Muscente v. R. S. Brine Transportation Co.

196 A. 259, 59 R.I. 482, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 14, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 196 A. 259 (Muscente v. R. S. Brine Transportation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muscente v. R. S. Brine Transportation Co., 196 A. 259, 59 R.I. 482, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 183 (R.I. 1938).

Opinion

*484 Moss, J.

These are actions of the case brought by Fausto A. Muscente and his minor daughter to recover the damages resulting to them respectively from personal injuries sustained by the daughter in a collision which occurred between a trolley car operated by the United Electric Railways Company and a heavy truck, consisting of a tractor and trailer, operated by the defendant. In each case the plaintiff alleges that the negligent operation of the truck was a proximate cause of the daughter’s injuries. At the time of the collision she was a passenger on the car and no contributory negligence by her or her father is claimed.

The two cases were tried together before a justice of the superior court, sitting without a jury, and at the conclusion of the trial he made a decision, in each case, for the defend *485 ant, on the ground that according to the evidence the collision was not caused by any negligence of the defendant’s servant in the operation of the truck, but solely by the negligent operation of the trolley car by the man in charge of it. The cases are now before us on bills of exceptions duly filed and allowed, the principal exception in each case being to the final decision. Since the relation of the parties and the nature of the cases are such that the father cannot maintain his action unless the daughter can maintain hers, we shall confine our discussion to the case of the daughter, and the word plaintiff in such discussion will refer solely to her.

The collision occurred in the intersection of Point and Richmond streets in the city of Providence at about 2:15 o’clock, p. m., on September 4, 1934. The former street runs approximately east and west and the latter north and south. The weather and conditions for driving were good. A few moments before the collision occurred, the defendant’s truck, moving at a speed from 10 to 12 miles per hour, was proceeding westward on Point street, which is 40 feet wide between curbs, with sidewalks 10 feet wide, and was approaching Richmond street, which is 22 feet wide between curbs, with sidewalks 9 feet wide. A building stood at the southeast corner of the intersection, coming up to the building line on each street.

The one-man trolley car was at the same time approaching Point street from the south, on a track which crossed that street and occupied the middle of Richmond street. It stopped by a white pole, which stood on the east side of Richmond street about 55 feet south of the southerly curb line of Point street. A witness, who was driving a truck northward on the east side of Richmond street and stopped a few feet back of the car, when it stopped by the white pole, testified that its rear door was then opposite to the pole. Some other witnesses testified that the front door was then opposite to the pole.

*486 The plaintiff boarded the car and paid her fare, and the car started forward. She testified that after that the motorman gave her a transfer. He testified that he started the car after she had paid her fare and that he thought he gave her a transfer. The collision occurred before she had left the vestibule. Another witness testified that when the car was entering the. intersection, the motorman was turned around as if he was making change.

The operator of the defendant’s truck testified, in substance, that as it moved westward, its right side was 2 feet from the curb on the north side of Point street and that he was seated 6 feet from that side of the tractor; that when he was at a distance from the easterly curb line of Richmond street which he estimated at 30 to 40 feet, he saw the trolley car stopped, a short distance to the south, on Richmond street, to take on passengers; that he kept on going and looked the other way to see if there was anything coming from the north; that then, when he was close to the northeast corner of the intersection, perhaps 10 or 15 feet away, going perhaps a little more slowly than before, as he had just been shifting from third speed to fourth, he looked again toward the south and saw the trolley car approaching the southerly curb line of Point street and slowing down as if it was going to stop; that it stopped when he was 10 or 15 feet away from the nearer rail, that is, when he was about 1 to 6 feet east of the easterly curb line of Richmond street; that he kept on going straight ahead and when the front wheels of his tractor were over the track, he saw the car right beside him; and that it struck the battery box right behind his cab and threw the tractor around to the right, so that it was headed to the north and was partly in Richmond street to the north of the intersection, and the tractor and trailer blocked the east side of that street.

The motorman testified that when his car entered the intersection, moving at a speed of about 4 miles per hour, he *487 saw the truck more than 50 feet east of the intersection; that he thought he had time enough to pass through ahead of the truck; that he did not see it slowing down, but thought it was going to stop; that he put on “a little more speed”; and that near the middle of the intersection the speed of his car was between 8 and 10 miles per hour.

He also testified that he did not see the truck again until just before the collision; that he then put his car into reverse; and that it stopped after it had gone about 6 or 7 feet into that part of Richmond street which was to the north of the north curb line of Point street. He further testified, as did the operator of the truck, that the right front corner of the car came in contact with the tractor at the step, where the battery was kept.

The projecting metal at the bottom of that corner of the car was damaged, and the rear half of the second door, back of that corner, was considerably damaged and the glass broken. The battery box, about 10 feet back from the front bumper of the tractor, which was about 15 feet long, was knocked off; the chassis was twisted a little; and the rear tire at the left rear of the tractor was cut to some extent. There were scratches and dents just above the doors of the car, and the operator of the truck testified that these were made by a canvas rack on the front board of the trailer, and that the trailer was wider than the tractor by about 6 inches on each side.

There was testimony that corroborated the testimony of the operator of the truck in important particulars, and there was other testimony that in like manner corroborated the testimony of the motorman and contradicted some of the testimony of the operator of the truck. Some of the witnesses who gave the latter testimony contradicted the testimony of both the operator of the truck and the motorman as to the position of the truck when the collision occurred. Counsel for the plaintiff contend that the admitted physical facts of the case show that the testimony of the operator of *488 the truck is incredible; but we do not find their reasoning convincing.

After the evidence had all been introduced, the trial attorney for the plaintiff made his argument and there was discussion between him and the trial justice as to the salient features of the evidence.

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

Related

Currie v. Nathanson
190 A. 22 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 A. 259, 59 R.I. 482, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muscente-v-r-s-brine-transportation-co-ri-1938.