Gambino v. Duplessis

138 So. 2d 868, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1712
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1962
DocketNo. 173
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 138 So. 2d 868 (Gambino v. Duplessis) 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
Gambino v. Duplessis, 138 So. 2d 868, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1712 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

JOPINSON, Judge.

The defendants have appealed from a judgment of $5,000.00 in favor of plaintiff.

The plaintiff suffered personal injuries when struck by an automobile owned and driven by defendant, Edward F. Duplessis, about 6:30 o’clock a. m., on March 11, 1959, while walking across the downtown side of Canal Street on Decatur Street in New Orleans. Decatur Street enters the downtown' side of Canal Street and becomes Magazine Street on the uptown side. Just before the accident the plaintiff got off a street bus at the uptown lake corner of [869]*869Canal and Magazine Streets, walked across the uptown side of Canal Street, crossed the neutral ground and was walking across the downtown side of Canal Street toward the lake corner of Canal and Decatur Streets when he was hit by the Duplessis car. The downtown side of Canal Street is forty-one feet wide at Decatur Street. The plaintiff had traversed twenty-seven feet from the neutral ground toward the corner of Decatur Street. Duplessis was driving his car from the river in the second lane from the neutral ground of Canal Street.

The Bankers Fire and Marine Insurance Company had in force an automobile public liability insurance policy with a limit of $5,-000.00 for one person in the name of defendant, Duplessis, covering the Ford automobile owned and being driven by Duples-sis. The insurance company and Duplessis are both defendants.

Plaintiff was sixty-nine years old. He had operated his own butchershop at the French Market for fifty-two years. He arrived at his shop about 2:00 o’clock a. m., the morning of the accident, as was his custom, cut his meat and left about 5:00 o’clock to deliver an order of meat across Canal Street. On his return journey he rode a street bus toward Canal on Camp Street. The bus turned toward the river at Canal and when it stopped at the lake corner of Magazine Street the plaintiff left the bus and started to cross Canal Street when the light turned green. After he progressed across the neutral ground he saw that the light was still green for him and he entered the downtown side of Canal Street on the green light. When he was twenty-seven feet from the neutral ground the Duplessis car struck him and knocked him fourteen feet to the curb against a garbage can. Immediately prior to the accident Duplessis’ car skidded in a straight line eighteen feet starting about the middle of the projection of Decatur and some distance after the impact. The plaintiff never saw the car before the accident, and Duplessis never saw plaintiff until it was too late to stop the car. The plaintiff said he had about ten feet to go to complete the crossing when he got hit. From the debris in the street, which the police took to be the point of impact, the police measured fourteen feet from that point to the downtown curb of Canal Street. The plaintiff testified that as he crossed Canal he kept watching the green light and that it was green when he got hit.

Thomas W. Roberts was at that time employed as a barker at the Old French Opera House. He is a small man, three feet seven inches tall. Counsel for defendants criticize some slight inconsistencies in the testimony of Roberts. While it is apparent that Roberts does not possess a mind of superior intelligence, a study of his testimony reveals clearly that he had the capacity to apprehend the interrelationships of the facts and the ability to explain them with sufficient tenacity of purpose to enable the Court to accord considerable weight and credit to the main thread or theme of his testimony that plaintiff was crossing on the green light when hit by the car. It is true that on cross-examination he was led into saying some things contrary to his original explanation but when he realized that he had done so in most instances he corrected himself.

Roberts said he was walking up the lake side of Decatur within five or six steps, or about twenty feet, of Canal Street when he saw plaintiff leaving the neutral ground coming toward Roberts and the traffic light was green. He saw a car come out of Decatur Street into Canal Street on the green light about that time. When Roberts reached the curb of Canal Street and was ready to start across, he said the plaintiff had progressed about twenty-five feet toward Roberts. Roberts said that the light still being green for him he stepped off the curb to go across Canal and made one or two steps when he heard the squeaking of car brakes and saw the Duplessis car hit the plaintiff while the light was still green, but the light turned red about that time and Roberts jumped back to the sidewalk. Fie said there was another car next to the neutral ground on Canal Street beyond the car that hit plaintiff, but it missed plaintiff. He was [870]*870positive that the light was green on his side when the car hit plaintiff. He said several times that * * * When the light turned red the car had done hit him.” He stuck to that statement throughout.

Counsel for defendants contend that Roberts, being abnormally small in stature, wants to help a friend and fellow sufferer by testifying falsely for the injured plaintiff. We do not gain that impression at all from his testimony. Roberts had seen plaintiff several times in the French Quarter and had coffee with him, but it is plain that they were not close friends. Roberts didn’t even know plaintiff’s correct name.

Defendant, Duplessis, testified that he left Buras, Louisiana, early that morning to bring his son-in-law to the Charity Hospital. They crossed the Mississippi River on the ferry at the foot of Canal Street and as they drove out Canal in the second lane from the neutral ground the light at Decatur Street turned green when their car was in the middle of the block. Duplessis said he then picked up speed to about twenty-five miles an hour. When he got within a few feet of Decatur Street he said a car pulled out from the Decatur Street side or from the Canal Street curb. He did not know from what place or position it came or where it went. (He first told the police officers at the scene the same morning that the car referred to came out of Decatur Street). He testified that he thought the car might come over in his lane and he applied his brakes, which caused his car to skid. (The police officer said at that point his car made skid marks for twelve feet extending up to the Decatur Street line). Duplessis then saw the car go ahead and he took his foot off the brake pedal and “ * * * jammed on the accelerator very hard.” He said about the time he was in the Decatur Street intersection plaintiff came from in front of another car driven by Naylor into the path of Du-plessis’ car. Duplessis again applied his brakes and skidded until the car hit and stopped completely. (The police officer said the skip between the first marks and where they started again was eighteen feet and that the last line of skid marks measured twenty-two feet starting in the middle of Decatur Street. See Police sketch (“Wilson 1” at page 151 of the transcript).

The defendant, Duplessis, did not see plaintiff until 'he appeared in front of his car. Duplessis attempts to excuse himself for not seeing plaintiff by saying that the Naylor car to his left was a little ahead and his vision to the left was obscured by that car. The fact is Duplessis didn’t look to the left according to his own testimony. He said he was looking to his right. He said the front wheels of his car were about even with the rear wheels of the Naylor car to the left. The son-in-law of Duplessis, a passenger in the Duplessis’ car, said the two cars- were about even.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 2d 868, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gambino-v-duplessis-lactapp-1962.