Parnell v. City of Monroe

98 So. 2d 820, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 935
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 26, 1957
DocketNo. 8694
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 So. 2d 820 (Parnell 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
Parnell v. City of Monroe, 98 So. 2d 820, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 935 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

In this action in tort plaintiff seeks to recover of the City of Monroe and its agent, Oscar L. Womack, damages in soli-do for personal injuries, shock, pain and suffering, as well as for medical and hospital expenses incurred as a result thereof, and for disability and loss of earnings, alleged to have been accidently sustained by her July 15, 1956, as she was alighting from a municipally owned bus which she had boarded as a fare-paying passenger.

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff against both defendants, in solido, in the principal sum of $1,200, plus $403.55 medical and hospital expenses, plaintiff, Edith Parnell, and the defendant, Oscar L. Wo-mack, appealed devolutively. The defendant, City of Monroe, appealed both suspen-sively and devolutively.

Only factual questions are presented for determination. It is conceded that passenger carriers generally are required to exercise the highest degree of care for the safety of those they undertake to transport and are liable for the slightest negligence. Coleman v. Shreveport Railways Co., La.App., 86 So.2d 590, and the authorities therein cited.

Plaintiff, a resident of Lake Providence, Louisiana, accompanied by her sister, boarded the bus near the post office in Monroe, Louisiana, near noon July 15, 1956, for the purpose of visiting in her sister’s home on Church Street in the Booker T. Washington Subdivision to the City of Monroe, and charges the defendants with negligence in the failure of the driver to keep a proper lookout, in starting the bus while she and other passengers were attempting to alight therefrom, and in suddenly starting the bus while she was on the steps in the act of alighting therefrom.

The defendants denied any acts of negligence on their part, but, in the alternative, plead that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence “because of the manner in which she alighted from the bus”, obviously, a mere statement of a conclusion insufficient to support the charge.

The issues presented for determination by this appeal are (1) whether plaintiff sustained accidental injuries as alleged; (2) if so, whether the bus operator was guilty of negligence constituting a proximate cause thereof, and (3) if so, the adequacy of the award.

The trial court concluded, after trial upon the merits, that plaintiff had, by a preponderance of the evidence, established the first two of these propositions. Our review of the record leads us to the conclusion that the findings of our distinguished brother of the district court were not only without manifest error but eminently correct. A brief discussion of the facts [822]*822on these points will suffice for the purpose of this opinion.

Plaintiff testified that when the bus stopped at her destination, she was preceded to the rear side door by one Daisy Lou Dunlap, accompanied by her child, and was followed by Irma Lee Turner and Yvonne Turner; that while in the act of alighting from the bus and when she had descended to the second step, holding with her left hand to an iron railing, the bus suddenly started up, throwing her to the ground. Plaintiff’s sister, Bernice Dunlap, on boarding the bus, left her baggage near the front door of the bus, and as it stopped at their destination, she proceeded towards the front to get her luggage but the bus started up before she alighted. The bus was therefore required to stop a second time for her to leave the bus, and, on her doing so, she saw her sister lifted from the ground by other passengers. It was on the occasion, too, of the second stop that the Turner girls left the bus.

The defendant, Womack, testified that, after initially starting the bus, one of the passengers came forward after he had driven 35 to 40 feet and requested that she be permitted to get off, whereupon he again stopped for that purpose.

Without recounting in detail the evidence given by each of these witnesses, the record shows most conclusively that as plaintiff was alighting from the bus, holding with her left hand, standing on the second step with one foot and in the act of stepping to the ground with the other foot, the bus was suddenly started, precipitating plaintiff’s fall to the ground, and that such negligent act was the proximate cause of the accident in which plaintiff was injured. No facts were alleged in defendant’s plea of contributory negligence, neither was any evidence introduced supporting the same.

The record further discloses that after the bus continued forward some four or five blocks to the end of its run and prior to its return, plaintiff was carried to a house nearby, and on the bus’s return the driver was informed of plaintiff’s injury, whereupon she was again taken on the bus, accompanied by her sister, and carried to downtown Monroe where they were granted transfer tickets and conveyed to the E. A. Conway Charity Hospital. Plaintiff was admitted to that institution for emergency treatment, in the course of which N-rays of her broken arm were made. She was later sent by ambulance to the St. Francis Sanitarium, where she was placed in bed and treated by Dr. Roy H. Ledbetter over a period of approximately a week.

The Doctor testified that upon plaintiff’s admission to the hospital, the X-rays revealed a severely comminuted fracture of the radius just above the wrist, and a splint was applied. However, on the following day she was admitted to the operating room, given a general anaesthetic, and a reduction of the fracture was carried out with traction, maintained by the insertion of pins into the hand distal to the fracture and then one into the bone of the elbow. These pins were incorporated in a cast which extended from the hand to above the elbow. After her discharge from the hospital, the Doctor saw her at home on four or five occasions during August and September, 1956.

Additionally, the Doctor noted that during the period of plaintiff’s hospitalization she complained of pain and discomfort in her back (but X-rays revealed no fractures in that area) and he concluded that plaintiff had suffered a strain or sprain of the ligaments about the lumbosacral joint, which, in his opinion, was in all probability attributable to the accident. But the witness was further of the opinion that plaintiff, notwithstanding her age of 69 years, had a satisfactory recovery and would experience no permanent disability.

Dr. J. E. Walsworth, who examined plaintiff prior to the trial, praised Dr. Ledbetter’s surgery and treatment, but was [823]*823of the opinion that, due to the severity of the injuries, there would he some residual effects suffered by her, particularly as to her back, shoulder, right forearm, hand and wrist, the remainder of her life. It was the Doctor’s opinion that she is permanently and totally incapacitated from doing the work of the kind and character she had formerly done, such as housecleaning, washing and ironing, gardening and picking cotton.

Dr. Irving J. Wolff of Monroe, who made an examination of plaintiff October 20, 1956, but who had not examined the X-rays, was of the opinion that the injuries sustained were sufficient to cause serious pain, suffering and disability.

Plaintiff complains that the defendants’ failure to call Dr. Alfpns R. Altenberg, an orthopedic surgeon of Monroe, Louisiana, as a witness or to take his testimony should be construed as a presumption that the Doctor’s testimony would not have been favorable to defendants’ position. The record discloses that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
98 So. 2d 820, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parnell-v-city-of-monroe-lactapp-1957.