Kemp v. Donnes

32 So. 2d 383, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 515
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 1947
DocketNo. 18685
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 32 So. 2d 383 (Kemp v. Donnes) 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
Kemp v. Donnes, 32 So. 2d 383, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 515 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Edgar Fortson Kemp, plaintiff, sustained serious painful'injuries in the very early morning of August 8, 1946, when he was struck by an automobile close to the Canal Street neutral ground near the corner of Marais Street in New Orleans. The automobile was a taxicab, owned and driven by Homer F. Donnes.

Kemp alleges that Independent Cab Operators Association, pursuant to the requirements of Ordinance No. 13825 C.C.S., had deposited bonds and securities in lieu of a liability insurance policy, and that the taxicab of Donnes was specifically included among those “covered by said deposit” of bonds and securities.

In addition to this allegation concerning the alleged deposit of bonds and securities by said Association, plaintiff, in a supple[384]*384mental petition avers that in the operation of the said cab, Donnes, as owner, and the said Independent Cab Operators Association were engaged in a joint adventure or undertaking; that the accident was caused by negligence on the part of Donnes and that therefore both because of the deposit and because of the said joint adventure, Donnes and the said Association are soli-darily liable to him for such injuries and losses as he has sustained.

The Board of Administrators of the Charity Hospital at New Orleans intervened, alleging that certain services and treatments had been rendered to Kemp at the said Charity Hospital and that if there was any liability in defendants, or either of them, there should be judgment in favor of the said Board of Administrators for the value of the said services, to wit, $151.75, with attorney’s fees, interest and costs.

Defendants deny that there was any joint adventure between them, and especially deny that the accident resulted from negligence on the part of Donnes and aver that it was caused solely by negligence • on the part of Kemp, himself, and defendants aver that in the alternative that it should appear that Donnes was negligent in any way, the proximate cause of the accident was not the negligence of Donnes but was the .contributory negligence of Kemp, himself, in the following particulars:

“1. Dashing across a busy thoroughfare in the path of approaching traffic.
“2. Failing to keep a lookout for approaching vehicles.
“3. Running across the street in total and wanton disregard of the approaching traffic.”

From a judgment in favor of both defendants dismissing the suit, plaintiff has appealed.

Kemp resided in Shreveport, La., and at the time of the accident had, for several days, been a guest at the Jung Hotel in New Orleans. This hotel is located on the uptown, lake corner of Canal and Marais Streets. Canal Street is a very wide thoroughfare in the center of which there is an extremely wide neutral ground on which there are located street-car tracks. On the neutral ground between the tracks and between the outside track on each side and the edge of the neutral ground there are wide spaces for pedestrians, especially for those boarding and alighting from streetcars. There are two wide paved surfaces for automobiles, one on each side of the neutral ground.

The night was clear. Plaintiff, in an effort to return to the hotel from other places nearer the so-called business center of New Orleans, had boarded a street-car from which he had alighted on the neutral ground on the river side of the Marais Street crossing. He states that there was a large crowd of people in the car; that quite a number of them alighted at that corner, and that in order to avoid the congestion, instead of crossing in an uptown direction to the side of Canal Street on which the hotel was located, he crossed to the lower sidewalk so that he might wait there until the crowd should disperse and then cross to the upper side, and thus reach his hotel. He says that he was crossing back from the lower sidewalk to the neutral ground when he was struck by the taxicab which was on its way out Canal Street, going in the direction of Lake Pontchartrain. Pie also says that as he stepped from the sidewalk, he looked to his left and saw cars coming and that “there were some of them abreast”; which seemed to be “approximately at the end of the block from where I was standing.” Later he fixed this distance at about 300 feet. He says that he looked again and that they had proceeded “somewhat closer to me”, but “not very much closer.”

Pie then became a little confused in his statements and said that when he looked the second time the cars were about 40 feet away from him. A careful analysis of his testimony on this point convinces us that he intended to say that as he looked this second time the cars had advanced about 40 feet and that they were about 260 feet away from him as he continued in his walk across the street. He says he knew that if they continued at a proper speed he could complete the crossing, and that he did not look at them again until he was struck. Shortly before he reached the neutral ground he noticed four lights very near him, indicating that two cars were bearing [385]*385down upon him, one in the lane nearest the neutral ground and one in the next lane, and he adds that he was struck by one of these cars but added: “I can’t say which one hit me.”

It is contended that the speed of the taxicab was excessive; that its operator was not keeping a careful lookout for pedestrians ; that he should not have been attempting to pass the other car at the corner, and that he was especially at fault in approaching the intersection at the speed at which he was going since his view was obstructed by the other car on his right.

Donnes, the driver of the cab, says that as he approached the Marais Street intersection there was another automobile to his right, “travelling as I was” and that just before he reached the intersection “a man either run or jumped out into the ‘section’ ”. He says that at that time his bumper was about at the door of the other car to his right and that he applied his brakes immediately but that his car struck the plaintiff. He says too that just before applying his brakes his speed was about 20 or 25 miles per hour. He does not know how many other cars there may have been proceeding as his was at that time.

Counsel for plaintiff attempts to convince us that Donnes was negligent on several counts and was operating his cab in violation of the provisions of the City Traffic Ordinance No. 13702, C.C.S. He says that Donnes should not have been attempting to pass the car on his right as the two vehicles were about to enter the street intersection, and he points to paragraph (e) of Section 12 of Article V which provides that “The operator of a vehicle shall not pass at an intersection any other vehicle travelling in the same direction.”

There is nothing in the record which convinces us that Donnes was attempting to pass the other car. Those two cars and probably others had stopped for a traffic semaphore light at Rampart Street, a few city blocks before reaching Marais Street, and when the light at Rampart Street permitted them to proceed, they all did so. When the accident occurred, just before they entered the intersection of Marais Street, the record does not show where any of the cars were except these two; the other of these two being about a half length ahead of the Donnes car. The record does not show that the Donnes car was passing the other one.

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Bluebook (online)
32 So. 2d 383, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemp-v-donnes-lactapp-1947.