Embry v. Reserve Natural Gas Co.

12 La. App. 97
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1929
DocketNo. 3586
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 12 La. App. 97 (Embry v. Reserve Natural Gas Co.) 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
Embry v. Reserve Natural Gas Co., 12 La. App. 97 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, J.

A motor truck, owned by defendant and operated by its servant, acting within the scope of his employment, knocked plaintiffs’ son, Stanley Embry, aged three years and nine months, down, one of its wheels rolling over his body, killing him; and plaintiffs brought this suit to obtain judgment against defendant for $26,150, being $12,500 for each, of them, as damages for the anguish caused them by the death of the child and loss of his love, society and companionship, and $150 funeral expenses incurred in his burial. They alleged that the death of. the child was caused solely by the servant’s negligent operation of the truck.

[98]*98The defendant denied that the truck was negligently operated and denied that its servant was acting for it or within the scope of his employment at the time of the accident, and alleged that the accident was unavoidable, so far as its servant was concerned, and alleged that plaintiffs negligently permitted the child to play, unattended in a public street, and that their negligence barred recovery.

The case was tried to a jury on these issues and a verdict was returned in favor of each plaintiff for $3,750, and in favor of John S. Embry for an additional amount of $150. He remitted $13.75 of the $150, and judgment was rendered by the court against the defendant and in favor of John S. Embry for $3,886.25 and in favor of Mrs. Mary 0. Embry for $3,750, with legal interest on each of the amounts from judicial demand, and defendant appealed.

OPINION

The accident happened about 9 o’clock in the forenoon on October 25, 1927, in the 2800 block of Maple street in the city of Shreveport. Maple street runs east and west and this block is bounded on the east by Missouri avenue and on the west by Arkansas avenue. The width of .the street, between property lines, is sixty feet. There is a cement sidewalk on each side of the street, but the street itself is not paved, nor is there any curb on either side of it separating the sidewalk from the street. The block is four hundred feet long, and each side of the street is divided into ten lots of forty feet width each. Only one of the ten lots on the north side of the street is built on, namely, the fourth lot west of Missouri avenue. On the south side of the street two of the lots have houses on them, namely, the sixth and seventh lots west of Missouri avenue. The house on the north side is known as No. 2822 and is occupied by Mr. Cassard. The houses on the south side are numbered 2821 and 2823, respectively; number 2821 being east of 2823. Number 2821 is occupied by Mrs. Roberts and No. 2823 by Mrs. Hodges.

The accident happened in front of Mr. Cassard’s residence, Number 2822, on the east side of his house in front of his driveway.

The motor truck came into Maple street from Missouri avenue and stopped in front of Mr. Cassard’s house near the west side of the lot and a negro woman, Leola Bryant, whom the driver of the truck, John Smith, without the knowledge or consent of defendant, "had gratuitously carried there, alighted; and after a few seconds conversation with the woman, the driver put the truck in motion backward, his intention being to back it to'and into Missouri avenue. When the truck had moved from where it was stopped, a few feet from the west side of the lot on which the house, Number 2822, stands, to a point in front of the driveway, a few feet from the east side of the lot, it struck plaintiffs’ child, a wheel of the truck passing over and killing him.

The evidence as to exactly how the accident happened is conflicting.

Mrs. W. W. Roberts testified that she resided at Number 2821 Maple street and on the occasion in question had come out of her home and was on the sidewalk in front of her house. She saw the motor truck come into Maple street from Missouri avenue and drive up and stop close to a telephone pole in front of Number 2822 Maple street, Mr. Cassard’s home. The telephone pole is approximately five feet from the west side of the lot on which Mr. Cassard’s house stands.

[99]*99“Q. How close to the pole was the truck located?

“A. Well, I couldn’t say exactly, but it was about — bound to have been very close, because the child was about even with the driveway.

*******

“Q. Mrs. Roberts, will you state in your own way, what you saw next to this telephone post, and what happened?

“A. Well, when I started across the street I heard the noise of the truck which was parked there with the negro sitting there and there was a negro woman had gotten out and she was standing on the right hand side of the truck and he was turned talking to her and he was backing up all the time and just as I looked I saw the child behind the truck and the truck kept coming backward and struck the child about here and he fell backwards and fell right flat on his back and I screamed for the negro to stop and I ran toward the truck screaming for him to stop and' he didn’t stop and, of course, by that time just as soon as the child fell he turned over. The truck was high and the child turned over and got up on his little hands and knees and naturally he was excited and he tried to crawl out and he crawled between the left front wheel and the back and got about half way when the left front wheel ran over him and I screamed for the negro to stop, that he had killed the child, and that is the very first time he had ever heard me, and he stopped and jumped out, and picked him up and laid him in my arms.

“Q. Was the driver of the truck talking to someone ?

“A. He was talking to the negro woman he had put oiit of the car.

“Q. Did you see the truck when it started backing?

“A. It was running when I heard it. It was making a noise when I first heard it.

“Q. Was the driver of the truck talking to the negro woman at the time he was backing up?

“A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Did the ■ driver look back?

“A. He did not.

“Q. Did he sound his horn?

“Q. How far from the rear of the truck was the little fellow?

“A. Well, I couldn’t just exactly tell. He wasn’t very far, because when I looked I saw the child fall, and he wasn’t standing — well, not very far, because the truck was moving and I saw the child fall backward.

“Q. Can' you indicate the distance where the hoy was standing?

“A. He was standing up in two or three feet, maybe not that far; but he was standing there naturally waiting for the truck to go on.

“Q. Where you lived on West Maple street, in the vicinity where this accident occurred, all of the children play on your front yard and the other front yards and sidewalks?

“Q. Play out in the street, too?

. “A. Yes, sir; naturally, because nearly every yard was right out to the street.”

Mrs. E. H. Hodges testified that she lived at Number 2823 Maple street and on the occasion in question saw defendant’s truck come into Maple street from Missouri avenue and stop in front of Mr. Cassard’s residence, Number 2822, near a telephone pole, and that there was a negro woman on the truck with the driver.

"Q. How long did he stay there?

“A. Well, I don’t know just exactly how long he stayed there, but he stayed long enough for the negro woman to get out of the truck, and he was talking to her.

“Q. Did you see him when he moved this truck?

“A.

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Bluebook (online)
12 La. App. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/embry-v-reserve-natural-gas-co-lactapp-1929.