Lewis v. Goodman

92 So. 2d 723
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 1957
Docket20618
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 92 So. 2d 723 (Lewis v. Goodman) 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
Lewis v. Goodman, 92 So. 2d 723 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

92 So.2d 723 (1957)

Southerner M. LEWIS
v.
Claude GOODMAN et al.

No. 20618.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

February 18, 1957.
Rehearing Denied March 11, 1957.
Writ of Certiorari Denied May 6, 1957.

*724 Racivitch, Johnson, Wegmann & Mouledoux, New Orleans, William J. Wegmann, Trial Attorney, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Charles E. Deichmann, New Orleans, for Claude Goodman, defendant-appellee.

Christovich & Kearney, New Orleans, for Westside Transit Lines, Inc. and Allen E. Landry, defendants-appellees.

JANVIER, Judge.

In a tragic, though fortunately not fatal, accident which occurred on the afternoon of December 19, 1952, on Patterson Road, which runs alongside the levee just below Algiers on the west bank of the Mississippi River, Cynthia Ann, the young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Southerner M. Lewis, sustained serious physical injuries as the result of being struck by an automobile owned by Mr. and Mrs. Claude Goodman and operated by Mrs. Goodman on a community errand.

The little girl was seven years and ten months of age at the time. She had been on the river side of the road alongside the front door of a passenger bus of Westside Transit Lines, Inc., which was standing partly on the shoulder of the road, and she intended to cross from that side to her home, which was on the other side of Patterson Road. The bus was facing in an upriver direction, and the little girl entered the road in front of the bus so that it *725 screened her from the view of Mrs. Goodman as she, in her automobile, approached from the rear of the bus. Just as the child emerged from the obstruction to view, which resulted from the presence of the bus, Mrs. Goodman's car passed the bus and the little girl stepped in front of it and sustained the injuries on which this suit is based.

The bus was in charge of Allen E. Landry, an employee of Westside Transit Lines, Inc. Mr. Goodman had secured a policy of liability insurance from Texas Mutual Company which, however, had gone into receivership before that time.

Southerner M. Lewis, the father of the little girl, brought this suit in his own behalf and for her use and benefit against (1) Westside Transit Lines, Inc., (2) Allen E. Landry, the driver of the bus, (3) Mr. and Mrs. Claude Goodman and (4) Wade O. Martin, Jr., as ancillary Receiver of Texas Mutual Insurance Company. He prayed for solidary judgment against all defendants in the sum of $79,982.90. He alleged that Landry, who was in charge of the bus, had been negligent in allowing the little girl, who, though she had not just alighted from the bus, nevertheless, according to plaintiff, still occupied the status of passenger to attempt to cross the road in front of the bus without making sure that it was safe for her to do so and without at least warning her of the danger of crossing. He charges that Mrs. Goodman was negligent in driving her car at an excessive speed; in failing to maintain a proper lookout, and in failing to have her car under proper control.

The Ancillary Receiver excepted to the petition of plaintiff and prayed that the plaintiff be enjoined from proceeding on the ground that the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans is without jurisdiction ratione personae since the said Ancillary Receiver is legally domiciled in the Parish of East Baton Rouge, and also on the ground that in the receivership proceedings of the said insurance company there was judgment enjoining anyone from proceeding against the said Receiver without first obtaining permission of the Court of the receivership.

Exceptions of no cause of action were filed by the other defendants and, after these exceptions were referred to the merits, answers were filed on behalf of Landry, the Westside Transit Company and Mr. and Mrs. Goodman. The Transit Company and Landry denied any negligence on the part of Landry, and Mr. and Mrs. Goodman denied any negligence on the part of Mrs. Goodman, and in the alternative, all defendants averred that if there was any negligence on the part of Landry or of Mrs. Goodman, there was contributory negligence on the part of the little girl. Mr. and Mrs. Goodman also alleged that in the event there be negligence shown on the part of Mrs. Goodman, there was also negligence on the part of Landry and that, therefore, any judgment which might be rendered in favor of plaintiff against Mr. and Mrs. Goodman should be rendered also against all defendants solidarily.

There was judgment dismissing the suit against the Ancillary Receiver of Texas Mutual Insurance Company, and, after a trial, there was judgment in favor of all other defendants. Plaintiff has appealed suspensively and devolutively but has made no effort to obtain judgment against the Ancillary Receiver of Texas Mutual Insurance Company.

A clear understanding of the theory on which plaintiff attempts to hold Landry and the Transit Company liable cannot be had without a full comprehension of the rather complicated facts, some of which are in dispute.

The bus was not a school bus. It was a regular unit in the public transportation system of the Transit Company, and in it, as in all other busses of that company, all persons who desired to do so might ride upon payment of the proper fare. In other words, it was a regular common carrier.

*726 However, plaintiff says, and we find no denial of this statement, that "the bus company, to facilitate the handling of child passengers, has a regular coupon system", and argues that for this reason it was in effect a school bus.

The bus in question, on its regular run, had picked up the little girl and her twin brother, a younger brother and a younger sister at or near their school, which was located in Algiers proper. It had proceeded down the river on Patterson Road and had gone about 50 or 60 feet beyond its regularly marked stopping point and had come to a stop just in front of the gateway of the home of these little children and here the children, including Cynthia Ann, alighted. The bus then had gone on to its terminus, which was about one long block farther down the river. When the Lewis children alighted there remained in the bus only the driver and one passenger, Albert M. Otis, who seems to have been just taking a ride and who, therefore, did not get out at the end of the line but remained in the bus to take the return trip to Algiers. Otis noticed that one of the children had left school books in the bus and he called Landry's attention to this. Landry opened one of the books, and, finding that it belonged to one of the Lewis children, and realizing that he knew them all, decided that he would return the books on his upriver trip which he was just about to commence. He turned his bus around and commenced the return trip and almost immediately he noticed Cynthia Ann standing on the riverside of the road near the regular stopping place on that side and just across the road from the gateway to her home. Landry drove his bus alongside the little girl, to the far edge of the road and brought it to a stop with its right side slightly off the paving and its front door just opposite where the child was standing and opened the front door to give the child the books.

There is a dispute over the question of whether the girl got into the bus to get the books, or whether she merely reached in and took them from Landry as he leaned to his right and handed them to her.

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Related

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320 So. 2d 288 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
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153 So. 2d 565 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
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122 So. 2d 837 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)
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Bluebook (online)
92 So. 2d 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-goodman-lactapp-1957.