Guillot v. Louisiana Railway & Navigation Co.

3 La. App. 541, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 304
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 La. App. 541 (Guillot v. Louisiana Railway & Navigation 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
Guillot v. Louisiana Railway & Navigation Co., 3 La. App. 541, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 304 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

The defendant company’s railw’ay track rims north and south through the City if Baton Rouge. Main Street, one of its principal thoroughfares, runs east and west through said city, and is crossed at right angles by the track of defendant company. On the 2nd of Feb., 1923, at about eleven o’clock P. M., while Ludovic Frank Guillot, the deceased husband of plaintiff, was going over the crossing of said company on Main Street in an omnibus which was operated by Louis Simoneaux, and as the bus was about negotiating the crossing, Guillot either jumped out or fell therefrom, and, as a result, suffered injuries from which he died shortly thereafter.

Plaintiff, the surviving wife of deceased, charging that, the death of her husband was due entirely to the fault of the negligence of defendant, sues the latter in damages of $17,500.00, individually, and for a like sum for June Major Guillot, her minor child, with legal interest from judicial demand. The District Judge rendered judgment against defendant company for $10,000.00; $5,000.00 for the widow, and $5,000.00 for the minor, with legal interest as prayed for. The company appeals.

The bus in which Guillot was riding was the property of Louis Simoneaux who was regularly engaged in the transportation of passengers from the plant of the Standard Oil Company to the City of Baton Rouge. At the time of the accident the bus had entered the city, and was traveling on Main Street westward towards the river. At about the time the bus was nearing the crossing of defendant company on Main Street, a train of the company was backing up on its track from the direction of Laurel Street, south of the crossing, and was going northward. This train was made up of an engine, two gondolas or open cars, and a box car. It is clearly shown that Sumrall, the car engine foreman on this short train, had placed a fusee or' red light at about two feet below the top of this box car when he left North Boulevard Street several blocks south of the crossing. This fusee, the record shows, gives a brilliant, glowing light for a considerable distance along the track and is not affected by rainy or dark nights, being dimed only by the fogs. The night was dark or rainy when the accident happened, but there is no proof it was foggy, and the record shows the fusee was burning with its accustomed brightness up to the time the train was nearing the crossing. The members constituting the crew on the train say the bell was ringing as it was backing up, while several witnesses for plaintiff who were in the bus, deny that it was.

On this question there is some conflict in the evidence although it may be reasonably said that the parties in charge of the train were in a better position to notice if the bell was ringing or not. Be that as it may it is certain that the fusee was burning practically at the top of this box car, which was the “approaching” car, as it is described in the language of the trainmen. Three photographs were taken showing the view down the railroad track south of the crossing at Main Street. In taking photograph No. 1, the [543]*543photographer was standing at a distance of 75 feet east of the railway track. From that point the photograph and evidence show that a person could see an object at 102 feet down the track, south from the crossing. By photo., No. 2, when standing 50 feet from the railroad track, it is shown an object could be seen down the track at a distance of 194 feet; and at 102 feet from the track, as shown by Photo. No. 3, the view could be clear along the track southward to a distance of 71 feet. It is also shown that at the time of the acident there was no impediment or building which could have obstructed the view along this railway track south from the crossing.

C. L. Leewald was driving the bus in which deceased was riding, was an experienced chauffeur and in the employ of Simoneaux as driver for the transportation of passengers. In accordance with its agreement with the City of Baton Rouge, defendant had placed a flagman or watchman at the crossing in question on Main Street and had established a system of flagging and signals for the protection of all street crossings. Simoneaux, owner of the bus, was riding on it when deceased was fatally injured. He says, he was sitting in front of the bus, on the left side of the driver and next to him. As he was coming westward, and was on the left, he had a clear view ahead of him, and southward down the track from' the crossing. He says, he saw the flagman with a red lantern in his left hand and white lantern in his right hand. At first he stated the red lantern was motionless, and persisted in this statement in answer to several questions on cross-examination. Finally, he was asked the following: “And the flagman was standing out in the street, with a red lantern in his left hand, stationery, holding his left hand out towards the center of the street, wasn’t he?” Answer: “Yes, sir”. The hand" of the flagman, though motionless, was being held towards the center of the street and was unquestionably intended as a signal of danger. The proof shows that a Ford car passed the bus on Main Street going west and in the same direction, about 100 feet east of the crossing. Simoneaux says the Ford car went across the track and was ahead of him 75 feet when it cleared the crossing. His statement is that the flagman came out as soon as this Ford car went across. Making proper allowance for the width of the track, Simoneaux must have been at a distance of not less than 70 feet from the track when he saw the flagman pointing to the center of the street with his red lantern. He says that he did not see the fusee or red light before the bus got about 20 feet, from the railroad track. It is unbelievable that a man situated as he was on the front seat of that bus with the glowing light of that fusee shining from the top of that car and with an unobstructed view down Main Street from the crossing, as was shown by the photos and «evidence above referred to, did not see that train before he reached to a point of about 2.0 feet from the track. To say 'the least, this is very singular, if it be true, when we consider that this witness was the owner of the bus then regularly engaged in the transportation •business. Leewald, the driver, says the flagman had two lights, white and red. As to the red he testifies, he had it hanging by his side, and, was not holding it out and in this particular he does not agree with Simoneaux. He says, he did not see the the train until he was 20 feet from the track; that it was then too late to stop, that he had speeded and went across. Strange to say, this driver, did not see a red light or fusee, which, however, was seen by Simoneaux who was [544]*544not driving and by most of the other witnesses who testified in the case. That the driver of a bus, an experienced chauffeur, with 15 or 20 passengers in his charge at such a crossing, on a dark night, should have failed to see the glaring light of this fusee, is indeed passing strange. He must certainly have been oblivious of his surroundings, and mindless of the responsibilities of his position.

Mansor, witness for defendant, was in the Ford car which passed ahead of the bus on Main Street going towards the crossing. Rice was driving the Ford. Mansor saw the flagman with a red lantern in his left hand and a white in his right. He was, he says possibly 50 or 100 feet from the crossing when he first saw the flagman, who was then holding out the red light straight. In this particular his statement is in accord with the testimony of Simoneaux. He also saw the fusee, and was then about 30 or 40 feet from the track.

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Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 541, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guillot-v-louisiana-railway-navigation-co-lactapp-1925.