Hebert v. Meibaum

24 So. 2d 297, 209 La. 156, 1945 La. LEXIS 920
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 37775.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 297 (Hebert v. Meibaum) 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
Hebert v. Meibaum, 24 So. 2d 297, 209 La. 156, 1945 La. LEXIS 920 (La. 1945).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

This suit was instituted by Sidney L. Hebert to recover damages for personal injuries sustained as a result of his being struck by an automobile driven by defendant, Christian Meibaum.

The district court rendered judgment against defendant and his insurer, United States Casualty Company, and in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $7958.94. On appeal to the Court of Appeal, Parish of Orleans, this judgment was amended by reducing the amount, awarded to plaintiff to $7310.14, and, as thus amended, was affirmed. 17 So.2d 750. A rehearing was granted by the Court of Appeal, and on rehearing the original decree of that court was recalled and annulled, the judgment of the district court appealed from was reversed, and plaintiff’s suit dismissed at his costs. 19 So.2d 629.

On application of Sidney L Hebert, plaintiff, this court granted a writ of certiorari, and' the matter is now before us for review under our supervisory jurisdiction.

The Court of Appeal has discussed and analyzed exhaustively the testimony of the various witnesses to the accident, both in its original opinion (17 So.2d 750) and on rehearing (19 So.2d 629). We do not intend, therefore, to discuss in- detail- the tes *159 timony of these witnesses, but shall simply set forth the facts as we have found them after a careful reading and study of the record.

In the early afternoon of August 5, 1940, plaintiff, Sidney L. Hebert, aged 54, was a passenger in an automobile driven by James E. Curran, proceeding out Napoleon Avenue in the City of New Orleans. Upon arriving at the intersection of this street and Freret Street, the car turned left into Freret Street uptown, in the direction of Carrollton Avenue. Just as Curran’s car entered the intersection of Freret Street, plaintiff observed an automobile proceeding along Freret Street downtown, or in the direction of Napoleon Avenue, driven by Richard Burch, district manager of the H. G. Hill Stores, Inc., by which company plaintiff was also employed. The occupants of Curran’s car signaled to Burch to stop, whereupon Burch parked his car parallel to the curb on the river, or St. Charles Avenue, side of Freret Street, facing the intersection of Napoleon Avenue. The car driven by Curran also came to a stop, parked parallel to the lake, or Claiborne Avenue, side of Freret Street, headed uptown, or in the direction of Carrollton Avenue. The Burch automobile was parked approximately nine feet from the pedestrial lane crossing Freret Street at the intersection of Napoleon Avenue, and the Curran car was almost directly opposite but about two feet farther uptown.

After both cars were parked in the positions and places as above set forth, plaintiff and Curran got out of their car and proceeded across Freret Street to the Burch car and engaged Burch in conversation. Burch remained seated under the driver’s wheel in his car. Hebert stood in the street, facing uptown, with his left foot on the left running board of Burch’s car, and Curran stood in the street, facing downtown, with his right foot on the same running board.

The record does not contain a plat of the immediate scene of the accident, which occurred on Freret Street near the intersection of Napoleon Avenue. However, from the testimony in the record, it appears that Freret Street is a two-way thoroughfare, 34 feet in width, with two-streetcar tracks thereon, one for streetcars proceeding downtown and the other for streetcars proceeding uptown. These tracks are each five feet, six inches, wide, with a five-foot space between them. The riverside rail of the downtown track is nine feet from the riverside curb, and there is the same distance between the lakeside rail of the uptown track and the lakeside curb. There was a space of four feet between the parked Burch car and the riverside rail of the downtown track, and in this space plaintiff Hebert and Curran were standing while talking with Burch, who was seated in his automobile, just prior to the time when plaintiff was struck by the Meibaum car.

After Hebert, Curran, and Burch had. talked for approximately 10 minutes, Hebert left the side of the Burch automobile and started, in a slightly diagonal direction, across Freret Street toward the lake side, with the intention of passing to the rear of the Curran car and resum *161 ing his seat on the right-hand side thereof. He was struck by an automobile being driven downtown, or toward Napoleon Avenue, by the defendant Meibaum, and as a result thereof sustained serious and painful injuries.

Plaintiff was knocked to the pavement, with his head in the direction of Napoleon Avenue. Defendant’s car came to a complete stop in a distance of two feet, with the bumper extending over Hebert’s legs. However, the wheels of the car did not roll over his body.

Curran, who had remained standing beside Burch’s car, was attracted to the approaching automobile by the screeching sound of the brakes’ being applied, and, thus attracted, he turned and looked in the direction of the approaching automobile, which was at that time a distance of about 10 feet from the plaintiff. Curran immediately called to Hebert to “watch out,” and he himself jumped onto the left running board of the parked Burch car, which action was, he stated, for self-preservation, or, in other words, to avoid the possibility of being struck. Burch did not see plaintiff in the act of crossing the street, and did not see the Meibaum car prior to the time it struck plaintiff because he was sitting in his automobile facing Napoleon Avenue, or downtown, and defendant’s car had approached from his rear.

Just prior to the accident, defendant, Christian Meibaum, was proceeding down Freret Street in the direction of Napoleon Avenue at a speed of 15 miles per hour at the time he passed ’the intersection of Freret and Jena streets, one block above Napoleon Avenue. At that time he saw and observed the parked Burch car with Curran and Hebert standing beside it. He continued to observe these two parties, and, as he approached the parked car, the right wheels of his car were very near the riverside rail of the downtown car track. He observed the traffic light at the intersection of Freret Street and Napoleon Avenue changing to red for traffic on Freret Street, and, when he reached about the middle of the block, he reduced his speed to approximately 10 miles per hour so as to stop at the Napoleon Avenue intersection.

Plaintiff contends that, after leaving the Burch car, he walked a distance of 12 or 14 feet in a slightly diagonal direction across Freret Street, with his back partially turned to the approaching car; that he was struck by the left side of Meibaum’s car, which, he contends, was then in the area between the two sets of car tracks, nearer to the lakeside, or uptown, car track, and that he fell to the pavement between the two tracks.

Under this contention, plaintiff relies on the doctrine of last clear chance against the defendant, urging that he, plaintiff, was walking across a public street, exposing himself to the perils thereof, unmindful of his danger, and that the defendant should have seen him long before he did, and should and could, by stopping his car or swerving to the right or the left, have avoided the accident.

On the other hand, defendant contends that Hebert was only some six or seven *163

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 297, 209 La. 156, 1945 La. LEXIS 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hebert-v-meibaum-la-1945.