Edmendorf v. Clark

79 So. 557, 143 La. 971
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 26, 1917
DocketNo. 22408
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 79 So. 557 (Edmendorf v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edmendorf v. Clark, 79 So. 557, 143 La. 971 (La. 1917).

Opinions

[973]*973Statement of the Case.

MONROE, C. J.

This is an action in damages by the parents of a boy, who lost his life by reason of his being struck by an automobile operated by the minor son of the defendant, and the matter comes to this court upon an appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment rejecting their demand.

The facts, as we find them disclosed by the evidence in the record, are as follows:

The accident occurred on De Siard street, the principal business thoroughfare of the city of Monroe, in the evening of Christmas day, 1915, at about 5:30 or 6 o’clock, and it is admitted that the sun set at 1 minute past 5 on that day. The store windows were lighted at the time of the accident, and probably the street lamps, and it is contended on behalf of defendant that the lights upon his automobile (which was a Hudson 4, and, for convenience, will be called a car) had been turned on, but the evidence is radically conflicting on that point, and we shall pass it without decision. Defendant lived in West Monroe, which lies upon the west side of the Ouachita river, opposite the city, and is connected with Monroe by a bridge which spans the river at the end of De Siard street. He had been out for several hours with his car upon the east side of the city, and at the time of the accident was returning home, going westward, on the north side of De Siard street, which is separated by a street car track, from the south side, and was the proper side for him to use, going in that direction. The acting chauffeur of the car was his son, who had attained the age of 17 years some 3 or 4 months before, and was operating the car from the chauffeur’s position, which, on that particular car, was upon the right end of the front seat, the left end having been occupied by defendant’s brother-in-law, Mr. Maroney, and the back seat by defendant and three of his friends, to wit, Mr. McLeod to the right, Mr. Whitfield in the middle, and defendant to the left, with Mr. Henry seated upon his knees. As the car approached the scene of the accident, the horn was sounded at a point about 150 feet distant, and was not sounded afterwards, and Whitfield and Henry testify that, from that distance, they saw a “bunch” of boys on the north sidewalk; Whitfield being unable to say whether they were playing, or merely standing, and Henry saying:

“I was not looking right up the street. I was looking sort of up the sidewalk at those boys. X had my eyes on the boys. They were playing —hunting each other. I was looking at the boys, thinking about how my boys used to be Christmas time — playing on the sidewalk.”

McLeod saw them from a distance of 20 steps, and says that they were “tagging” at each other. Defendant, being on the left end of the back seat, with Henry on his knees, did not see the boys. “Jimmie” Clark (the acting chauffeur) saw them from some distance, not stated, “walking down the street,” and he says “they started playing,” and that he “didn’t see them, after that,” until just a moment before the accident, when he saw the Elmendorf boy leave the sidewalk, but with his face turned in that direction, and come towards the car, by which he was knocked down and so injured that he died. Maroney “didn’t see any children, or any one on the sidewalk, until this little Elmendorf boy left the curb.”

The car, we are satisfied, was moving at a rate exceeding 8 miles, and probably as high as 10 miles an hour, and upon a line not less than 6, and probably 8 feet from the curb. The boy was struck by the metal piece which serves as a bumper, upon the thigh of the right leg, breaking the femur, knocking him down, and thereby fracturing his skull. The car, some 12 or 14 feet in length, passed over him, and when it was stopped he was found with his feet under the rear axletree and his body extending back, to the eastward. He was 10% years of age, and had been sent by his mother to the baker’s to get bread for [975]*975supper, and, the baker not being ready with his bread, he met several other boys of about the same age, one or two of whom were on the same errand, and they seem to have engaged in what might be called sky-larking with each other, playing “tag,” as one of the incidents of which amusement little Elmendorf playfully kicked another of the boys, and, naturally expecting a return in kind, or of some kind, backed or sidled away, off the sidewalk and into the street; our conclusion, from, the testimony and from the fact that the bumper, or guard, of the car struck him on the right leg, being that his movement was rather a sidelong one, in a southeasterly direction, and that he kept his face turned towards the boy from whom he was retreating, but who was prevented from following by the desire to comply with a request from another member of the party to show him a pair of new boots that he had probably received as a Christmas gift, and which were somewhat obscured by an overcoat. It was perhaps on that account that the movement was not a very rapid one, and it is not surprising, under the circumstances, that there should be some variance in the testimony as to whether it was backward, forward, or sideways. One or two of the boys say that the little chap backed slowly; another, that he ran. Young Clark, the acting chauffeur, says:

“He was coming towards me with his head down, looking back, and he struck the street, about running. * * * He was going at a moderate gait.”

It will be understood that the boy and the car were approaching the same point, the one moving in a southeasterly, and the other in a westerly, direction, and that, as we think, when the boy suddenly found that the car was bearing down on him, he made an attempt to escape it by a turn to his left, thus presenting his right side, upon which he received the impact of the car. After that he was taken to a sanitarium, where he lingered, with intervals of consciousness and suffering, until the following evening, when he died.

The city ordinance in force at that time prohibited the operation of motorcars, in Monroe, without licenses, and prohibited, the owners of such cars from permitting any one under 18 years of age, or not licensed as a driver or chauffeur, to use or operate them, and also made it unlawful for any one to operate such a- car in that part of the city at a higher rate of speed than 8 miles an hour. It is admitted that young Clark was under 18 years of age, and that he had been operating the car in question, with defendant’s consent, for some 2% years, and several witnesses testified that they considered him a careful operator.

Opinion.

It may be conceded that the mere violation of a city ordinance by one citizen does not afford another a ground of action in damages, unless some direct relation of cause and effect between the violation and the damages can be traced with reasonable certainty; and, if it were shown that the injury here complained of would have been sustained, even though defendant’s car had been operated by a lawful chauffeur, at a lawful rate of speed, and that the chauffeur had been .guilty of no negligence, defendant would be entitled to judgment in his favor, notwithstanding that, in fact, the car was operated by an unlawful chauffeur, at an unlawful rate of speed. But no such showing has been made.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 557, 143 La. 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmendorf-v-clark-la-1917.