Bourgeois v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co.

192 So. 379
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1939
DocketNo. 17287.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 So. 379 (Bourgeois 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
Bourgeois v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co., 192 So. 379 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

This is a suit against Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Company, brought by Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Bourgeois, claiming damages in the sum of $5,460.81, because of accidental injuries sustained by Mrs. Bourgeois, while a passenger in one of the taxicabs operated by the defendant company, alleged to be due to the negligent operation of the cab by its driver. Mr. Bourgeois claims $140.81 for medical expenses incurred by him as master of the community and Mrs. Bourgeois the remainder. The defendant denied all responsibility for the injuries alleged to have been sustained by Mrs. Bourgeois and consequent expenses occasioned her husband.

There was judgment below in favor of Mrs. Bourgeois in the sum of $2,500 and in favor of Mr. Bourgeois in the sum of $140.81. Defendant has appealed.

The case was vigorously and ably presented below. The transcript contains three hundred and forty-five pages of testimony, but only three eye-witnesses testified, the plaintiff and her daughter, Mrs. John J. O’Neil, who were occupants of the cab, and Thomas Braswell, the cab driver.

The accident, which was an unusual one, it is agreed was caused by the sudden stopping of the taxicab, plaintiffs contending that the stop was due to carelessness and want of skill on the part of the chauffeur, and the defendant that it was occasioned by a traffic exigency caused by the sudden movement of a parked car in darting across the path of the taxicab without warning. In the alternative, defendant pleads contributory negligence averring that the stopping of the taxicab, while sudden, because of the emergency referred to, was not of sufficient violence to cause a passenger in the normal possession of her faculties much discomfort, and that if Mrs. Bourgeois was injured to any appreciable extent, it was because of, or at least partially due to, her intoxicated condition.

*380 It must be conceded that if the taxicab stopped, however suddenly, for the reason given by the defendant, that is to say, in order to prevent striking an automobile which, without warning and at a high rate of speed, darted across its path, there can be no recovery because in that situation the action of the chauffeur in stopping his cab probably prevented a very serious accident and, therefore, it was the proper and prudent thing to do.

The accident happened on Sunday night, March 28th, 1937, at about 9:20 p. m. when the taxicab was on St. Joseph Street near the intersection of that street with St. Charles Street, being about fifty feet from the intersection when, according to defendant, “a privately owned automobile, which was parked on the downtown side of St. Joseph Street and headed toward the river, without any signal, suddenly shot from the curbstone and careened across St. Joseph Street turning up St. Charles Street; that as a result of the violent and sudden movement of this automobile, directly in front of the oncoming cab, the driver was forced to quickly apply his brakes to avoid a collision”. The only evidence of the presence of this “privately owned automobile” or of its having anything to do with the accident, is that given by Thomas Braswell, the chauffeur. At the time that the automobile is claimed to have crossed his path, Braswell testified that he was moving at the rate of eight miles per hour. The Honorable Wm. H. Byrnes, who tried this case below, was of opinion that the statement of Braswell was “pure fiction”. He referred to it as “the ghost car”. We quote the following from his reasons for judgment:

“In my opinion, his (Braswell’s) story about the ghost car is pure fiction. I visited the scene of the accident on several occasions. I drove my car at approximately eight miles per hour. When I reached a distance of about fifty feet from the comer, I attempted to visualize a car near the downtown curb, facing the river, dash out in front of me and pass my. car in front of it before I reached twenty-five feet from the corner of St. Charles Avenue. I have no hesitancy in saying that the facts as this witness stated concerning the ghost car are physically impossible. Again, in his testimony, he varies his statements at will to meet the exigencies created by any question. A fair example of what I mean will be found on pages 89 and 90 of the Transcript.” (Braswell’s testimony). Here follows detailed questions and answers referred to.

Both Mrs. Bourgeois and her daughter deny that there was any car whose sudden movement compelled Braswell to stop his car abruptly. Moreover, we find it difficult to understand how a car moving at eight miles per hour when stopped, however suddenly, could cause such violent disturbance to its passengers as to throw them from the seat to the floor of the cab as happened in this case to Mrs. Bourgeois and her daughter. It is also' difficult to understand how an automobile parked against the curb on St. Joseph Street could have picked up sufficient speed to execute the maneuver in the manner claimed by Braswell. St. Joseph Street is shown to be forty feet wide. Braswell entered St. Joseph Street from Carondelet Street which intersects St. Joseph Street at right angles, Carondelet being one square away from St. Charles Street. It is said that the speed of the taxicab at no time exceeded fifteen miles per hour after leaving the corner of Howard Avenue and Carondelet Street, which is one city square above St. Joseph Street, because Braswell realized that the block between Howard Avenue and St. Joseph Street was a short one and, intending to make -a right angle turn on St. Joseph Street, he had moderated his speed accordingly.

On the other hand, Mrs. Bourgeois and her daughter aver that the cab turned into St. Joseph Street at a rapid rate of speed, so much so, as to cause both passengers to lose their balance, and they contend that this immoderate speed was maintained until the sudden stop was made which caused them to be thrown from the seat to the floor of the cab. Braswell says that after the cab had stopped and he realized that something was wrong with the passengers, a police officer by the name of James M. Gagan, appeared on the scene and that Mrs. Bourgeois and her daughter in a conversation with the officer absolved him of all blame for.the accident, saying that “whoever was driving that car (the car which is said by defendant to have created the emergency) should be put in jail”. He also stated that Mrs. O’Neil immediately after the accident rebuked her mother in the following language: “Mama, I told you not to drink any more and you went and taken another drink after I *381 told you not to. Now this a pretty fix for me to take you home in.” Officer Gagan corroborated the testimony of Braswell to a certain extent, stating that he smelled the odor of liquor in the cab and that the ladies had exonerated the driver from all censure. He also stated that the daughter, Mrs. O’Neil, had rebuked her mother because of her excessive drinking. Officer Gagan’s testimony is, however, discredited because he claims to have gone to the scene of the accident pursuant to instructions from the First Precinct Station, when it appears from the records of 'that Station that no report of the accident had been received until nine fifty-five p. m., by which time Mrs. Bourgeois and the taxicab had left the scene of the accident, Mrs. Bourgeois having been conveyed to the Hotel Dieu in the taxicab which thereafter went about its business.

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Related

Johnson v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc.
139 So. 2d 7 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
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146 F.2d 103 (Fifth Circuit, 1944)
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8 So. 2d 562 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1942)

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192 So. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bourgeois-v-toye-bros-yellow-cab-co-lactapp-1939.