Lakios v. New Orleans, T. & M. Ry. Co.

147 So. 525, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1632
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1933
DocketNo. 1113.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 So. 525 (Lakios v. New Orleans, T. & M. Ry. 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
Lakios v. New Orleans, T. & M. Ry. Co., 147 So. 525, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1632 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

Mrs. Irene Lakios was delivered of a stillborn male child on the morning of June 16, 1930. On the morning previous, she had been a passenger on one of the defendant company’s trains; she and her husband, George Lakios, having entrained in the city of Houston, Tex., to go to their home in in De Quincy. They were carried beyond their destination and were continuing east to Kinder, where they would again take a train that would carry them back to De Quincy. Alleging in her petition that as the train reached Kinder she sustained personal injuries as a result of the negligent handling thereof by those in charge of it, which injuries brought on her misfortune, she prays for judgment in the sum of $10,000 as damages against the defendant. Her damages are for pain and suffering from the time she was injured until the miscarriage of her child, for mental anxiety and distress to herself and unborn child, and for physical suffering since that time, as well as mental distress over her condition because of permanent injury and loss of ability to bear children in the future. Her husband also joins her in her petition and asks for judgment in a similar amount in his behalf; the damages he claims being for the loss of companionship and assistance of his wife in her household duties, mental anxiety and distress, and the loss of his wife’s opportunity to bear children due to her physical condition.

The defendant is charged with negligence on the part of its agents and employees in charge of the train, in two particulars. The first is that as they were standing in the aisle of the coach in which they had been riding, preparatory to their alighting, there was a terrible jerk or sudden stop of the train which threw Mrs. Lakios against one of the car seats and then back into the aisle with great force, bruising her side and shaking her up severely. The second is that as Mrs. Lakios was about to alight from the step of the coach, after having been invited to do so by the brakeman, onto the movable footstool used in discharging passengers, the train was suddenly, and without warning, violently-shunted or pushed backward, and she was thrown from the step to the ground across the stool; the latter striking her chest and abdomen, bruising her and jarring her whole body, all of which caused severe pains internally.

The defendant, for answer, admits that the plaintiffs were passengers on the train in question on the night alleged, averring, however, that they were riding free of charge, and otherwise denies virtually all of the remaining allegations of their petition.

There was judgment in the lower court in favor of the defendant, rejecting the demands of both plaintiffs, and they have both appealed.

The ease presents a sharp conflict in the testimony of the witnesses on both sides as *526 to what actually are the true facts. The burden, of course, rested on the plaintiffs to show that the miscarriage suffered by Mrs. Lakios and the attending results complained of were caused through the negligence of the employees of the defendant railroad company in operating the train on which she was riding. The question as to whether she was a gratuitous passenger or not, and of the duty of-the railroad company toward her if she was, is not stressed toy the defendant as a ground upon which it seeks to be relieved of liability. The testimony on that point, however, is seriously to be considered in weighing the evidence as a whole and in determining the precise issues of fact involved in the case.

George Lakios was formerly employed as a mechanic by the defendant and was so employed on June 14, 1930. On that day, he and his wife were in Houston and left from there to go to De Quincy on defendant’s train No. 10 which travels. between Houston and New Orleans. They left Houston, riding on an employee’s trip pass, at about 9:30 in the evening, and were due to reach De Quincy about 1 o’clock of the following morning. They were both sleeping as the train reached De Quincy, and although the station was called by both the conductor and the flagman, they were not awakened and therefore did not get off. When it was realized that they were still on the train, apparently it had proceeded too far to back into De Quincy. At any rate, that was not done, and it is from this point that the first serious dispute arises in the testimony.

Plaintiff George Lakios gives a detailed account of a heated verbal spar between himself and Conductor J. S. Hill, who was in charge of the train, which almost resulted in a physical encounter. The argument started when, as he says, the conductor insisted that he would have to pay a cash fare for himself and wife to Kinder, at which point they could catch a train that would take them back west to De Quincy. According to his testimony the conductor threatened to put them off the train if they did not pay the fare. His wife, 'who did not seem to understand the situation, became' alarmed, paid the fare out of a $5 bill which she took from her purse, whereupon he demanded a form of receipt’on which he could have the money refunded. The conductor refused to give him any such receipt, went off, and finally came back and gave him a “regulation company’s receipt.” He is not certain as to the amount his wife paid for the fare, but thinks it was about $2.88. Mrs. Lakios testifies that it was that amount. She, however, does not give as minute an account of all that transpired as does her husband regarding the demand for payment of the fare. O. 0. Webster, witness for plaintiffs, who says that he was riding on the same coach with them, does however corroborate, in detail, George I-iakios’ story on this point, and if anything makes the encounter appear more violent, as he says that after Mrs. Lakios had pulled her husband down in the seat, evidently in an effort to quiet him, he “jumped up and took his coat off.” According to further testimony it all resulted as Lakios had testified in his wife paying the fare with money from her pocketbook and a demand by Lakios for a special form of receipt which the conductor finally gave him. F. A. Tollison, another witness for plaintiffs, also said to be a passenger in the same coach, corroborates, in a general way, Lakios’ testimony on this point, although not nearly as minutely as does Webster.

According to Lakios and Webster, there were only five passengers in the coach in which they were, after the train left De Quincy and until it reached Kinder. These five included Mr. and Mrs. Lakios, Webster, and Tollison. The fifth, according to Lakios, was a man named Duries, who, however, did not appear as a witness at the trial, So positive are Lakios and Webster that thesei were the only five persons in the coach that they are willing to stake the whole of their testimony on that fact alone.

Conductor Hill says that he cannot account for his overlooking plaintiffs when they reached De Quincy, but frankly admits that it does happen once in a while that night passengers are so overlooked. He testifies that they had gone some little distance when, on passing through the coach, he noticed the hat check on- Lakios’ hat, which was laying upside down on the seat between Mm and the window. He says that he then woke Lakios up, and that the latter, on realizing that they were past De Quincy, made some remark about his losing his day, meaning his day’s work no doubt, and that he readily assured him that that would not happen as he would send him back to De Quincy on train No. 9 and that the only thing he would lose would be a little sleep.

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147 So. 525, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakios-v-new-orleans-t-m-ry-co-lactapp-1933.