Matkins v. City of Monroe

144 So. 758
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
DocketNo. 4319.
StatusPublished

This text of 144 So. 758 (Matkins v. City of Monroe) 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
Matkins v. City of Monroe, 144 So. 758 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PALMER, J.

Plaintiff sues individually, and for the use and benefit of his minor son, Thomas F. Mat-kins, to recover damages for personal injuries and property losses sustained by him, and for personal injuries sustained by his son, as a result of a collision between a truck driven by plaintiff and a street car owned and operated by .the defendant city within its corporate limits. The amount of damages sought for plaintiff, personally, is $495, and the amount he seeks for the use and benefit of his said minor son is $10,000.

For cause of action plaintiff has made substantially the following allegations: That on or about April 26,1930, he and his said minor son, while traveling south on Lee avenue in the city of Monroe, in a Ford truck loaded with stave timbers' or bolts, on their way to the plant of the Louisville Cooperage Company, located in the southern part of the city, came to the intersection of Lee and Forest avenues, at which .point they started to turn across the street car track to the east on Forest avenue, and when their truck had reached the tracks of the street car line, the engine suddenly died, stopping the truck; that at this time there was approaching from the south, traveling north on Lee avenue, a street car operated by the defendant company, which was about 200 or more feet distant; that when his truck stopped, he made every effort to start it, and before he could do anything, the street car, after having failed to stop, slow down, or slacken its speed at the intersection, increased its speed and ran the left front corner of the street car against the right front corner of his truck, knocking the street car from the track and turning the truck around; that it was the duty of the defendant, in approaching this intersection, to stop, slow down, or slacken his speed, which he failed to do, but instead increased it; that notwithstanding the street car motorman had a clear view of plaintiff’s truck, he continued in his travels until the collision occurred, although plaintiff’s truck had stalled at or on the track, and he and his said son were rendered helpless to avoid the accident.

He further alleges that at the time of the -collision, defendant’s street car was being operated in a reckless, negligent, and careless manner, and at an excessive rate of speed, and that notwithstanding his truck was heavily loaded and standing still at the time of the collision, it was knocked into a reversed position and the street car was knocked from the track, thereafter traveling approximately 14 feet before coming to a stop, all as a result of the excessive speed at which the street car was running; that after seeing the street ear was not going to stop or slow down at the intersection, as required by defendant city, but instead increased its speed, he and his son had no opportunity to get off the truck and out of the way to avoid injury as a result of the collision; that as a result of his truck being struck by the street car with terrific force, his son was thrown underneath the street ear and in front of the wheels, so that his left leg was severed from his body above the knee and, in addition, received other injuries and bruises; that in the collision the truck was damaged, and that he (plaintiff) received injuries to his arm, hand, jaw, and head, rendering him unconscious ; that if the operator of the street car had used ordinary care, reason, or diligence by placing the car under control, he could have stopped before striking the truck and before causing the said damages to himself and his said minor son.

The amount of $10,000 damages claimed for his minor son is to cover the loss of his leg and decreased earning capacity and for bruises to his face, head, arm, and body, and for physical and mental pain, anguish, and suffering, and for further deprivation of pleasure and the embarrassment caused from being crippled or one-legged. The amount of $495 claimed personally by plaintiff is to cover alleged damages to his truck and to cover the amount paid the doctors for medical attention to his son, and for his son’s sanitarium bills, and for injury to his own person, and for physical and mental pain suffered therefrom.

Defendant, while admitting the collision and in the main admitting the injuries alleged, denies that .they were occasioned through any fault or negligence on its part. In fact, it denies all the charges of negligence made against it. It makes substantially the following allegations: That when the motor-truck being driven by plaintiff was approaching the intersection of Lee and Forest avenues from the north, traveling south on Lee avenue, that its street car was at that time approaching the same intersection from the south, traveling north on the same avenue; that when the street car approached the south line of the intersection, the operator brought the ear to a safety stop and then started across the intersection, at which time the mo-tortruck was stopped, headed south and in a position where it was entirely clear of the street car track ;■ that the street ear proceeded slowly across' the intersection and had -completely crossed it, having reached a point *760 where the front end of the street car was more than 12 feet north of the north line of Forest avenue, at which time plaintiff suddenly started his motor truck, turning to his left, that is, in an easterly direction, as though to cross into Forest avenue on the east, and in doing so, the right front corner of the motor-truck struck the left front corner of the street car, the impact resulting in derailing the street car, knocking it at an angle to the track, after which the ear traveled a short distance.

Defendant further avers that the street car was within a few feet of the truck before plaintiff suddenly started the truck, resulting in the collision; that in approaching the intersection in question the motorman brought the car to a safety stop and, upon discovering that there was no traffic approaching from either end of Forest avenue, proceeded across the intersection at a reasonable speed, at which time plaintiff’s truck, still facing south on Lee avenue, was standing still at a sufficient distance from the track for the street car to pass in safety, and that plaintiff, when the street car was within a few feet of where he was stopped, suddenly started the truck moving, turning to the left, running the right front corner of the truck into the left front corner of the street car; that neither at the time plaintiff stopped his truck on the north side of the intersection, nor when he suddenly started the same and turned to the left, did he give any warning as to what he intended to do; and that the collision was the direct result of plaintiff’s negligence, in which defendant was in no manner at fault.

The lower court rejected the demands of plaintiff at his costs. From that judgment he prosecutes this appeal.

Opinion.

There are two very distinct lines of testimony submitted in this case — one by the plaintiff and his witnesses, and the other by the defendant’s witnesses. Plaintiff and his witnesses are thoroughly in accord in their testimony as to how the collision occurred, and likewise all of defendant’s witnesses are in full accord as to how the collision occurred. But the two lines of testimony on practically all of the material points are diametrically opposed, the one to the other.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 So. 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matkins-v-city-of-monroe-lactapp-1932.