Doyle v. Nelson

11 So. 2d 645
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1942
DocketNo. 6564.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 645 (Doyle v. Nelson) 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
Doyle v. Nelson, 11 So. 2d 645 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiffs, the father and mother of Shirley Jane Doyle, age three years, prosecute this suit to recover for the minor's use and benefits a judgment for damages sustained *Page 646 by her as result of her running into an automobile driven by James E. Nelson, and for their own account physician's bill and amount expended for medicine needful in alleviating the child's pain and injury. Nelson, the operator of the car, and the Weaks Supply Company, Ltd., his employer, are impleaded as defendants. Judgment against them in solido is prayed for. The company is joined as defendant on the theory that at the time of the accident Nelson was on a business mission for it. No exception was taken to the wife's part in the suit.

The accident occurred in the 1700 block of Trenton Street in the City of West Monroe, Louisiana, near the hour of five o'clock P.M., February 23, 1940, in front of premises then occupied by plaintiffs.

Trenton Street is eighteen feet wide and is hard surfaced. It courses northerly and southerly along the west bank of the Ouachita River at the eastern edge of which is located a concrete sea wall several feet high. Nelson was driving his own car, a Ford coupe, and was traveling southerly. Above and below the locus of the accident, for a block or more, the street is straight. There are no obstructions to vision.

The specific acts of negligence charged against Nelson, and assigned as the proximate cause of the accident, are: Excessive speed; giving no warning of his approach; inattention; and, failure to maintain a proper lookout.

The Weaks Supply Company, Ltd., denies, firstly, that at the time of the accident Nelson was on a mission for it or in any other manner was acting within the scope of his duties and employment, but avers that he was about his own business in which it had no concern; and, secondly, denies that the accident is ascribable to any negligence or carelessness on Nelson's part.

Nelson's answer is a denial of responsibility for the accident and its consequences and an affirmance of freedom of negligence as the or a cause or contributing cause thereof. He also denies that he was on a mission for or that he was acting within the scope of his employment with the Weaks Supply Company, Ltd., when the accident occurred. Further pleading, this defendant says:

That immediately prior to the time the accident occurred, as he approached at a moderate rate of speed, Shirley Jane Doyle left the front yard of her parents' home and crossed to the east side of Trenton Street and was there standing beside a boy (afterward learned to be her brother) twelve years of age; that he observed said boy holding the child by the hand, apparently to prevent her from running into the street; that after observing this situation and noticing other children near by he retarded the speed of his car to a rate of between ten and fifteen miles per hour; that after the front end of his car passed the two children, Shirley Jane suddenly left the boy holding her, and ran into the street and against the side of this defendant's car, striking it near the center of the left side; that the impact of the collision threw the child to the pavement and her right leg was run over by the left rear wheel; that the car was stopped within a distance of less than twenty feet and that the accident happened solely from the child's imprudence and carelessness.

Plaintiffs' demands were rejected and their suit dismissed with costs. They prosecute this appeal.

It is obvious that the Weaks Supply Company, Ltd. was improperly sued. The testimony is to one accord that Nelson had concluded his day's service at the company's place of business in the City of Monroe and had left for the day; that at the time of the accident he was driving his own car and was on his way to purchase some sandwiches for himself and family.

As the child's tender age renders her incapable of contributory negligence, to escape liability for the consequences of the accident, entire freedom of negligence of any character as a or the cause, or contributing cause thereof on the part of Nelson must be shown. The trial judge reached the conclusion that the testimony sustained Nelson's defense of freedom of negligence.

Defendant testified that when about one block north of the locus of the accident he observed several children playing in the street thereabout; that he then was driving approximately twenty-five miles per hour; that he saw plaintiffs' little girl run across the street to her brother and he immediately reduced speed to about fifteen miles per hour and the street became clear; that he saw the boy reach out and take hold of the child's hand and when this occurred he testified that he "speeded up a little bit to get by and, when I had practically gotten by her, she ran into my car." He says that at that time he was traveling *Page 647 fifteen miles per hour. He admits that he applied the brakes and that the car skidded a distance unknown to him. He also testified that the child's body was not over five or ten feet behind his car when it stopped and that he did not drive more than twenty feet after the child ran into the car.

Mr. J.C. Moak and his wife were in a car traveling southerly on Trenton Street about one-half block behind defendant's car. Moak testified that he saw the children in the street and noticed that defendant reduced his speed presumably for that reason; that he saw the little girl jerk her hand from her brother's and run into the car; that at the time defendant's car, as best he could tell, was going at a speed of ten or fifteen miles per hour "when he started to pick up speed a little bit when the child ran into the side of his car." Again he said: "* * * the best I could judge he gave his car a little gas as he got near and then the child ran into the side of his car." Moak further testified that he reduced his own car's speed when he observed defendant doing so. Mrs. Moak's testimony corroborates that of her husband.

Plaintiffs' son, Charles, age thirteen, returning from school walked on the top of the sea wall for a considerable distance and had descended therefrom in front of his parents' home immediately prior to his sister running across the street to him. Doubtless his presence prompted the child to cross over and join him. Dalhart Doyle, plaintiffs' other son, age twelve, was standing on the lawn of his parents' home when the accident occurred. Both boys testified that they did not see the car until a moment before the accident and that the child was struck by the front part of the left front fender at the time traveling at a speed of approximately sixty miles per hour. These boys are in error as to the part of the car that contacted the child. Had it been struck as they say, her body would have been knocked forward. We are satisfied that the child ran into the side of the car as alleged by defendant. We are also satisfied that at the time of the accident defendant's car was not going at a speed of sixty miles per hour, but that its speed was then considerably in excess of fifteen miles per hour. Convincing proof of this is found in the fact that the car skidded thirty-seven feet before it was stopped.

It is highly probable that the car was moving at a speed between thirty and forty miles per hour. At a speed of thirty miles per hour under favorable road conditions it should have stopped at not more than 35.3 feet after the brakes took effect. See 14 Tulane Law Review, 503.

If the car traveled only twenty feet after the child ran into it, as defendant testified, it follows that it skidded seventeen feet before contact with the child. The brakes were forcefully applied as their screaming was heard by persons inside their homes near by.

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-nelson-lactapp-1942.