Brooks v. Airline Motor Coaches

35 So. 2d 786, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 502
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1948
DocketNo. 7167.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 786 (Brooks v. Airline Motor Coaches) 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
Brooks v. Airline Motor Coaches, 35 So. 2d 786, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 502 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Plaintiff, a Negro man aged sixty, alleging that he suffered physical injuries while riding on a bus owned and operated by Airline Motor Coaches, Incorporated, hereinafter called the bus company, instituted this suit against said company and its insurer, Highway Insurance Underwriters of Austin, Texas, to recover a large amount of damages. The below related facts are uncontradicted:

The bus company is authorized to and is engaged in the operation of a line of passenger motor busses in the States of Louisiana and Texas. It is, therefore, a common carrier.

Late in the afternoon of November 4, 1946, plaintiff and some friends boarded a bus of said company in the City of Shreveport, Louisiana, that was destined to pass through the places where they lived, south of the city, and paid to the motorman the required fares. As the bus proceeded southerly on Southern Avenue in said City, an automobile driven by Mrs. T.B. Wallace emerged from an intersecting street, going westerly, and in the effort to turn left on the Avenue, collided with the left side of the bus at and about its left front wheel. Both vehicles stopped instantly. The automobile was only slightly damaged. The wheel of the bus was so badly injured that when, a few minutes later, the motorman put the bus in motion, in an effort to remove it to the west curb of the street, the left wheel fell from the axle, allowing that corner of the bus to heavily descend to the pavement, a distance of some 18 inches. Mrs. Wallace, after the lapse of a few minutes, drove her car below the bus and parked it against the west curb of the Avenue. From this time on, the material facts of the case, in the main, are in serious dispute.

Plaintiff alleged that all seats on the bus were occupied when he boarded it and that he and several other passengers, on account of its overcrowded condition, were standing in the aisle when the accident occurred; that the motorman, after closing the bus door, following the collision, put the bus in gear and started it forward; that this movement caused the injured wheel to fall off and the axle's end to drop to the pavement; that the bus tilted so badly he was violently thrown upon and across the arm of one of the seats in front of him, his back and side striking the same, and that several of the standing passengers, having lost their balance, fell upon him; that as a result of these movements he received severe, painful and permanent injuries to his spine, vertebrae, etc. *Page 788

The following acts of negligence are charged against the motorman, to-wit:

1. That the accident could and would have been averted had he been maintaining proper lookout;

2. That he operated the bus at an excessive rate of speed in view of its overcrowded condition;

3. That he tried to drive the bus forward without inspecting the wheel to ascertain if its condition warranted him in believing it was safe to do so without unloading all the passengers; that the wheel's injured and unsafe condition was obvious to any one who would have taken the pains to inspect same.

Defendants deny that plaintiff, if injured, as by him alleged, was injured because of the negligence of the bus company or its agent. They aver that the accident occurred solely through the negligence of Mrs. Wallace in that she failed to stop her car before endeavoring to cross Southern Avenue in front of the on-coming bus which enjoyed a superior right thereon under ordinance of the City of Shreveport. All other allegations of the plaintiff having to do with the injuries allegedly received by him, and the cause thereof, are denied.

The case was tried with intervention of a jury who rendered a verdict in plaintiff's favor for $6,145.00. From a judgment in keeping with the jury's verdict, the defendants appealed. Plaintiff, answering the appeal, prays for increase in the judgment.

[1] If plaintiff's case depended for its success upon injuries sustained by him as a direct result of the collision, clearly he would be without right to recover therefor. This conclusion is inevitable from undisputed facts. The collision is solely attributable to the negligence and carelessness of Mrs. Wallace. The bus enjoyed right of way on Southern Avenue. It was traveling at a lawful rate of speed when the Wallace car ran into it, and immediately prior. Mrs. Wallace attempted to cross the Avenue immediately behind a trolley bus that was going northerly and did not see the defendant's bus until it was too late to avoid colliding with it. These established facts exonerate the operator of the bus from any negligence whatever as a contributing factor to the original accident. Charges of negligence Nos. 1 and 2, above mentioned, are without merit.

The more serious phases of the controversy revolve around the alleged negligence of the motorman in trying to drive the bus forward when the left wheel was virtually in the act of falling off; and whether plaintiff was in the bus when the wheel did fall off.

The motorman is positive that immediately after the collision he turned around, faced the passengers, asked if any one was hurt and that plaintiff spoke up and said one of his feet had been injured. No other complaint was made. He is also positive that he at once accompanied plaintiff from the bus onto the sidewalk and then turned his attention to the Wallace car in which Mrs. Wallace's two small boys were crying, and that after talking to her a few minutes and being informed by her that neither she nor the boys were injured, he returned to the bus, put it in gear and went forward a few feet when the wheel fell off. He is also positive that plaintiff did not re-enter the bus. With respect to the motorman's knowledge of the injured wheel's condition, he testified as follows:

"Q. What did you see with regard to the bus and the car? A. I seen (sic) that the right front fender (of the car) was caved in and the left front wheel (of the bus) was kind of out of line a little bit. That looked like all that was wrong with it.

"Q. Could you tell the wheel would fall off? A. It didn't look like it would fall off.

"Q. Where were you going to drive to? A. I was going to pull as far as I could to the right."

Two white women, passengers on the bus, were as equally positive as was the motorman that plaintiff left the bus with the motorman immediately after the accident and did not re-enter it.

Four Negro men, friends of the plaintiff, on the bus at the time, are certain he remained aboard it until after the wheel fell *Page 789 off. They testified that they saw him fall upon the arm of one of the seats and that three or more colored passengers who were standing in the aisle, lost their balance when the bus suddenly stopped and tilted, and fell upon him. One of these witnesses testified that he "rushed over and pulled the people off of him". All of these witnesses are also certain that not one passenger left the bus until after the doors were opened following the falling off of the wheel.

Mr. E.O. Daniel, Jr., member of the police force of the City of Shreveport, arrived at the scene of the accident a few moments after it occurred. Mrs. Wallace's car was then still beside the bus and the passengers had not left it. He is positive that the motorman told him that no one to that time had been allowed to leave the bus. He asked the motorman if any one was hurt and he replied: "Not to my knowledge". The bus door was then opened to allow the passengers to get off. The policeman further testified that at that time a colored boy "came up and told me that there was one of them (sic) colored boys back there was hurt". This officer then talked to the plaintiff who, he says, was aboard the bus and was told by him that his foot had been hurt by a suitcase falling from a rack.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 786, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-airline-motor-coaches-lactapp-1948.