McNeil v. Boagni

153 So. 352, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 585
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1934
DocketNo. 1258.
StatusPublished

This text of 153 So. 352 (McNeil v. Boagni) 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
McNeil v. Boagni, 153 So. 352, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 585 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

Mr. Lyman Guidry, employee of Mr. E. M. Boagni, one of the defendants, now deceased, represented herein by Richard O. Eekart and E. M. Boagni, Jr., his testamentary executors, as parties defendant and appellant under order of this court, while driving an auto belonging to his employer on Railroad avpnue in Opelousas, collided with Henry Sims, November 23,1932, who received injuries from which he died about a week after the accident.

His surviving widow, Charlotte McNeil, and three of his major heirs brought this suit in damages against E. M. Boagni and the Independence Indemnity Company, public liability insurer, for $11,625.

Judgment was rendered in solido against defendants for $1,750 with legal interest from judicial demand, from which defendants appeal.

Appellees having acquiesced in the correctness of the judgment dismissing the claim of the major heirs of deceased, our review of the case will be restricted to the contested issues between Charlotte McNeil, the surviving widow, and the defendants.

Railroad avenue runs north and south through the city of Opelousas, and North street, east to west into that avenue. One block south of North street, Bellevue street runs east to west into the avenue, likewise Landry street, one block south of Bellevue street, enters the avenue.

Mr. Guidry, driver of the car that caused the injury, drove into the avenue from Landry street, turned to his right as he entered it, and proceeded northward intending to go to the office of Mr. Boagni, his employer, which is situated some distance north of North street.

North street runs into Railroad avenue but does not continue across and therefore stops at its entrance into that avenue.

The first question to be determined is as to where the collision occurred.

Mr. Guidry, who was driving the Boagni *353 car and the only witness who actually saw the accident, says, when he first saw the deceased, the front of his car was “well past the north of North Street.” He could not, however, fix the exact distance or the number of feet north of the north line of that street, where, he says, the accident occurred. If the front of his auto had “well passed” that line when he first saw the “figure,” as he explains, it is therefore obvious that when he came in contact with the deceased, it was at some distance north of the north line of North street/ He testifies that this “figure” was about 7 or 8 feet from his car when he first saw it, hut as the front of his car had then “well passed” the north line of that street, the collision must have happened at not less than 10 or 12 feet from that north line, according to Mr. Guidry’s own testimony.

It is shown that Mr. Oahanin was driving a mule across Railroad avenue from the west towards the entrance of North street into that avenue just before the collision occurred and that deceased, Henry Sims, was coming behind him at a distance of about 30 or 40 feet. Mr. Oahanin had crossed the avenue with his mule and was about 20 feet in North street when he heard the noise caused by the impact between the car Mr. Guidry was driving and the deceased who, the evidence shows, was walking across the avenue, carrying pieces of wood and some ice under his arm.

Mr. Oahanin testifies that he picked up Henry Sims’ hat about 3 or 4 feet from the south corner of North street, under the “overhead” light, which the record shows was an' electric light of the city and which was burning at the time. Oahanin also found a piece of ice in the middle of North street at the time he saw the hat of the deceased. This piece of ice was undoubtedly a broken piece of the ice the deceased was carrying under his arm across the avenue. The-fact that the hat was 3 or 4 feet from the south corner of North street and that the piece of ice was found in midway of that street, shows that the collision did not occur well beyond the north line of North street, as testified to by Mr. Guidry.

Counsel for defendants advance the contention that deceased on entering the avenue Erom tlie west may have diverted his course n a northeasterly direction in crossing, and, n consequence, was north of the north line if North street where Mr. Guidry says he vas when struck.

'The evidence shows that deceased was then living on Bellevue street whiéh is one block southeast of North street and that deceased was then going to his home after his day’s work. The evidence shows that deceased was following Mr. Oahanin who was driving his mule directly across the avenue towards North street, and we cannot conceive why deceased should have deviated to the north of North street, while intending to go southward from North street to Bellevue street where he lived. If there were in the evidence any proof that he had been attracted northward 'as he attempted to cross the avenue, there might be some support to sustain the contention urged .by counsel, but in the total absence of the slightest proof of that character the reasonable conclusion is, that plaintiff was walking towards the entrance of North street in the avenue and not in line with the north side of North street, where the evidence shows there was no sidewalk, but that he was going towards the south line of that street where there was a sidewalk.

Another contention of counsel for defendants is, that the wind blew Henry Sims’ hat after he was struck to where it was found near the south corner of North street.

The only witness who testified as to the weather condition at the time was Mr. Gui-dry, defendants’ witness. His testimony on this subject is that the weather was very cloudy but that there was no rain, that the roadway was dry. He did not say that any wind was blowing, nor in what direction, hence there is no ground whatsoever to support the suggestion that Sims’ hat might have been blown from beyond the north line of North street where Mr. Guidry claims the accident happened to the south corner of North street where the hat was found, a distance of over 50 feet, the width of North street being 53 feet curb to curb. Even if we could account for the finding of that hat for the reasons urged by counsel for defendants, how would it be possible to explain how the piece of broken ice was also found in the middle of North street? It can hardly be said that it was also blown by a wind coming from the north line of North street, as such a wind could have little effect in blowing back a chunk of ice to a distance exceeding 25 feet. The simple, natural, and logical explanation of all this is, that deceased was carrying the wood and ice under his arm and when struck, prompted by an instinctive impulse, pressed these objects.under his arm,, one piece happened to drop in North street and other broken pieces of ice he carried, with pieces of wood, beyond the north *354 Une of North Street where they were seen flying by Mr- Guilbeau who was driving a car southward at the time. As deceased was holding the wood and ice, it is probable they were carried along with his body and his hat being 'loose on his head fell where he was struck, near the south corner of North street and under the electric light.

Mr.

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153 So. 352, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneil-v-boagni-lactapp-1934.