Cobb v. Baldwin

178 So. 743
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 3, 1938
DocketNo. 5476.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 178 So. 743 (Cobb v. Baldwin) 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
Cobb v. Baldwin, 178 So. 743 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

DREW, Justice.

This is a suit against the trustee for the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company. Plaintiff sued to .recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by his minor child, Martha Jean Cobb, in a grade crossing collision in the town of Bastrop, Louisiana, on June 22, 1934, at which time it is alleged that a car driven by plaintiff, in which the minor child was riding, was struck by a train operated by the agent of the defendant. He specifically set out the acts of negligence of defendant, which he contends makes the defendant liable. It is not necessary to enumerate them here, as will show later in this opinion.

Service was made on the defendant by citation addressed to the Secretary of State, served on June 18, 1935, and by citation addressed to F. G. Hudson, Jr., attorney for defendant, served on him June 19, 1935.

Defendant filed the following pleadings in the following order: “Exception to Citation,” “Rule to Traverse Pauper’s Oath,” “Exception to the Jurisdiction, Ratione Personae,” “Exception of No Cause or Right of Action.”

The lower court sustained the exception to the citation as to the service on F. G. Hudson, attorney, and overruled it as to service on the Secretary of State. It overruled all other exceptions and pleas, and defendant answered, denying each and every material allegation of the petition, article by article.

The lower court, after hearing the testimony adduced and the case presented by counsel for both side's, rendered judgment for defendant/rejecting the demands of plaintiff, and he is now prosecuting this appeal.

Due to our finding on the merits of the case, which will finally dispose of the case, we will pretermit any discussion or ruling on the exceptions and pleas 'filed by defendant; and for the purpose of this decision, we find without any discussion thereof that defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the accident alleged upon, and he is liable for any damage or injury sustained in said accident by plaintiff’s minor daughter. The first item of damage claimed is $250 for bruises, contusions, etc., to the minor, Martha Jean Cobb. The record is barren of any substantial proof to show that the minor child received any contusions or bruises in the accident, and necessarily this claim for damages must fail. The fact that there were no bruises or contusions on the child is further borne out by the fact that plaintiff did not make any claim for damages for injuries to Martha Jean until nine months after the accident, although he filed suit for damages to himself and another minor child who was in the car, and compromised same before it went to trial.

In that suit he made no claim for damages for any injuries to his minor daughter, Martha Jean. Plaintiff and his wife both testify that they did not consider Martha Jean to be injured in any way until some time after the accident when, as they contend, she developed spastic colitis of neurotic origin caused by the shock to her nervous system, which shock she received in the accident.

Another item of damage is doctors’ bills in the amount of $200, which plaintiff admits here to have been included through error, and no proof was offered thereon.

The other items of damage claimed may well be included in the claim that the shock to the nervous system caused spastic colitis, which caused pain and suffering and permanent injury.

As we view the case, the sole question now to determine is: Did the accident cause the child to develop spastic colitis of a neurotic origin? We will discuss the testimony on this question in full. Plaintiff testified as follows:

“Q. Now he has asked some questions about Martha Jean. When did you and Mrs. Cobb first notice anything different, or any change in her physical or mental make up or nervous make up? A. We-first noticed it three or four weeks after the accident, and my wife didn’t think there was anything the matter with her, and in four or five or six months — -all the time she kept complaining and she was nervous and began to fall off in her eating, and in about six months after the accident, we decided to take her to the doctor to see what was wrong.
“Q. During that period of time, you didn’t think the child’s injuries were serious? A. Yes, sir; not serious enough to amount to anything.
*745 “Q. What was her trouble principally; what did you notice in the child? A. She got to where she complained of her stomach, and she was nervous and easily excited. She would not have anything to do with the other kid and she would complain of her stomach- — sometimes she would quit for a while and ’then she would begin complaining again.”

He further testified that he took the child to Dr. Tisdale in the latter part of February, 1936, and to Dr. Leavell in the latter part of December, 1935. That she had lost a few pounds in weight since the accident and up to the time of the trial. That she suffered from constipation and is nervous. When he crosses a railroad track with her, and she hears a train whistle, she becomes highly excited. He further testified as follows:

“Q. If ‘ I understand you correctly, Martha Jean complained a little, three or four weeks after the accident? A. She complained some, but we didn’t have an examination by the doctor because I didn’t think it was serious. I didn’t know what the trouble was.
“Q. You took Mary Rose to a doctor? A. Yes, sir. She was complaining as soon as we got to the house after the accident.
“Q. You let Martha Jean complain four or five months before you took her to a doctor? A. She wasn’t complaining often, just a little off and on for four or five months, and it began to get more serious and we took her to the doctor to see what the trouble was, and Dr. Leavell prescribed X-rays be made, and I took her to Dr. Lehman at Monroe.
“Q. At the time you settled with the Company, in December, 1934, Martha Jean had been complaining four or five months, that' she was not feeling well? A. No, sir; four or five months.
“Q. You said nothing whatever and made no claim for injuries? A. I didn’t know what was the trouble. I didn’t know that the accident was causing it; she complained a little at times and then she would feel all right for a few days, and about five or six months after she got to complaining more and more, and she got nervous and didn’t eat much, and began to be- constipated, and we took her to the doctor.
“Q. She went to school pretty regularly during the last two years? A. Sh'e was out a few days.
“Q. On the whole, she attended regularly? A. She went when she felt like it, and when she didn’t feel like it, I didn’t force her to go.
“Q. She lost fifteen or sixteen days each year? A. Something like that.
“Q. Has she been confined to her bed? A. Maybe for a day or two at a time.”

Mrs. Cobb, the mother of Martha Jean, testified that Martha Jean would be eight years of age in August, 1936. The case was tried July 7, 1936, and the accident happened June 22, 1934. Martha Jean was therefore approximately five years and ten months of age at the time of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-baldwin-lactapp-1938.