Maggiore v. Laundry & Dry Cleaning Service, Inc.

150 So. 394
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1933
DocketNo. 14484.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 150 So. 394 (Maggiore v. Laundry & Dry Cleaning Service, Inc.) 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
Maggiore v. Laundry & Dry Cleaning Service, Inc., 150 So. 394 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

As plaintiff was about to back his automobile from his driveway into Dumaine street, he noticed that an unattended electric delivery truck of defendant was standing against the curb on the opposite side of the street. The street was so narrow that he could not back his car into it because of the presence of the truck.

After waiting for what he considered a reasonable time for the driver of the truck to return to it and to move it, he summoned a friend to assist him in pushing it backward a sufficient distance to afford him room to drive his own car into the street.

He took a position in front of the truck and the friend, Hirstius, placed himself at its side. They exerted sufficient energy to move the truck a few inches backward, when its motor commenced to operate in the opposite direction, and the truck moved forward. Plaintiff was unable, to remove himself from in front of the on-coming truck and it crushed him against another automobile and then against a post. He received physical injuries for which he now seeks to recover from defendant $28,272.75.

He charges that defendant is liable because of the violation by its employee of certain statutory requirements contained in the then applicable traffic ordinance of the city of New Orleans, No. 7490, C. C. S.

*395 He bases his charges of negligence on the alleged violation of two provisions of the said ordinance. He asserts that the driver of the truck was negligent in leaving it in the street without first removing from it the key, or plug, which is an instrument by means of which the electrical current is turned off or on, and he maintains that, had this plug been entirely removed, there would have been no possibility of the premature starting of the truck, and he alleges that this negligent act on the part of the driver was a violation of section 14 of article III of the ordinance, which said section provides that: “No vehicle, motor propelled, shall be left standing at a curb unattended, unless the operator shall, in the case of a gasoline-driven vehicle, first shut off his motor, and in the ease of an electrically driven vehicle, shall first lock the controller switch and withdraw the key.”

The other provision which it is charged the driver violated is No. 9 of the same article III, paragraph (b) of which reads as follows: “No vehicle shall park so as to block ingress or egress of any driveway.”

That the said key or plug was not removed by the driver when he stopped the vehicle is not denied. Nor is it in dispute that plaintiff’s driveway was so blocked by the truck that it was impossible for his ear to leave it and to emerge into the street.

Defendant’s counsel, conceding that there were technical violations of the ordinance in the two particulars charged, nevertheless deny that defendant is liable to plaintiff and declare that the proximate cause of the accident was not the fact that the key was not withdrawn and was not the blocking of the said driveway, but was the intervening act of plaintiff himself and of his friend, Hirstius, in attempting to move the truck. This act on the part of plaintiff and his friend, defendant’s counsel declare, was negligence and prevents recovery, even if the law violations to which we have alluded be held to show primary or initial negligence in defendant’s employee.

There is in dispute only one important question of fact and that is, whether plaintiff and his friend, or either of them, entered the truck and manipulated any part of the control mechanism. Defendant’s counsel assert that the evidence shows that there was no defect whatever in the starting or control mechanism of the truck and that it further shows that, unless there was such defect, it was beyond the realm of possibility that the motor of the truck could start merely as the result of the slight push given to the truck by plaintiff and his friend.

Erom this premise counsel for defendant argue that either plaintiff or his friend must necessarily have entered the truck and must have touched, or attempted to manipulate, one or more of the levers or pedals, because, they say, that, coupled with the testimony of the experts that the truck could not have moved unless there was something defective, is the evidence of employees of defendant that the truck had been practically rebuilt only three months before the accident and the further evidence that an examination made immediately afterwards showed no defect.

An expert who testified on behalf of plaintiff stated that if the control lever was worn, or if the spring intended to hold it in a. neutral, or off position, did not operate properly, the said lever might, as the result of a jolt or movement of the truck, fall into-either the forward or the backward position. Also opposed to the testimony of defendant’s experts that the car could not start from a mere jolt, we have the direct, positive evidence of the two men who were most concerned, who were the only actual eyewitnesses, and who testified that they touched nothing except the outside of the-truck when they attempted to push it backward.

Whether either of the said two mem touched the starting levers or pedals is a question of fact which our brother below has decided adversely to defendant. We-find, among the reasons given for judgment, by the district judge, the following:

“It is impossible for me to discard the positive testimony of the plaintiff and his witness, Hirstius, as the, defendant’s counsel urges me to do, and decide the case-against plaintiff, because three of his witnesses testifying as experts stated that unless the mechanism of the truck had been-tampered with, the truck could not have acted in the manner in which it did act. The expert who testified on behalf of the plaintiff flatly contradicted the opinions of the three witnesses for the defendant.

“I am further convinced that the plaintiff and Hirstius have stated the facts correctly because there existed no reason for either of them to have touched the lever or switch. They did not desire to turn the current on; they had no intention of moving the truck under its own power. It is admitted that they were not in the truck, that they were standing on the ground, that they made no attempt to steer or guide the machine, which they necessarily would have-done if they had intentionally turned the power on. The plaintiff was directly in-front of the truck; no sane person would, have taken such a dangerous position if he knew the truck could start under its own. power.”

We concede that modern machinery has-, almost reached perfection and that, if a-, modern machinery expert testifies that a. modern machine can or cannot do a certain thing, under certain given circumstances, the; *396 possibility of error on bis part is remote. Nevertheless, remote though it may he, there is possibility of error, and on occasions apparently perfect machinery will do the unexpected, and therefore, in view of the decision reached below, which is not manifestly incorrect, we conclude that the machinery had not been tampered with and that the truck started as the result of the slight push given to it. We also conclude that it was in a defective condition.

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150 So. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maggiore-v-laundry-dry-cleaning-service-inc-lactapp-1933.