Hinton v. Tri-State Transit Co. of La.

151 So. 116
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1933
DocketNo. 4577.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 151 So. 116 (Hinton v. Tri-State Transit Co. of La.) 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
Hinton v. Tri-State Transit Co. of La., 151 So. 116 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

In this case the lower court, in a well-prepared opinion, has discussed the testimony and correctly decided the issues of fact. We ■fully concur'in the opinion as to the liability of defendant for the amount of damages plaintiff received in the accident.

The opinion of the lower court is as follows:

“In this suit plaintiff seeks to recover damages resulting from an intersectional collision between his Chevrolet automobile and a passenger bus owned and operated by defendant. The collision occurred on the 22d day of May, 1932, at the intersection of Georgia avenue and North Vienna street in, the town of Ruston. Plaintiff was driving his car north on North Vienna street, and defendant’s bus was being driven by an employee west on Georgia avenue.

“North Vienna street is a right of way street, made so by Ordinance No. 257 of the Town of Ruston. There is a traffic light signal at the intersection involved, but at thet time the collision occurred this signal had not been put in operation for the day. Both plaintiff and defendant claim to have had the right of way over the intersection and to have been in possession of it at the moment of the collision.

“It is my conclusion, arrived at from a careful consideration of all the testimony bearipg on the point, that plaintiff was both entitled to and actually had possession of the right of way over the intersection at the time of the collision. The testimony of the witnesses at this point is very conflicting. It is a plain case of the court having to accept the testimony of the witnesses for one side and rejecting that of the other. There is no other way, as I see it, by which a conclusion can be reached.

“Plaintiff testified that as he approached the intersection, he was traveling from 20 to 25 miles per hour. When at a point some 80 or 100 feet from the intersection, he heard the driver of the bus sound its horn or signal for the intersection. He says the bus was then about 150 feet east of the intersection. Being nearer to the intersection and knowing that he was traveling a right of way street, plaintiff proceeded on to and into the intersection. When plaintiff’s car reached the intersection, the bus was some 15 or 20 feet; from the intersection. Plaintiff assumed, and rightfully so, that the driver of the bus would observe the ordinance of the town, slow down or stop the bus, and give him the right of way. But, on the other hand, both cars continued, without stopping, or apparently slowing down, and the collision followed.

“Mr. Oharlie Tomlinson, a witness for plaintiff, testified that he was standing on the north side of Georgia avenue at a point some 20 or 25 feet west of North Vienna street when the accident occurred and witnessed *117 the entire occurrence. I may say right here that I have personally known Mr. Tomlinson lor a long time and I know him to be a man whose integrity and veracity are beyond question. I believe his testimony and I shall accept his version of the occurrence as being tho correct one. He says that plaintiff was traveling 20 or 25 miles per hour and that the bus was traveling about twice as fast; that plaintiff’s car entered the intersection first; and that when it -did enter the intersection, the bus was a distance of about twice the length of the bus away from the intersection. He corroborates plaintiff’s testimony in every essential particular.

“Mr. I. E.' McGuire, another witness for plaintiff, was about 30 or 40 yards from the intersection, coming down North Vienna street toward the intersection, and saw the collision. He says that plaintiff’s car entered the intersection first. Mr. McGuire is a reputable citizen of Ruston and a disinterested witness.

“In reaching the conclusion that plaintiff actually had the right of way at the intersection, I have not overlooked or failed to consider the testimony of Frank Mathews and T. .1. Johnson, witnesses for defendant. Frank Mathews testified that he was on his way to Monroe and had approached the intersection involved from the north, and that, in doing so, he saw plaintiff’s car coming toward him from the south and the bus coming toward him from the east. Inasmuch as he would have had to cross the pathway of both cars, in continuing his course toward Monroe, he stopped his car near the curb on the west sidé of North Vienna street, just a few feet from the intersection, awaiting the passage;' of plaintiff’s car and the bus out of his route, before continuing on his journey. He says that the bus entered the intersection first.' He says, also, that he was the first person to reach plaintiff’s car, after the collision, and that he opened the door of plaintiff’s ear and asked him if he was hurt. Strange as it may seem, plaintiff denies this. Plaintiff says he never saw Mathews there at any time. Mr. Tomlinson says he was the first person to plaintiff, after the collision, and that it was he who opened the door of plaintiff’s ear. He never saw Mathews at any time. In fact, nobody seems to have seen him there but the driver of the bus, Mr. Johnson. I do not say that he was not there, but I do not believe his testimony, as against the testimony of plaintiff, Mr. Tomlinson, and Mr. McGuire, as to what happened in connection with and surrounding the collision of the two cars.

“The driver of the bus, T. J. Johnson, testified that he was driving the bus at a speed of .about 15 miles per hour when he reached the intersection. He says he saw plaintiff’s car about the time he reached the intersection, and that plaintiff’s car was about 10 feet back from the intersection when he entered it.

“I think this witness is mistaken as to which car entered the intersection first. Plaintiff’s car entered it first, but, if not, then the driver of the bus was negligent in entering a right of way street without first stopping his bus, or, at least, slowing it down to where he could stop it in an instant, and look both ways on North Vienna street and ascertain that there was no traffic approaching the intersection before he entered it. If he had done that, he would have seen plaintiff’s car approaching the intersection within such a distance that the driver would have known that he could not clear the intersection before coming into collision with plaintiff’s car. He had no right to enter this right of way street without and until he had ascertained that he could safely pass over it without coming into violent contact with the traffic on that street. In entering the street intersection as he did, he did not respect the ordinance granting to travelers on Vienna street a right of way over travelers on Georgia avenue and the right then being exercised by plaintiff under the ordinance in traveling on that favored street. He both looked and. undertook to stop the bus when it was too late to do any good. ’

“The driver of the bus was, therefore, negligent in entering the intersection when he did and in the manner he did, and his negligence, in that respect, is the sole and proximate cause of the collision and resulting damage. As I view the ease, the doctrine of the last clear chance does, not enter the case, in so far as the plaintiff is concerned. Dameron Pierson Co. v. Stafford, 1 La. App. 506; Norwich Union Ind. Co. v. Cohen, 1 La. App. 512; Stern v. Yellow Cab Co., 2 La. App. 273; Plick v. Tusa, 14 La. App. 330, 124 So. 678; Arceneaux v. Teche Lines (La. App.) 143 So. 533; Hamilton v. Lee (La. App.) 144 So. 249; Murphy v. Hartley (La. App.) 144 So. 785, 787.

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151 So. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinton-v-tri-state-transit-co-of-la-lactapp-1933.