Polizzi v. Louisiana Ry. & Nav. Co.

131 So. 611, 14 La. App. 442, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 336
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 1930
DocketNo. 11,607
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 131 So. 611 (Polizzi v. Louisiana Ry. & Nav. 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
Polizzi v. Louisiana Ry. & Nav. Co., 131 So. 611, 14 La. App. 442, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 336 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

This is a suit by Lawrence Polizzi and his wife, in behalf of themselves individually and also for the use and benefit of ^their minor son, age four years, for damages for personal injuries suffered by each of them, and for the value of a Ford automobile, clothing and doctor’s bills, as further damages suffered by Lawrence Polizzi.

The accident occurred on March 17, 1925, at 10:30 p. m. at the intersection of Broad and Poydras streets in the city of New Orleans when a box car of the defendant company struck plaintiff’s Ford sedan automobile, completely demolishing it and causing the alleged damages to plaintiffs.

[444]*444The defendant denied liability and pleaded contributory negligence against all of the plaintiffs. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of Lawrence Polizzi in the sum of $2,350, Mrs. Polizzi, in the sum of $750, and Lawrence Polizzi, Jr., their minor son, in the sum of $1,500. Prom this verdict and judgment defendant has appealed.

The locus in quo where the accident occurred is as follows: Broad street is a street with a neutral ground in the center and paved on both sides and runs in a direction from uptown to downtown. Each of the paved sections is approximately 30 feet wide and the neutral ground between them about 60 feet wide. Traffic going downtown moves on the river side of Broad street and traffic going uptown moves on the lake side of this street. The Broad street bridge which crosses the New Basin canal is immediately in line with the wood side thoroughfare of Broad street and located on the uptown side of the railroad tracks.

The Illinois Central Railroad Company has 8 tracks along Poydras 'street running parallel with the New Basin canal and crossing Broad street at right angles. These 8 tracks are situated within the neutral ground of Poydras street. This railroad company maintains four traffic gates at the intersection of these two streets, two on the downtown side of the tracks and two on the uptown side of the tracks as a protection to automobile traffic moving on both sides of Broad street where the traffic is heavy. These gates were operated by a man stationed in a tower, which is situated in the neutral ground at the intersection of Poydras and Broad streets. The width of the Poydras street neutral ground, within which the eight Illinois Central Railroad Company’s tracks lay is approximately 91 feet. The traffic 'gates were located at sufficient distance on both sides of the eight tracks to protect vehicles from going upon the tracks when trains were approaching in either direction.

The defendant railroad owned and maintained a single track situated 57 feet from the eighth track of the I. C. Railroad Company towards the New Basin canal or upon the uptown side of the eight tracks. The track of -the defendant was outside of the I: C. Railroad Company’s traffic gates. The defendant did not maintáin any traffic gates with respect to its track and depended upon its train crew flagging traffic at this crossing.

At the time of the accident a train of the I. C. Railroad Company had passed, going in the direction of the river and upon the approach of its train the traffic gates of the I. C. Railroad Company were lowered by the man in the tower, and after this train passed the gates were raised.

The plaintiff was driving a Ford sedan with his wife seated in the front by his side and his little boy, age four years, seated in the rear. He was proceeding on the lake side of Broad street going uptown. As he came to the crossing in question, the I. C. Railroad Company’s gates were down as its train was passing and plaintiff stopped his car about the middle of the street.

Thereafter a car in which Mr. Robert Weigand and H. M. des Bordes were riding stopped to the right of plaintiff’s car and a car in which Mrs. Sol Wolff and Mrs. Jeannette Phillips were riding stopped to the left of plaintiff’s car. Both of these cars were to the rear of plaintiff’s car and going in the same direction as plaintiff. The car of Dr. Frederick Fenno, was also going in the same direction and was about 100 feet from the gates when they went up.

[445]*445When the gates were lifted the first three cars started up with plaintiff’s car about 14 feet in the lead. Dr. Fenno’s ear followed about 60 feet to the rear. Plaintiff crossed all eight of the I. C. Railroad Company’s tracks and a space of 57 feet between the eighth track and the defendant’s track. When the front part of his car was near or upon the defendant’s track, it was struck by the front box car, one of 30 box cars, which were being pushed by defendant’s switch engine. The air was not coupled to the cars and the train depended on the braking facilities of the engine in order to stop. After the front of plaintiff’s machine became engaged with the end of the lead box car, it was dragged and shoved entirely across the neutral ground of Broad street and finally came to rest at a spot beyond Broad street, about 150 feet from where it was struck, a complete wreck. The other automobiles stopped in the space between the defendant’s and the I. C. Railroad Company’s tracks.

This switch train was composed of an engine and 30 cars and was proceeding on the defendant’s track from the lake towards the river. The train was in charge of a train crew consisting of the engineer and fireman and a switch foreman and two switchmen. The engine was on the extreme end of the “cut of cars” towards the woods.

It appears that plaintiff was going about ten miles per hour and the train was going about five miles per hour at the time of the accident.

Plaintiff contends that the defendant was solely at fault for the following reasons:

First: Because of the absence of any light on the box cars which came silently out of the darkness across the street, where there was heavy traffic;

Second: Because there was no signal or warning given of the approach of the train, and

Third: Because of the negligence of the defendant’s flagman in trying to simultaneously flag the two street crossings on Broad street.

Defendant contends that one of its switch, men, Glynn, was on the front ear with a white lantern and another one, Nolan, equipped with a red fusee and a white light flagged the crossing and gave plaintiffs adequate and proper warning of the approach of the train and that plaintiffs were solely at fault in causing the accident and in the alternative, their negligence in not seeing the train and not obeying the flagman’s signal to stop contributed to the accident.

The plaintiffs’ witnesses were Robert Weigand, H. M. des Bordes, Mrs. Sol Wolff and Mrs. Jeannette Phillips, who were in the two cars immediately following plaintiff’s car, and also themselves. They all testify that it was a dark night and that they did not see any light on the front box car; that no signal of the approach of the train was given, and that the switchman, Nolan, was over on the river side of Broad street and arrived too late to warn plaintiff of the train’s approach.

The train crew, except the fireman and Glynn, who died since the accident, and Dr. Fenno testified for defendant. Dr. Fenuo and Nolan testified that Nolan was at the lake side of Broad street and gave proper signal of the train’s approach. The switch-man, Glynn, died before the trial and Borrough, the switch foreman, says that upon receiving a “wash out” signal from Glynn he transmitted it to the engineer, who in turn testified he immediately applied the brakes and.reversed his engine in order to stop quickly.

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

Related

Manuel v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
264 So. 2d 376 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)
Dalferes v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.
185 So. 49 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)
Cavicchi v. Gaiety Amusement Co.
173 So. 458 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 So. 611, 14 La. App. 442, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polizzi-v-louisiana-ry-nav-co-lactapp-1930.