Pigott v. Bates

143 So. 535
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
DocketNo. 1043.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 143 So. 535 (Pigott v. Bates) 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
Pigott v. Bates, 143 So. 535 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LE BLANC, J.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, William John Pigott, who br'ought this suit in his capacity as administrator of his minor son, Edwin Pigott, against W. Lawrence Bates. The demand is one for damages for personal injuries sustained' by young Pigott when he was run into, while riding his bicycle, by one Howard Adams, who was driving Bates’ truck. The petition charges the driver of defendant’s truck with negligence in driving at an excessive speed and recklessly; in making no effort to apply the brakes of his car and stop it until the child was hit; in becoming excited and not slackening his speed, but instead increasing it and driving to the right of the street after the child was nearly across; ■ and in failing to avoid the accident by taking advantage of the last clear chance. The young boy suffered a fractured skull, for which he had to undergo a serious operation. The demand, including hospital expenses, is for $10,000. Judgment below was for $1,250.

Defendant first filed an exception of no cause of action based on a contention that the petition, by some of its allegations, disclosed contributory negligence on the part of thq injured boy and other allegations which nullified those of negligence on the part of the truck driver. We have carefully considered the petition from both of the points of view stated, and have come to the conclusion that as to the contributory negligence of the young boy there is presented a matter which is one of defenses, and with regard to whatever averments it may. contain which would in any way tend to nullify one of the charges of negligence made, there are sufficient allegations otherwise to sustain a cause of action against the defendant.

The defense is a denial of the negligence charged against defendant’s truck driver and an averment that the proximate and sole cause of the accident was the negligence of the boy in suddenly riding a bicycle across the street in an unusual movement contrary to the normal way in which traffic moves, and in suddenly coming from behind a moving truck which was about to meet defendant’s truck. As an alternative, defendant pleads the contributory negligence of the boy as a bar to his recovery.

The accident occurred in the city of Boga-lusa in the early afternoon of July 21, 1931. Several boys were congregated in front of file-store of Mr. A. J. Mevers, which is situated on. the northwest corner of Avenue F and Seventh street. Both of these streets are forty feet wide. Right at the intersection, Avenue-F begins sloping downgrade, going north,, which is the direction defendant’s truck was-going. The sidewalk on the north side of Mevers’ store is ten feet wide. The store is. next to the sidewalk and therefore ten feet from the street proper. In front of the store,, at a point about fifteen or twenty feet from the point formed by the intersection of the sidewalks along both streets, is a bench on . which these boys, • who congregated at the corner, sat. They were in the habit of riding their bicycles, leaving from that bench and going in a semicircular path across Avenue F to a sloping ramp in front of the Ne-Hi Bottling Plant directly across the avenue from Mevers’ store, and returning to-their starting point; Although it is not shown that the injured boy was doing so-at the time of the accident, it may be inferred from' some of the testimony that sometimes some of these boys would grab onto a moving vehicle to let it carry them up the grade a bit while making their circular turns, in the street. That this was a dangerous, pastime is'no better indicated than by the undisputed testimony of Mrs. Matilda Maas- *537 sen, who lived next door to Mevers, and who, just a moment before the accident, had warned the boys about it. The older Pigott boy, Wilton, heeded her advice and stopped riding. The injured boy seemed to have been a bit bolder and continued in his sport. Mrs. Maassen hardly had time to get up from the rocker in which she was seated on her front porch and turn to go into the house when she heard the crash in which the boy was hurt. She states that it was because of her nervousness and the fear that some of them would be injured that she left the porch.

Whilst these boys were playing on the bench in front of Mevers’ store, a truck which belonged to Bussel-Seal Furniture Company was parked on Avenue E some distance north of the bench. Durwood Seal, the driver of that truck, estimates the distance as being about two car lengths from the bench. It is shown that the frontage of Mevers’ store on Avenue P is sixteen feet, and we think it is safe to assume that a Ford truck, the kind in question here, is not less than seven or eight feet long. Therefore, taking into account the ten feet of sidewalk on Seventh street, sixteen feet of the Mevers’ store frontage, and fifteen feet, the two car lengths, it would seem that this truck was parked forty feet from the north line of Seventh street where that street and Avenue F meet. We stress these measurements because of the importance of deciding where this truck and defendant’s met in the intersection, and whether the boy came within the vision of the driver of defendant’s truck, after emerging from behind the other truck, in time for the defendant’s driver to avoid running into him.

As Seal left his parking place on Avenue F running in low gear and going very slow, Edwin Pigott, the' injured boy, followed on his bicycle directly behind the truck. Seal says that when he left the parking place, a -boy followed his truck; he not knowing at .that time that it was the one who was afterwards hurt. He says that he thought the boy was attempting to catch hold of his truck, and when he entered Seventh street, he looked back and saw that he was coming south, but too far back to catch up with him. It was at that moment also, in turning his gaze back to the front that he noticed the defendant’s truck coming north,, or toward him. It was then within thirty or forty feet of his. He does not state, as indeed we can hardly expect any one to do so, the exact point where the two trucks met, but it was certainly within the intersection of the two streets. Taking into account the fact that he had forty feet to go to get to the north line of Seventh street and traveling very slow, and that the other truck, on the contrary, was going twenty-five or thirty miles an hour, and that it was forty feet from him as he entered Seventh street, it would seem that the meeting was bound to have been either in the center of the intersection or north of that point. This would have placed the defendant truck between twenty-five and thirty feet from the north pedestrian traffic line on Seventh street, j.ust north of which, some five or six feet, the injured boy veered to his left when he left the back of the Seal truck to go across Avenue F. Based on these figures, the distance here established tends to corroborate the testimony of Howard Adams, the driver of defendant’s truck, that he passed the Bussel-Seal truck right around the middle of Seventh street. It also tends to corroborate the testimony of Mr. A. J. Mevers that when the two trucks were abreast of each other the front wheels of the Bates truck were twenty to twenty-five feet from the north pedestrian traffic line on Seventh street. Adams, going at from twenty-five to thirty miles an hour, was within the speed limit as fixed by the city ordinance of Bogalusa.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pigott-v-bates-lactapp-1932.