

The doctor on whom plaintiff was forced to rely, that is, the doctor who attended his wife from the time of the accident until her death, is very positive in his statement that her death was not caused or even hastened by the injuries sustained in the accident. Plaintiff was, therefore, forced to rely on the testimony of other medical experts who had not attended his wife, or even seen her during the course of her disability, but who stated that, in their respective opinions, the death was caused by the injuries.

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163 So. 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biaggini-v-toye-bros-yellow-cab-co-lactapp-1935.