Link v. Shreveport Rys. Co.

153 So. 77, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 564
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1934
DocketNo. 4695.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 153 So. 77 (Link v. Shreveport Rys. 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
Link v. Shreveport Rys. Co., 153 So. 77, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 564 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The four minor children of Mrs. W. H. Eu-bank, deceased, to wit, William H., 'Mabel, Emma Nell and Elizabeth, through their tutor, B. S. Link, instituted this suit against the Shreveport Railways Company and the city of Shreveport to recover damages for pain, suffering, and mental agony experienced by their mother before her death, for medical expenses during her last illness, and for damages sustained by them in the way of loss of support, companionship, affection, etc., of their said mother; said damages, it is alleged, being caused by and resulting from the negligence of defendants, specifically set up in the petition.

Mts. Eubank and her husband and five children lived at New Boston, Tex., Í10 miles from the city of Shreveport. On February 6, 1930, Mr. Eubank met a tragic death, and the widow, being of limited financial substance, began to direct her attention and energies toward ¡plans to support and educate the children. Her brother, Dr. Cather, of Oakdale, La., owned a 10-room residence in Cedar Grove in the southern section of the city of Shreveport, and this was offered to her as a future home.

Early in the morning of February 15, 1930, Mrs. Eubank and her said four minor children accompanied by Mrs. Dr. Cather and Mrs. Eubank’s married daughter, Mrs. Mary Bain, in Mrs. Eubank’s two-door Ford ear, *78 left New Boston for Shreveport to inspect Dr. Cather’s house in Cedar Grove. The car was driven by the son, William H., then 18 years old. Arriving in Shreveport about noon, they drove down to Cedar Grove by way of Fair-field avenue, and, after looking over the Cather house and driving about Cedar Grove some, they 'began the trip back toward the city by way of Tulsa street, some two blocks west of Fairfield avenue. At this time, in addition to William IT., the driver, Mrs. Eu-bank and one of the younger girls occupied the front seat of the car; the daughter being in the middle. The party traveled up Tulsa to Yinton street, and turned east thereon with the view of again getting on Fairfield avenue. Vinton street runs east and west, while Tulsa and Fail-field run north and south. Southern avenue, which is midway between Tulsa and Fairfield, also runs north and south. It is serviced by a single-line of street railway, which is crossed at right angles by Vinton street. When the Eubank car attempted to cross the intersection of Vinton street and Southern avenue, it ran into, and collided with, a north-bound street car. This was about 4:30 p. m. Mrs. Eu-bank was the only person even painfully injured from the collision. She was thrown violently against the dash and windshield of the car, and received a cut in her forehead, over the left eye, about 2 inches long. She was taken promptly to a nearby home, and, after some two hours’ delay in securing ambulance service, was taken to a local sanitarium, where the wound was sutured, and there she remained until the following evening. She and party occupied rooms in a Shreveport hotel the night after she was discharged from the sanitarium, and drove back to their home the following morning. Her condition was thought to be satisfactory until February 24th, at which time she showed nervousness, followed by hallucinations, being obsessed with the fear that her room was being entered by a man bent on doing her bodily harm. Her condition grew worse. She was violent to the degree that she was uncontrollable. She was taken to Dr. Cather, at Oakdale, where she stayed for a few weeks, but, as her. condition grew worse, she was then placed in the asylum for the insane at Pineville, La., where she died of manic exhaustion on April 23, 1930.

Plaintiffs allege that Vinton street at the time of, and for several years prior to, the said accident, at its intersection with Southern avenue and for two blocks west of same, was a street or thoroughfare of the city of Shreveport, open to travel by the public as such; that the Shreveport Railways Company is a common carrier, operating railway lines by electric power for commercial transportation of passengers, and, as part of its business, laid and constructed the track on Southern avenue where it crosses Vinton street many years prior to said accident; that the city of Shreveport constructed the roadway on Vinton street, adjacent to the said railway track, and it and the railway company constructed the intersection of the said street and the roadbed of the railway track at that point. They further allege:

“Petitioner further shows that on February 15,19-30, and for several years before that date, the crossing of Vinton Street and the track of the defendant Railways Company was concealed and dangerous to the operators of automobiles who approached by driving easterly along Vinton Street to the crossing, for the following reasons:

“1. Embankments on each side of Vinton Street obscure the view.

“2. Trees, a house, a fence, a hedge, and other shrubs, on the south side of Vinton Street, obscure the view of street cars approaching from the south.

“3. The track of the Shreveport Railways Company was laid out and placed in a small ditch, or ‘U’-shaped depression," said track being lower than the roadbed of Vinton Street on either side of the track; and that the track is -thus completely concealed from a driver approaching along Vinton Street from the west until he has approached within a few feet of the track.

“4. The rails of the street railway track are imbedded and concealed in the gravel of the roadway.

“5. There was no sign, warning, marker, signal or notice of any description to indicate that there was a street railway line crossing Vinton Street at that point.”

And, further, they say that the obstacles, hazards, and conditions above set forth existed at the time of the accident in which Mrs. Eubank was fatally injured, and so existed for many years before that time; that Vinton street approaches the railway track from the west on a slight downgrade; that the movements of an automobile approaching the said track, from the west, are further hampered by the presence of ditches on each side of the street, and by the presence of a wire supporting pole near the edge of the roadway and near said track; that all of said hazards to traffic at or near said intersection were created, and were allowed to *79 exist, by defendants, and of all of which, they each had knowledge prior to the accident, and for that reason had ample time and opportunity to have remedied and repaired said con-cealments, dangers, and hazards to traffic; that they wrongfully, negligently, and unlawfully failed to repair, or cause to ¡be repaired, said defects, concealments, and dangers, and negligently failed to erect signs or markers there to warn the public of the crossing.

It is further alleged that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
153 So. 77, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/link-v-shreveport-rys-co-lactapp-1934.