Cantrell v. H. G. Hill Stores, Inc.

193 So. 389
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1940
DocketNo. 17189.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 193 So. 389 (Cantrell v. H. G. Hill Stores, Inc.) 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
Cantrell v. H. G. Hill Stores, Inc., 193 So. 389 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Cantrell are the parents of two minor children, Seymour, a boy aged ten years, and Angel, a daughter, aged twelve, who, on January 18, 1938, at about 5:15 p. m., received' bodily injuries as the result of an accident which occurred on the lake side driveway of South Claiborne Avenue, a shoft distance below the corner of Josephine Street.

The two children were riding on a ofle-seated bicycle belonging to the boy, who was on the seat and who was propelling it, the girl, Angel, being seated in front of the lx>y on the bar which extends from a point just below the handlebars to a point just below the seat- They were proceeding in an uptown direction and were some five or six feet from the curb on. the right as a motor-truck owned by defendant corporation, H. G. Hill Stores, Inc., and driven by an employee, Clarence Matthews, admittedly acting within the scope of his employment, and also going in an uptown direction, overtook and attempted to pass them on their left.

It is alleged by plaintiffs, who bring this suit on behalf of their said children, that the driver of the truck, without giving warning of its approach, drove it at ex *391 cessive speed and struck and wantonly ran down and injured the two children.

It is admitted by defendant that the horn of the truck was not sounded as it approached, but it is contended that there was no necessity for any warning, as the truck was sufficiently to the left of the bicycle to pass safely, and it is further contended that, in fact, it had almost passed, when suddenly the bicycle either swerved, or slid to its left, throwing the two children to the ground alongside the passing truck.

Defendant maintains that the truck was being driven at a lawful and reasonable speed and that there was no carelessness on the part of its employee and asserts, further, in the alternative, that if its employee was guilty of any of the acts of negligence charged, the true cause of the accident was the contributory negligence of the two children in riding on a single-seated bicycle in violation of paragraph 11 of Article X of traffic ordinance No. 13,702 of the City of New Orleans, which provides that it shall be unlawful for the operator of a bicycle, or of a motorcycle, “to carry any other person upon the handle-bar, frame, or tank of any such vehicle, or for any person to so ride upon such vehicle”, and also in violating paragraph 17 of the same Article, which provides that “bicycles shall not be ridden * * * in public streets except close to the right hand curb”.

In the court below there was judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ suit and they have appealed.

Although plaintiffs allege that the bicycle was actually struck from the rear by the truck and attempted, in the district court, to so prove, their counsel in this court devoted himself principally to the task of convincing us that, even if the bicycle slid or swerved into the side of the passing truck, the defendant should, nevertheless be held liable because of the asserted negligence of their driver in attempting to pass too close to the bicycle and in not giving warning of the approach of the truck so that the children on the bicycle might have swerved to their right and thus afforded an even greater clearance between the bicycle and the truck; and they contend, too, that even if there was no contact between the bicycle and the truck; or between the children and the truck, still the defendant should be held liable since, they argue, the children were probably frightened by the approach of the truck, which, without any warning, came so close alongside them.

Of course, if the truck struck the bicycle or the children as it approached' from the rear, there need be no further consideration given to the record because, surely, one who, acting within the scope of his employment, runs down, from the rear, children so situated, renders his employer liable even though the children may themselves be negligent, or be acting in violation of some provision of a traffic ordinance.

But the record abundantly justifies the conclusion reached by our brother below that “* * * the front of the truck. had passed them and, as the back wheel was passing, the bicycle fell against the truck”. We feel it unnecessary to refer in detail to the evidence on this point since it is manifest that the judge below was not in error in so concluding.

There is ho foundation whatever for the charge that the truck was being driven at a speed of 45 miles per hour, the evidence overwhelmingly showing that it was proceeding at between 15 and 25 miles an hour, and showing, also, that even though the driver did not actually see the accident and knew of it only when he heard the noise near the rear of the truck, he brought that vehicle to a stop only 18 or 20 feet beyond the point at which the children and the bicycle were lying in the street; and before we leave this point we merely refer to the gross exaggeration of the two children, one of whom says that the truck proceeded 99 feet beyond the point of impact and the other of whom testifies that it did not stop for half* a block.

Plaintiffs also alleged that the brakes of the truck were defective and that, therefore, the vehicle could not be brought to a stop promptly. But the record contains absolutely no evidence in corroboration of this allegation.

The evidence is quite convincing that, as the truck and the bicycle were proceeding, the bicycle was several feet to the right of the truck, and it follows that, if both had proceeded without swerving, -the truck would have passed safely at least three or four feet to the left of the bicycle.

Matthews, the driver of the truck, says the bicycle was about four or five feet to his right.

John Wilcher, a disinterested' pedestrian saw the occurrence. He states that, as the truck passed, it was “something like three or four feet” to the left of the bicycle.

*392 It is true that the two childreil said that the truck struck them from the rear, the boy stating that “a truck coming along without blowing its horn knocked me down and -stopped a half a block away”. But it appears that, immediately after the occurrence, the -boy made a statement to the police to the effect that the wheel of the bicycle got caught between the railroad track and skidded and fell against the truck. The railroad track to which the boy referred crosses that side of Claiborne Avenue from the neutral ground to the yard of an industry located in the next block above Josephine Street, and it was therefore necessary that both the bicycle and the truck cross these rails, the tops of which are flush with the surface of the street.

It is obvious, we think, that largely responsible for the accident was this railroad track. The bicycle was crossing it just as the truck was passing the bicycle. We have no doubt that the truck would have passed safely by had not the front wheel of the bicycle become involved with the rails of this track with the result that the bicycle was diverted from its direct line apparently towards the side of the truck.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cantrell-v-h-g-hill-stores-inc-lactapp-1940.