Jefferson v. Caddo Transfer & W. Co.

4 La. App. 377, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 130
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1926
DocketNo. 2441
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 La. App. 377 (Jefferson v. Caddo Transfer & W. 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
Jefferson v. Caddo Transfer & W. Co., 4 La. App. 377, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 130 (La. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

On March 1, 1924, plaintiffs’ son, about 17 years old, was run over and killed on a public street in the city of Shreveport by a truck owned and operated by the defendant.

Plaintiffs bring this suit for damages resulting from the death of their son, and allege that his death was caused solely through the fault and negligence of the driver of said truck.

Defendant answered denying liability and defended the suit on the ground that there was no negligence on the part of its driver but that the accident was wholly unavoidable.

The district judge rejected plaintiffs’ demand and they have appealed.

OPINION

The accident which resulted in the death of plaintiffs’ son occurred in the daytime on Texas avenue in the city of Shreveport. Texas avenue is 40 feet and 6 inches from curb to curb. There is along the center of the avenue ' double street car tracks.

[378]*378The truck which ran over and killed plaintiffs’ son was being driven in a westerly direction out Texas avenue, away from the business section of the city.

The accident happened on the right hand side of the street car track going out. The right hand rail of the outbound street car track at the place where the accident happened is 13 feet from the curb.

There was a gravel wagon being driven on the right hand side of the street going out about two feet from the curb. ■ The truck approached this wagon from the rear and about the time it got opposite the side of the gravel wagon plaintiffs’ son came between the truck and the wagon riding a bicycle going in the same direction as the truck and the wagon and in some way was thrown to the ground and the truck ran over him.

It is defendant’s theory that the boy while riding along by the side of the team either put his hand on the mule which frightened him and caused him to make a move which threw the boy to the street, or that in some way the handle Bar of his bicycle became entangled in the harness on the mule and that he was in that way thrown to the pavement and run over.

Counsel for plaintiffs, in brief, say that the crucial point in the case is:

“Was the boy knocked against the mules and . fell back under the truck, or did he himself run into the mules and fall back under the truck which was so close it could not prevent the accident.”

That seems to be the view accepted not only by counsel for plaintiff but counsel for defendant.

Therefore it is conceded that if the boy in riding Jhis bicycle became entangled with the team previous to being, hit there is no liability on the part of the defendant. On the' contrary, if the truck struck the boy and knocked him against the team and he’ was then knocked back to the pavement and run over by the truck, the defendant may be liable.

At the time of the accident there were on the gravel wagon Richard Riley, the driver, and another colored man by the name of Sam Allen.

On the truck there were the driver and a boy named John Martin sitting on the seat with him and on the top of the truck there was another colored boy by the name of Sheppard.

Sheppard was subpoenaed by the defendant and Sam Allen was subpoenaed by the plaintiffs, but according to the sheriff’s return neither of them could be found at the time of tie trial.

Riley, the driver of the gravel wagon, and a woman by the name of Marie Morris were called as witnesses for the plaintiffs, and the driver of the truck and the boy John Martin who was with him at the time were called and testified for the defendant.

These were the only eye witnesses, so far as the record discloses, to the accident.

Richard Riley, the driver of the gravel wagon, states that the boy on the bicycle rode up by the side of his wagon and in advance of the approaching truck and that as the truck came up from the rear it ran against him, knocking him over against the mule, and that the mule on that side became frightened and in some way knocked the boy to the pavement between the front and rear wheels of the truck and that he was run over and killed by the rear wheel.

Marie Morris, the woman called as a witness by plaintiff, was walking on the sidewalk next to the gravel wagon, coming towards the business • section of the city.

[379]*379She says she saw the accident, and she corroborates the testimony of Riley, the driver of the wagon, to the effect that the boy was struck by the right fender of the truck and knocked over against the mule and that he then fell to the pavement under the rear right wheel of the truck.

The defendant’s witnesses, on the contrary, testify as positively that the boy on the bicycle came in between the truck and the wagon and that when he got opposite the mules he either touched the mule, which frightened it, or that his handle bar became entangled in the harness on the mule, and that he was thereby thrown to the pavement in front of the truck and was run over by the right front wheel of the truck.

These two witnesses, the driver of the truck and Martin who was on the front seat with the driver at the time, are both positive that the boy was run over by the front wheel and not by the rear wheel.

It will therefore be seen that the testimony of the two witnesses called by plaintiffs and that of the two witnesses called by defendant, is conflicting on a very material point of the case, and that is, whether the truck struck the boy and knocked him against the mule, or whether the boy ran against the mule and was then thrown to the ground.

After considering aU the testimony we are of the opinion that the theory of the case as advanced by the defendant is correct, and we have reached that conclusion after analyzing all the testimony.

The witness Riley, driver of the gravel wagon, states positively that the boy on the bicycle was riding in the center of the outgoing street car track and that the truck overtook him and struck him with the right fender and knocked him against the mule.

The question which naturally arises in connection with his testimony, is that if the boy was riding in the center of the street car track and the truck had its right wheels on the right side of the right hand rail and its left wheels between the two rails, how could the boy be struck by the right fender and knocked over against the mule which was to the extreme right hand side of the street?

It would seem reasonable that according to Riley’s theory of the position of the boy at the time he was struck and of the truck at the time it struck him, that the boy would have been knocked straight forward and not over to the side as Riley and the witness Marie Morris say he was.

This point seems to have occurred to the district judge who examined the witness and asked him specifically if he was sure that the. boy, at the time he was hit, was riding between the rails of the street car track, and he reiterated that he was. He then questioned the witness as to how it could be that the boy was struck by the right fender and knocked over to the right against the mule. He attempted to explain by saying that at the point in the street where the collision occurred there was a car parked over on the left hand side of the street and that .

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Related

Moch v. Shreveport Rys. Co.
41 So. 2d 741 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1949)
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123 So. 352 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
4 La. App. 377, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-v-caddo-transfer-w-co-lactapp-1926.