Harness v. Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company
This text of 170 So. 2d 737 (Harness v. Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company) 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.
Opinion
Clarence HARNESS, and Ozia Harness, Wife of Clarence Harness, and Jewrel Harness, Sr., for and on behalf of his minor children, Jewrel, Rene, and Jacklyn Harness
v.
TOYE BROTHERS YELLOW CAB COMPANY, Ralph H. Radecker Jr., Logan Cab Company, Talmage Moses, and XYZ Bonding Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*738 Anthony C. D'Antonio, Metairie, and Alvin W. LaCoste for plaintiffs-appellees.
William W. Messersmith, III, New Orleans, for Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co., defendant-appellant, and Ralph Radecker, Jr.
Robert J. Pitard, New Orleans, for Talmage Moses, Logan Cab Company and Nola Cabs, defendants-appellees.
Before McBRIDE, SAMUEL and HALL, JJ.
HALL, Judge.
This case grows out of a collision between a taxicab owned and operated by Logan Cab Company and a taxicab owned and operated by Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company which occurred at approximately 7:30 P.M. on March 31, 1961, in the intersection of Simon Bolivar Boulevard and Earhart Boulevard in the City of New Orleans. Ozia Harness, a passenger in the Logan cab, was injured in the accident and brought suit for damages against both cab companies, both cab drivers, and Nola Cabs, Inc., the bondsman of Logan Cab Company. Her husband, Clarence Harness, joined in the suit claiming reimbursement for medical and other expenses.
Her son, Jewrel Harness, Sr., also joined in the suit against the defendants seeking damages for personal injuries for and on behalf of his three minor children who were passengers in the Logan cab along with their grandmother, Ozia Harness.
Judgment was rendered in favor of Ozia Harness for $750.00 together with interest and costs against Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company alone. All other demands were dismissed. Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company filed the only appeal. No answers to the appeal were filed.
The case involves purely a question of fact, and the sole and only issue is which vehicle had the green light?
Simon Bolivar Boulevard at its intersection with Earhart Boulevard is a one-way street for traffic proceeding in an uptown direction. Earhart Boulevard is a one-way street for traffic going toward the river. They intersect at right angles. The intersection is controlled by traffic lights.
Prior to the accident the Logan cab in which Ozia Harness was a passenger was travelling in an uptown direction on Simon Bolivar Boulevard, while the Yellow cab was being driven on Earhart Boulevard in the direction of the river. The two cabs came into collision in the center of the intersection.
There were five witnesses to the accident, viz., the plaintiff, Ozia Harness; the driver of the Logan cab; a Mrs. L. E. Thompson; the Yellow cab driver; and a Mrs. Ruth Lavin.
The plaintiff, Ozia Harness, testified that when the Logan cab in which she was riding approached the intersection it stopped for a red light "and when the light went off we came and started up on Simon Bolivar and then a Yellow cab came down Earhart Boulevard and ran into the Logan cab." She further testified that the Yellow cab ran into the center of the side of the Logan cab.
Talmage Moses, the driver of the Logan cab, testified that he was proceeding uptown on Simon Bolivar and when he neared the intersection of Earhart Boulevard, the light at the intersection facing him changed to red and he came to a stop; that he was stopped for 30 seconds or more and that when the light changed to green in his favor he started into the intersection. He further testified that he looked to his right out Earhart Boulevard and he saw some cars coming about 100 feet away but figured they would stop and they did; but as he got into the intersection he heard some "skid-marks" and tried to swing away to the left but was unable to avoid being hit; that the Yellow cab hit him at the right front door and he went up in the neutral ground of Simon Bolivar, put on his brakes and came to a stop.
*739 Mrs. L. E. Thompson testified that she was standing at the corner of Simon Bolivar and Clio Street, one block uptown from the intersection; that she saw the Logan cab stopped at the intersection; that she saw the Logan cab pull out into the intersection; that she saw the Yellow cab "running fast" and saw it strike the Logan cab and knock it onto the neutral ground. She testified she couldn't see the traffic light at the intersection, but that fact is explained by proof that none of the lights face uptown.
Ralph H. Redecker, Jr., driver of the Yellow cab, testified that the light had been green in his favor for one-half block before the intersection; that he was going 25 miles per hour and kept the light continuously in view; that he entered the intersection on the green light; that the Logan cab came from around the side of a bus which was stopped at the red light facing traffic on Simon Bolivar Boulevard and ran into him approximately in the center of the intersection; that he never saw the Logan cab until it entered the intersection; that he put on his brakes and turned to the right in order to avoid the accident but the Logan cab hit him and then proceeded up the neutral ground and came to rest about 150 feet from the point of impact; that the Yellow cab remained in the intersection headed in an uptown direction.
Mrs. Ruth Lavin, who was a passenger in the Yellow cab, testified that the Yellow cab was going about 25 miles per hour; that the light was green in its favor; that the Yellow cab was about two feet into the intersection when the Logan cab shot out from the left side of the parked bus at better than 40 miles per hour and ran into the Yellow cab. Mrs. Lavin testified on cross-examination that she had been injured in the accident; that she never made any claim on Nola Cabs, Inc. or Logan Cab Company, and that she had settled all of her differences with the Yellow Cab Company.
The trial judge in his reasons for judgment commented on the evidence in part, as follows:
"The Yellow cab driver and his passengers say the Yellow cab had the green light, and Talmage Moses and the passengers in his cab say that he had the green light.
"The court must consider the testimony of the passengers in the Moses' cab and must consider the testimony of L. E. Thompson (sic).
"The plaintiff, the passenger in the Moses cab, and L. E. Thompson (sic), in addition to the driver of the cab, all testified unequivocallyand there was no contradictionthat Talmage Moses stopped his cab.
"Now the testimony is that the Yellow cab did not stop. Miss Ruth Lavin testified that the Moses cab was travelling forty miles an hour at the time of the impact. The Court, of course, must realize that if Moses was stopped it was impossible, no matter what type of automobile he had, to get up to a speed of forty miles an hour in a distance of about fifteen feet.
"The Court must therefore conclude that Miss Lavin was mistaken, and, if the Court concludes Miss Lavin was mistaken in the speed at which the Moses cab was travelling, the Court must also conclude Miss Lavin is mistaken with reference to the color of the light at the time of the accident.
* * * * * *
"The Court, therefore, from all the evidence in the case, must decide that the green light was in favor of Talmage Moses and that he had the green light at the time of the accident. * * *"
The trial judge's determination in matters involving purely issues of fact will not be disturbed in the absence of manifest error. Ferguson v.
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170 So. 2d 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harness-v-toye-brothers-yellow-cab-company-lactapp-1965.