Funk v. New Orleans Ry. & L. Co.

91 So. 506, 150 La. 1045
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 1922
DocketNo. 24598
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 So. 506 (Funk v. New Orleans Ry. & L. Co.) 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
Funk v. New Orleans Ry. & L. Co., 91 So. 506, 150 La. 1045 (La. 1922).

Opinion

By Division B, composed • of Justices O’NIELL, LAND, and BAKER.

LAND, J.

This is a suit for damages for personal injury. Plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment in the lower court against defendant companies in solido for the sum of $5,000, and against the defendant railway and light company in the sum of $4,000, with legal interest from date of judgment. The National Surety Company of New York has been made a party to this suit as principal on a bond of $5,000, which was required to be given under an ordinance of the city of New Orleans by defendant railway and light company for each car operated on its lines for the payment of damages to any one injured by any of its cars.

Plaintiff, appellee, has filed an answer to the appeal, and has prayed for amendment of the judgment and an increase of same against the railway and light company from $4,000 to $9,000.

Plaintiff alleges that in the afternoon of March 6, 1919, she was a passenger on an Esplanade car of defendant company, which she boarded on Canal street, and that said car was imoceeding on a downtown trip.

Plaintiff alleges that her destination was the corner of St. Anne and Rampart streets, and that, as she approached said corner, she pushed the button as a signal that she wished to alight, and then proceeded to the rear of the car, as it slackened its speed, and that, as the car came to a stop at that corner, she proceeded to get off.

Plaintiff avers that when she was on the step with her left hand on the handle bar, and was proceeding to descend, the car started, and that, fearing that she would be thrown off, she held on to the handle bar of the car with all of her strength, and that the ear proceeded with her in this position until about in the middle of the block between St. Anne and Dumaine streets, when her strength gave way, and she was thrown off of the steps of the car with great force onto the neutral ground, and was severely injured and permanently incapacitated either to stand or to walk.

Defendant railway and light company in its answer avers that in the afternoon of March 6, 1919, a passenger in a car of the Esplanade belt line alighted therefrom at Rampart and Dumaine streets, before said car had stopped at its usual stopping place at Dumaine street; and that, if plaintiff was the passenger who alighted, and if she received any injuries, said injuries were due to her own want of care in alighting from a car moving too rapidly for her safely to [1049]*1049make tlie attempt. The answer of the defendant railway and light company was adopted by its codefendant, the- National Surety Company of New York.

[1 ] The evidence in the case establishes the fact that plaintiff was the passenger on the car in question; but the testimony in the record discloses a state of facts somewhat different from that alleged in the petition.

Plaintiff testified that she boarded the Esplanade Belt car on Canal street, and, when she arrived at St. Peter and Rampart streets, she rang the bell to stop on Orleans and Rampart streets, and that, when the car did not stop there, she again rang the bell, and requested the conductor to put her out at St. Anne street; that the car came to a halt on St. Anne street, and, as she got on the steps, the car moved on; that she kept holding on, and was carried nearly as far as Dumaine street, when the car stopped and gave a bounce, and threw her on her back.

Plaintiff had her left foot on the step and was in the act of taking her right foot from the platform and placing it on the step, when the car started to move at St. Anne street. I-Taintiff did not fall while the car was moving from St. Anne to Dumaine street and while she was on the step traversing that distance, but, when the car stopped near Dumaine, it gave a bounce, which threw her from the steps to the ground.

Plaintiff testifies that the car was moving fast between St. Anne and Dumaine streets, while she was on the step.

Defendant company’s theory of this case is that, when plaintiff passed her destination at St. Anne and Rampart streets, she became excited; that she went to the rear platform of the car and told the conductor that she wished to get off at St. Anne street; that the conductor told her to wait until they arrived at the next crossing at Dumaine street, but that plaintiff recklessly and deliberately walked off the car while it was moving, and while the front end of the car was about 20 feet from the crossing at Du-maine street, where plaintiff was to alight.

The defense upon its face is highly improbable. The uncontradicted testimony of plaintiff, who is a resident of the city of New Orleans, shows that she is a frequent passenger on the lines of the defendant company, and that she has always exercised due care in boarding and alighting from its cars, and this condition has been necessitated by the fact that she was 69 years old at the time of the accident and weighed 170 pounds.

Plaintiff had arrived at an age when calm judgment naturally supplants indiscretion and impulsiveness. In the case of Buccola v. Shreveport Traction Co., 132 La. 108, 61 South. 130, where an aged passenger was injured, the testimony was conflicting, and a similar defense made as in the present case, we had occasion to observe:

“Indeed, slowness and cautiousness of movement is so natural to extreme old age that impetuosity and recklessness in such a case appears t'o us almost incredible. » * * This disposition to step off of cars in motion might be believed of a man not in his right mind, or who had never, or perhaps seldom, traveled on street cars and was unacquainted with the proper manner of getting off, and at a loss how to go at it.”

This defense is shown to be utterly lacking in reasonableness and probability, by the fact that plaintiff and the witnesses for defendant company all agree that the accident occurred, not near St. Anne and Rampart streets, where plaintiff wished to alight, but nearly a city block from that point, near the crossing of Dumaine street, and with the front of the car only 20 feet from that crossing, as testified to by all of defendant company’s witnesses. We are asked to accept as true the testimony of the conductor and of a passenger on the rear platform of the Esplanade Belt car, that the plaintiff, when in such close proximity to the place, where she was to stop, and with the conductor at [1051]*1051lier side cautioning her not to alight until she reached the crossing, deliberately walked off of a fast moving car, as if she intended to commit an act of self-destruction. Such testimony failed to convince the jury who tried this case, and who saw and heard the witnesses testify, as well as the trial judge who overruled the motion for a new trial made by defendant company. We are eoa-strained to admit that this testimony, in the light of the circumstances surrounding it, has not favorably impressed this court, and we are therefore compelled to accept plaintiff’s version as to how the accident occurred. Her story as told on the witness stand is reasonable, consistent, and bears upon its face the honest impress of truth. Moreover, she is corroborated in many details by the testimony of- the witnesses of defendant company and by admissions made in the answer of said company.

It is admitted in the answer in this case that “the car was moving too rapidly for her safely to make the attempt to alight,” as it neared Dumaine street. This confirms plaintiff’s testimony that the car was moving fast between St.

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Related

Gallman v. Young
6 La. App. 137 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
91 So. 506, 150 La. 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/funk-v-new-orleans-ry-l-co-la-1922.