Jordan v. Crowell

171 So. 477
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 1937
DocketNo. 5382.
StatusPublished

This text of 171 So. 477 (Jordan v. Crowell) 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
Jordan v. Crowell, 171 So. 477 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

In this case the learned trial judge of the lower court has favored us with a well-written opinion in which he correctly states the issues, discusses the testimony, and concludes that defendant is not liable, therefore rejecting plaintiff’s demands. From this judgment, plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal.

The opinion is as follows:

“This is a suit for damages for personal injuries resulting from a collision by a bicycle, being ridden along the sidewalk, with an automobile while being driven across the sidewalk from the private driveway of defendant’s residence out into the street. The injuries were sustained by plaintiff’s daughter, who was riding the bicycle. She was eleven years of age at the time. Defendant’s nineteen year old son, Richard Crowell, was driving the automobile, which belonged to defendant.
“Defendant’s residence is located at the corner of Marye and Chester streets in a prominent residential district in the city of Alexandria, the residence fronting Marye. The grounds extend along Chester street. He has an entrance upon these grounds from Chester street about even with the residence, and an exit from the grounds back into Chester a short distance further toward the rear portion of the grounds constituting the premises, with a driveway *478 entering and leaving. There is a wall of thick masonry erected along the sidewalk between the points of entrance and exit, with a dense growth of shrubbery inside the wall along the entire space between these two points. The wall is four feet high; the shrubbery much higher, and almost completely shuts ■ off the view of a person traveling on foot or upon a bicycle along the sidewalk when approaching the exit point above described, from toward Marye street. It was at this point that the collision occurred.
“Plaintiff's daughter was riding a bicycle, traveling from the direction of Marye street upon the sidewalk next to defendant’s premises along Chester street. She was going at a pretty rapid rate of speed. Young Richard Crowell was leaving his father’s premises about that same time, driving the automobile out of the driveway approaching this exit at, the rear of the grounds. He reached and drove upon the sidewalk just ahead of the on-coming bicycle, and the bicycle ran against the automobile, striking the rear portion of the front fender.
“According to the testimony of the young girl, Carolyn Jordan, plaintiff’s daughter, who was riding the bicycle and received the injuries complained of, she did not see the automobile at any time either before it reached the sidewalk or at the time she struck it, and in fact did not know what had happened to her until several minutes later; after recovering from her shock, she asked and was informed as to what had happened. Evidently she did not see and could not see the automobile until it suddenly appeared upon the sidewalk; and, according to the testimony of Mr. Rush, one of plaintiff’s witnesses who was seated on his front premises almost directly across the street, in plain view of both the bicycle and the automobile, the young girl in all probability did not even see the automobile when she ran into it because, as Mr. Rush states, she had her head lowered and was ‘pedaling’ upon her bicycle. This probably accounts for the girl’s not knowing what had happened.
“According to the testimony of young Richard Crowell, the driver of the car, he did not see the girl on the bicycle until the moment she struck his car. He states that as he approached the sidewalk, driving at a speed of five or six miles per hour, he observed another automobile traveling along the street, approaching from the direction of Marye street, and that he brought his car to a stop to wait until this other car had passed, stopping his car upon the sidewalk; and that just about the time his car came to a stop, the bicycle, which he had not seen, ran into his car. His testimony as to his stopping his car and being struck by the bicycle is fully corroborated by the man who was driving the car along the street, also by his wife who was accompanying him. These two witnesses also observed the young girl as she was riding her bicycle along the sidewalk. They state that she was riding at a rapid speed for a bicyclist; that she was ‘pedaling,’ with her head lowered and apparently never saw the Crowell car.
“Under an ordinance passed by the city, is was unlawful to operate a bicycle upon its sidewalks, although it is agreed that the ordinance is constantly being violated by bicyclists, particularly in the community where this accident occurred, and that no one has been prosecuted therefor.
•“Plaintiff alleges that defendant’s son suddenly and without warning emerged from the rear driveway immediately into the pathway of the bicycle being ridden by Carolyn Jordan, which sudden and unexpected appearance of said automobile was the cause of the collision and the resultant injuries. Then in one of the following paragraphs of the petition, it is alleged that the injuries were caused solely by the gross negligence, carelessness, and want of skill on the part of defendant’s son, and that plaintiff’s daughter was in no wise guilty of contributory negligence.
“In his answer, defendant denied any negligence on the part of his son in the operation of said automobile; and alleged that his son was a young man of mature judgment and an experienced and competent driver. And in thé alternative, defendant alleged contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s daughter. Plaintiff’s daughter, Carolyn, appears to be equal to, if not above, the average in intelligence and physique of girls of her age. The same can be said of young Crowell.
“It is fairly well established by the evidence that young Crowell did not blow his horn or give any other warning as he approached the sidewalk, and he admits that he did not stop his car before entering upon it, but states frankly that he only stopped upon the sidewalk in order to let a car which he saw in the street pass. Due *479 to the almost complete obstruction of his view of the sidewalk as he approached it, we think he did not exercise the care that he should for the safety of pedestrians. However, due to the slow movement of the car, a pedestrian doubtless could and would have easily stopped, and not advanced headlong against it. Ordinarily, we think the driver of the car had a right to presume that none but pedestrians would likely be upon the sidewalk. Had young Crowell seen the girl advancing upon the bicycle, it would have been his duty, of course, to stop his car before reaching the sidewalk in order to let her pass, even though she was riding the bicycle along the sidewalk in violation of the city’s ordinance. But in the absence of any knowledge of an approaching bicyclist, he had the right, the court thinks, to presume that none would be where the ordinance forbade them to be.
“On the other hand, due to the apparent heedless manner in which the young girl was riding her bicycle, her evident awareness of the driveway across the sidewalk and obscure view to her, as well as to him, and the fact that she was riding at a rapid speed where the law forbade her to ride, we are forced to the conclusion that she was at fault.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 So. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-crowell-lactapp-1937.