Hopkins v. New Orleans Railway & Light Co.

90 So. 512, 150 La. 61, 19 A.L.R. 1362, 1922 La. LEXIS 2545
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1922
DocketNo. 23274
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 90 So. 512 (Hopkins v. New Orleans Railway & Light Co.) 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
Hopkins v. New Orleans Railway & Light Co., 90 So. 512, 150 La. 61, 19 A.L.R. 1362, 1922 La. LEXIS 2545 (La. 1922).

Opinions

DAWKINS, J.

Plaintiff seeks damages of the defendant company for personal injuries alleged to have been received through' its fault and negligence while alighting from a street car. She alleges that, when she went to leave the car at her destination, the platform over which she had to pass was crowded with passengers, one of whom had been permitted by the conducter to place a fish basket in her path to the steps, and that as she attempted to step down from the platform to the steps, the rear part of her skirt caught on the basket, causing her to trip and fall to the shell-covered ground spme two or three feet below, with such force that severe injuries were inflicted upon her left side, neck, shoulder, and hip, from the effects of which she developed curvature of the spine, and that her condition is now such that she is totally and permanently disfigured and disabled from earning a living. She claims' the sum of $50,000.

Defendant admits that plaintiff was a passenger upon its car, but otherwise denies the allegations of fact. Defendant further avers that plaintiff fell after she had safely alighted from the car, and that the same was due entirely to her own fault and carelessness, and for which it was in no way responsible.

There was a trial before a jury, which gave a verdict for defendant and from a judgment pursuant thereto plaintiff brings this appeal.

Opinion.

The issues of this case turn almost entirely upon questions of fact. The defendant, as a carrier of passengers, undoubtedly owed the plaintiff the duty of transporting and landing her safely at her destination, and this included clear passageway and safe means to alight. It could not permit its platform and exit to be obstructed by objects which were reasonably calculated to trip or cause injury to its passengers; and the burden rests upon the carrier to show, so long as the relation exists, that injuries received by the passenger were not due- to its fault or those over whom it has control. Clerc v. M. L. & T. R. R. & S. S. Co., 107 La. 370, 31 South. 886, 90 Am. St. Rep. 319; Le Blanc v. Sweet, 107 La. 355, 31 South. 766, 90 Am. St. Rep. 303.

The plaintiff, sworn as a witness in her own behalf, says that as she passed out of the car onto the platform a man was standing next the outer side of the vestibule near the exit which she had to use with a large wicker fish basket about two feet long in front of him, and leaving a narrow passageway for her to alight; that she avoided contact with the basket as she passed, but as she put her foot down to the step of the car the lower and rear portion of her skirt caught on the basket and caused her to trip and fall to the ground.

In support of plaintiff’s version of what took place there appears the following:

A colored witness by the name of Armant was summoned in her behalf, but at the timé he was called to testify could not be found, and defendant’s counsel consented that a statement signed by Armant and given plaintiff’s counsel might be filed in evidence, in order to avoid delay in the trial, and this was received in lieu of his testimony. The statement reads:

“William Armant, residing at No. 2731 Lep-age street, New Orleans, La., says: That he was a passenger on Spanish Fort train on or about the 13th of September, 1916, at about 8:30 a. m. He was standing on the platform with two or three other men on the trailer behind motorcar, and there was a man standing on the platform on the right-hand side near the step of car with a fishing basket in front of him. I saw a lady come from the inside of car where I was standing to the platform in order to get out. There was not much space for any one to walk on account of myself and other men and man with fishing basket standing in front of him. The lady had just put one foot from the platform to the step of the car when her skirt was caught at the bottom on the fishing basket and she' was thrown to ground on the shell walk below. I got off the [65]*65car and later joined by Mr. Ouccia and others, and I assisted the lady to her feet with the aid of the conductor. She looked to me like she was knocked out. She said to me that I am hurted, and held her side and started to limp. The train was about to pull out, and I got on the train, and the lady was left on the road.

“[Signed,] W. Armant.”

And Robert Blatcher (colored), sworn on behalf of defendant, in response to a question by defendant’s counsel, said:

“A. Well, when she got on the platform, a basket was setting on the platform caught her dress. It was loose. It got loose before she hit the step, and when she hit the step — before she hit the step, the basket come aloose from her dress. The car was stopped still; then she got down from the step and got safely down on the ground, and the car started off, and the car was about five feet when she fell, and the conductor, he stopped the car all of a sudden and got down and went and picked her up and helped her to her feet, and he turned her aloose, and she walked by herself.”

And again on cross-examination bis testimony was in part as follows:

“Q. Now, where was that basket, standing alongside of you?

“A. On that side of me; yes, sir (indicating)-

“Q. What side?

“A. The opposite side of me, on the left side, the way I was standing.

“Q. In other words; it was nearer the step' than you were?

“A. Well, yes, sir; it was.

“Q. You saw the lady’s dress get caught on the basket, you said.

“A. Yes, sir.

“Q. You don’t know what part of the dress got caught, do you?

“A. No, sir; it looks like the end of it, down at the tail.

“Q. Who did that basket belong to?

“A. Well, I couldn’t say exactly who it belonged to, but the gentleman what was right opposite me, the colored fellow, he caught hold of his basket and pulled it back after it was loose from her dress.

“Q. You saw it get caught on the dress, all right, didn’t you?

“Q. Now, wasn’t that basket on the right-hand side of the lady as she was getting off?

“A. On the right-hand side?

“Q. Yes?

“A. No, sir.

“Q. You are sure about that?

“A. It was on the left-hand side, I am sure.”

It is also conceded by all witnesses, in fact admitted in the answer, that plaintiff did fall; the point of difference being as to whether she fell while alighting, and as the result of her skirt having caught on the basket, or after she had reached the ground safely and at a time when it was impossible for the basket or anything else on the platform to have contributed to the fall.

On behalf of defendant a fish basket was produced in court by the colored witness to whom it belonged and who swore that it was the same one which he had on the car at the time of the accident. It measured 17% inches in length by 12% inches in width over the top, was 8% inches high, and 14x9 inches at the bottom. The lid and upper portion were made of wicker, and the bottom was composed of small wire netting.

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 512, 150 La. 61, 19 A.L.R. 1362, 1922 La. LEXIS 2545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-new-orleans-railway-light-co-la-1922.