Mansfield v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co.
This text of 78 So. 2d 544 (Mansfield v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab 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.
Opinion
Mrs. Geneva MANSFIELD, Wife of, and Charles C. Johnson,
Mrs. Annie Howell, Wife of, and Edgar Anthony,
Mrs. Camille O'Chery, Wife of, and Julian Campisi,
v.
TOYE BROS. YELLOW CAB CO., and Its Individual Members, and Clarence Collins, In Solido.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*545 Joseph Rosenberg, New Orleans, for plaintiffs and appellants.
Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, Breard Snellings, New Orleans, for Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co., defendant and appellee.
Defendant Clarence Collins absent and unrepresented.
McBRIDE, Judge.
About 12:45 a. m., on April 30, 1953, at the corner of Leonidas and Belfast Streets, New Orleans, a collision occurred between a taxicab owned by Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Company, a partnership, and operated by William E. Harris, an employee of said partnership, and a 1939 model Ford automobile truck, owned and operated by Clarence Collins. The Yellow Cab was on Belfast Street going toward the Jefferson Parish line, and the Ford truck was being driven on Leonidas Street and was moving in the direction of the river. The three plaintiffs named in the caption of the suit were passengers in the Yellow Cab and were injured, and they allege that the accident was caused by the joint negligence of both drivers in that each failed to see and observe the other vehicle at the intersection, and they pray for a judgment against the partnership known as Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Company and the individual members thereof and against Clarence Collins, in solido, for various amounts for personal injuries, and in the suit their respective husbands join them and make claim against said defendants for medical expenses incurred and for certain losses occasioned as a result of the accident.
In making answer to the suit, Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Company and its component partners disavow negligence on the part of Harris and their answer alleges that the accident was caused solely through the fault of Clarence Collins, who drove the Ford truck; Collins denies that he was negligent and alleges that the accident was caused by the negligence of the driver of the Yellow Cab.
After the case was heard on its merits on the issues thus made up, the judge a quo absolved the driver of the taxicab from negligence and dismissed the suit as to Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Company and the members thereof; the judge attributed the accident solely to the fault of Collins, who drove the truck, and rendered judgment against him in favor of all plaintiffs for various amounts. The plaintiffs have taken this appeal from the judgment; Collins has taken no appeal, so, therefore, the primary question now before us for consideration is whether the employee of Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Company was also guilty of negligence in connection with the accident.
From the description of the intersection given by the witnesses, it appears that Leonidas Street at the point of the collision has a paved surface; Belfast Street is unimproved. Neither street is given a right-of-way status by local ordinance, and there are no traffic signs or semaphore signals at the intersection directing the movement of traffic.
The front of the Ford truck hit the Yellow Cab at about its right rear wheel, and when the impact occurred the cab had crossed more than half of the intersection.
Harris attempted to fasten the blame for the accident on Collins, who was operating the Ford truck. He admits when he reached Leonidas Street he could not see to his right into that street because the structure on the corner built up to the property lines and also parked vehicles obstructed his view. He maintains he *546 stopped and "there was no lights coming in the street at all when I started across, and I was still in first gear when he hit me." The three injured passengers emphatically deny that a stop was made by Harris before he drove the cab into Leonidas Street, and with remarkable unanimity as to the details, they say the cab was being driven between 30 to 35 miles per hour and dashed out into the intersection directly into the path of the Ford truck.
Collins' story is that he was driving the truck at 25 miles per hour along Leonidas Street, but upon nearing Belfast Street, he reduced the speed to 20 miles per hour; that when his truck reached a distance of about 20 feet away from Belfast Street, the taxicab suddenly "busted out" into the intersection from his left and immediately into his path and that his attempt to stop the truck in order to avert the crash was futile.
Whether the Yellow Cab was brought to a stop at Leonidas Street is a subject which was much discussed both in oral argument and in brief, but the conflicting contentions made by counsel need not be dwelt upon, nor is it necessary to analyze the testimony regarding the controverted point, for the obvious reason that it is entirely immaterial whether Harris did or did not bring his cab to a stop before driving it into the intersection.
Whichever view is adopted would require a conclusion that Harris was clearly at fault and that his negligence contributed to the collision between the two vehicles. If the cab made the stop before it proceeded into Leonidas Street, then Harris was guilty of the grossest negligence in abandoning a place of safety and driving his vehicle directly into the path of the truck without seeing the truck approaching on Leonidas Street; and if Harris made entry into Leonidas Street without first having stopped and without looking, it could never be denied that he was most imprudent in dashing into the intersection in utter disregard of traffic movement in the intersecting street. There is no question that when the Yellow Cab first entered into Leonidas Street, the Ford truck was in close proximity to Belfast Street, and under the rules of the road it had the right of way because it approached from the right of the taxicab.
Harris, while on the witness stand, seemed to sense his dilemma, and at one point in his testimony he gave as the excuse for not having observed the Ford truck that it was being driven without its lights turned on. But Harris' evidence as a whole convinces us that the predicate for the assertion that the Ford had no lights is the fact that whereas he saw no vehicle coming, the truck could not possibly have been lighted. This contention of the cab driver that the truck approached on Leonidas Street without headlights, we feel sure, is nothing more than an afterthought and a feeble attempt on his part to relieve himself from blame for the accident. This abundantly appears when the state of the record is taken into consideration. We notice in the answer filed by the Cab Company that after a denial of negligence on the part of its employee was made, it then is affirmatively alleged that the accident was caused solely and proximately by the negligence of Clarence Collins in seven specified particulars, but conspicuous by its absence is any specification that Collins' Ford truck was unlighted at the time of the collision. The three injured plaintiffs all testified, at a time when the question of lights on the Ford was not an issue in the case, that they only knew of the presence of the Ford in Leonidas Street when its lights flashed into the cab just before the impact. Such statement was entirely voluntary on their part as there was not one question asked said plaintiffs if the Ford truck was lighted. Collins appeared as a witness in his own behalf and we do not find in his cross-examination by counsel for the Cab Company that any questions were asked of him whether his vehicle had its lights illuminated at the time of the accident.
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78 So. 2d 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mansfield-v-toye-bros-yellow-cab-co-lactapp-1955.