Matsler v. Jones Motor Co.

128 So. 721, 14 La. App. 175, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 412
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketNo. 3774
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 128 So. 721 (Matsler v. Jones Motor 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
Matsler v. Jones Motor Co., 128 So. 721, 14 La. App. 175, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 412 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

DREW, J.

Plaintiff, on June 4, 1929, brought suit against Jones Motor Company, Inc., and Y. J. Maish, alleging that said defendants were indebted unto plaintiff in solido in the full sum of $20,339 for injuries sustained by plaintiff by being struck and knocked down by an automobile driven by Y. J. Maish, an employee of Jones Motor Company, Inc., while acting within the scope of his employment and in the discharge of his duties; plaintiff further alleged that, at the time she was run into by said automobile, she was crossing De Siard street in the city of Monroe at the point where Third street intersects De Siard street; that plaintiff was within the white lines marked off at said intersection for the use of pedestrians; that she had observed the condition of the traffic at said point before crossing the street and had reached a point beyond the center of the street, traveling from the southern to the northern side of De Siard street, when the car then being driven by V. J. Maish, in an easterly direction along De Siard street, was driven into plaintiff with such force and violence as to hurl plaintiff to the pavement, whereby she sustained a ver[176]*176tical fracture of the outer condyle of the tibia (the larger bone of the lower leg); that a fragment was broken off of said bone, being about one inch in width and one and one-half inches in length, which was displaced outward, approximately one-half of an inch; that the head of the fibula (the smaller bone of the lower leg) sustained a splitting fracture running obliquely across the head and shaft and extending inward and upward. That in addition to the injury to petitioner’s knee as above set out, petitioner sustained numerous bruises and contusions about the body; that her back and shoulders were badly wrenched and sprained, all of which caused her great bodily suffering and soreness and greatly impaired her general health. That, as a result of said injuries, plaintiff was confined to her bed for a period of twelve weeks with her left leg packed in sand bags, during which period she suffered great pain and inconvenience attendant upon being confined to bed without being able to move or shift her body; that, after being able to leave her bed, she could move about only by the use of a wheel chair which was being used by petitioner at the time her suit was brought, and she further averred permanent disability and that in the event she should regain any future use of her limbs, that mobilization would always be attended with severe pain.

Plaintiff itemized her damages as follows:

(a) Pain and suffering undergone by petitioner because of said accident ....................................$ 5,000.00
(b) Permanent disability; impairment of petitioner’s health; inability to do any work of any reasonable character; impairment of petitioner’s general health and loss of resistive power ________________________ 10,000.00
(c) Pain and suffering which
your petitioner will have to undergo through the balance of her natural life on account of said injury______________ 5,000.00
(d) Expenses:
Sanitarium bill____________$ 14.00
Drugs and medicines 31.00'
Nurses’ bill---------------------- 144.00
Doctors’ bill__________________ 100.00
Wheel chair, crutches and other incidental expenses________ 50.00
-- 339.00
Total.......................... $20,339.00

Plaintiff further alleged that said accident resulting in her injuries was caused solely by the carelessness, negligence, and wanton disregard of her rights on the part of the said Y. J. Maish in the operation of the Hudson brougham automobile which he drove into plaintiff at said street intersection while running at a high rate of speed and without giving warning by the sounding of his horn or otherwise.

Defendants filed answer admitting the occurrence of the accident, but denying that it resulted through the negligence of the said V. J. Maish in operating the Hudson brougham automobile which they denied he was driving in a careless or negligent manner, and further admitted that plaintiff received some injuries, but denied that she was injured to the extern; which she alleged and further alleged that such injuries as plaintiff sustained were due to plaintiff’s fault or negligence in walking into or onto the street directly in front of a moving car which was being operated in a lawful, prudent manner.

Defendant, Jones Motor Company, Inc., further admitted that the car or truck which was being driven by the said Y. J. Maish was owned by defendant, Jones Motor Company, Inc., and that the said V. J. [177]*177Maish was the servant and employee of the said Jones Motor Company, Inc., and was then acting within the scope of his employment.

Upon the issues so made, the case was tried and submitted to the district court and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants, Jones Motor Company, Inc., and V. J. Maish in solido, in the sum of $8,500, together with legal interest from judicial demand and all costs. From the judgment thus rendered, the defendants prosecute this appeal. Plaintiff has answered the appeal praying that the judgment of the lower court be increased to $12,500 or $15,000.

Dr. Julie B. Matsler, plaintiff in this case, is a widow, who, prior to the accident, earned her livelihood by the practice of her profession of osteopathy in the city of Monroe, which profession she has followed since 1904. It was her sole means of support.

The accident occurred about one o’clock in the day on January 12, 1929, at the corner of De Siard and Third streets in the city of Monroe, La. The sun was shining and the street at this point was paved with asphalt and was dry and in good condition. The street is forty feet wide, with a street car track in the center. It is about twenty feet from the curb on the south side of said street to the street car track, and there were no automobiles parked on the south side of said street at the time of the accident. There was sufficient space south of the street car track for three cars to travel abreast. Plaintiff, before attempting to cross the street, stopped and looked in both directions. There was no car coming from the east, but she did see a car down the street some distance, coming from the west. Realizing she had plenty of time to cross in safety, she proceeded to walk slowly across the street, walking within the white lines marked off for pedestrians. She had either reached the car track in the center of the street or was within a few feet of it when she was struck by defendant’s car. The testimony of all witnesses, including the statement signed by the defendant driver immediately after the accident, shows that plaintiff fell on the south rail of the street car track. The defendant driver testified that he saw plaintiff when she was three or four feet from the curb, when she stopped and looked in both directions and then started on across the street; that he did not see her any more until he was in the act of striking her with his car, and that he swerved to the right to keep from running over her with his wheels.

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Bluebook (online)
128 So. 721, 14 La. App. 175, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matsler-v-jones-motor-co-lactapp-1930.