Coker v. Nola Cabs, Inc.

81 So. 2d 65, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 856
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 1955
DocketNo. 20296
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 So. 2d 65 (Coker v. Nola Cabs, 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
Coker v. Nola Cabs, Inc., 81 So. 2d 65, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 856 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

McBRIDE, Judge.

This suit arose out of an intersectional collision which occurred in the City of New Orleans on March 19, 1949, between an automobile owned and operated by the plaintiff and a taxicab owned by 'Major Williams and driven by John Holmes, his employee.

The scene of the accident was the intersection of Freret Street, which is paved and runs in an uptown-downtown direction, and Milan Street, which is also paved and crosses Freret Street at a right angle. Plaintiff was proceeding in ■ the direction of the lake on Milan Street and the taxicab was being driven on Freret Street in an' uptown direction. ' ‘ •

Plaintiff. sustained severe physical injuries, and.he brings a direct action against Nola .Cabs, Inc,, which under Ordinance 17,360 of .the City of New Orleans posted its bond for the indemnification of any person suffering injuries or losses as a result of an accident in which the taxicab might become involved.' Plaintiff prays for judgment in the sum of $5,000, which is the maximum amount of the bond insofar-as it covers the. above-mentioned taxicab.

The negligence charged to the driver of-the taxicab is that he was driving at a speed approximating or exceeding 60 miles per hour and was negligent in' not keeping a proper lookout ahead. The answer filed by defendant, after denying that the accident was caused through any fault on the part of John Holmes who drove the taxicab, alleges that the accident and plaintiff’s injuries were caused solely because of plaintiff’s own negligence in that he failed to keep a proper lookout, did not have his car under control, did not stop before entering the intersection, was speeding, and failed to accord the taxicab the right of way; in the alternative, defendant pleads that plaintiff was contributorily negligent in the above respects.

After a trial of the case on the merits, the court below dismissed the suit. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff’s testimony is that he approached the intersection of Freret Street with his car under perfect control; that upon reaching the intersection, he stopped in obedience to the official traffic sign located there and that while stopped he looked into Freret Street in both directions preparatory to proceeding across the intersection. The hour was approximately 1:40 a. m.; plaintiff states he saw no vehicles to his left pro-, ceeding in a downtown direction but that to his right he noted the presence ■ of an automobile in the approximate center of the .next downtown crossing of Freret Street, that is the Marengo Street intersection, and that the vehicle was headed uptown. Plaintiff states that he .did. not and could not ascertain the speed of this automobile and had no knowledge or warning _ that it was proceeding at a rate of speed exceeding lawful limits, but he added: “I imagine he must have picked up terribly after I saw him.”

The- vehicle' which Mr. Coker says he observed at the.M.arengo Street intersection, proved to be the taxicab operated by. Holmes which collided with the Coker vehicle. Mr. Coker insists that he proceeded across the intersection entirely ignorant of the speed of the taxicab and on the assumption that the approaching vehicle was 'traveling at not more than a lawful speed, and that he never considered it a hazard to his enter--ing and crossing the intersection in a normal manner and paid no further attention to it. Plaintiff alleged in his petition that after making the stop he “drove his automobile forward and proceeded across the intersection at a normal and natural speed and acceleration.” However, in testifying plaintiff was unable to give any approximation of the speed of his car after starting the crossing; he could not remember whether or not he shifted the gears. Plaintiff had no inkling of the impending collision until he saw “a flash of light” and [67]*67heard “bang.” He was rendered unconscious as a result of the force of the impact. He produced no other eyewitnesses to the accident.

After the impact the Coker vehicle deviated from its original course and- went off on an oblique angle of about 90 degrees toward the left for a distance of some 96 feet before it came to rest in the yard of a residence. The taxicab was deflected somewhat to the right and ran over the ¡curb to stop against a house after having traveled about 41 feet from the point of • collision. The photographic as well- as the testimonial evidence impels the conclusion that the front of the right side of the Coker car was run into by the left front portion of the cab, although couns.el for the respective parties entertain divergent views on that point.

Plaintiff insisted that when the crash came he. was • more than halfway • across Freret Street and in fact was “practically across” because the -front wheels of his car were near to the edge of the woods-side curbing. Defendant disputes plaintiff’s statement in that regard and points to certain testimony given by Officer John Lopez and a Charles W. Peyton, who made an investigation at the scene shortly after the accident happened and before the wrecked cars had been removéd. Officer Lopez is the accident technician of the New Orleans Police Department, and among his duties is that of investigating traffic accidents in order to ascertain if the vehicles involved were in good mechanical condition and to gather such details of the accident as are apparent from the physical evidence . Lopez testified that he backtracked from the points at which the two vehicles had come to a stop. and followed the tire marks of both cars, which were discernible, and these led to a common point in the middle portion of the intersection which in his opinion was the exact point at which the two cars crashed. Peyton is the adjuster and investigator of accidents for the defendant company and his testimony parallels -that of Lopez. Peyton also concluded from the tire marks left by the automobiles that the accident happened in the center of the inter- - section. Besides that, Peyton testified that there was mud in the street which had dropped from both cars and that the location of the mud was in the center of the intersection. Therefore, the existence of such physical evidence as was found by both Lopez and Peyton contradicts the statement .of plaintiff that he was nearly across when his automobile was run into by the taxicab.

Counsel for plaintiff argue that the fact that the Coker automobile traveled as far as it' did after béing struck sufficiently implies' that the taxicab must' have been traveling at an extremely rapid rate of speed, otherwise the Coker automobile' could not have been knocked for the'distance of 96 feet.' Counsel’s appreciation of the evidence is 'that the Coker vehicle was knocked sideways for the considerable distance mentioned.

We do not believe the force of the-blow alone sent the Coker automobile to its ultimate resting place. Mr.- Coker was rendered unconscious and he was unable to give any testimony whatsoever as to the behavior of his automobile after being struck, and we'are inclined to the belief that just at' the moment Mr. Coker- saw the “flash of lights” he instinctively swerved to his left thus directing the front wheel's of the car on the path it took after the crash. Furthermore, the location of the blow received by the Coker car would have tended to turn "the front wheels thereof in the direction in which -the car went.

Besides' the driver of the taxicab there were two passengers and these were seated in the rear of the cab; there was also a rider who sat alongside the driver in front. The rider could not be produced as a witness by defendant for the reason that his whereabouts was unknown and he could not be summoned.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 2d 65, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coker-v-nola-cabs-inc-lactapp-1955.