Rice v. Crescent City Railroad

24 So. 791, 51 La. Ann. 108, 1899 La. LEXIS 375
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 9, 1899
DocketNo. 12,816
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 24 So. 791 (Rice v. Crescent City Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Crescent City Railroad, 24 So. 791, 51 La. Ann. 108, 1899 La. LEXIS 375 (La. 1899).

Opinion

[109]*109The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

Plaintiffs sue for twenty-five thousand dollars actual damages for the killing of their three and a half year old child,, a little girl, by the electrically-propelled street railway car of defendant company.

The action is brought under the provisions of Article 2315 of the Revised Civil Code of Louisiana.

The demand is for the damages only which the child might have recovered if it had survived, and, consequently, the claim as presented is one accruing to the parents as.heirs of their deceased offspring.

The defense interposed is that the child was injured entirely through the fault and carelessness of the nurse in whose charge she-was; that the nurse was the servant of the plaintiffs, who must be held responsible for her acts; and that if the conduct of the nurse was not the sole cause of the accident, it was the contributing cause.

The case was tried by jury, who returned a verdict of twelve thousand five hundred dollars for plaintiffs, and from a judgment based thereon, defendant company appeals.

A preponderance of evidence sustains, we think, the following, statement of the ease: ‘

Rebecca Oobb, a colored woman, fifty-one years of age, was employed as nurse to the children of plaintiffs. There were two children —the little girl, whose death was the occasion of this suit, and a baby boy less than a year old. The colored woman was, strictly speaking, the nurse of the baby, but it was usual for her to take the two children out for a walk or airing- in Audubon Park in the upper part of the city of New Orleans. Plaintiffs lived opposite the upper end of this park.

November 18, 1896, was a bright, clear, warm autumn day.

In the forenoon of this day the nurse started out with the two children. Her destination was the Park. She had them both in a baby carriage. She appears to have taken the direction down St. Charles avenue to Calhoun street, paid a visit to some one’s house, and then proceeded along the lower side of the latter street towards Magazine street. Magazine street l-uns parallel to St. Charles avenue and distant from it some half dozen blocks. Audubon Park extends from the river to St. Charles avenue. Calhoun street is the first street below the Park and distant from the Park about one block. It crosses-■ Magazine street not far from the river. Calhoun street, including banquettes, is forty-two feet wide, and Magazine street, at the inter-[110]*110section of the two, is thirty-five feet wide. Along* the center of Magazine street ran two tracks of defendant company’s street railway. The upper track- — the one nearest the river — was used by the cars going down town, and the lower track by those going up town. The space in the street between the outer rail of the lower track and the gutter curb is nine feet, and that between the outer rail of the upper track and the curb ten and a half feet. Magazine street, at that point, is unpaved, and appears not to have been used to any great extent by vehicles drawn by horses, for the street, on either side of the .railway tracks, was covered with grass from six to eight inches high.

Pushing along the baby carriage with its two occupants, the nurse reached Magazine street, when the little girl expressed a wish to get out “to pick some flowers.” These flowers are supposed to have been some clover blossoms growing among the grass in the street near the curb. The nurse assented, put the little one out of the carriage, and then proceeded across Magazine street with the carriage containing the baby. Reaching the river side of the street she turned up, or towards the Park, crossed Calhoun street-and then proceeded up the banquette ou Magazine street. Meanwhile the little g'ii’l had crossed Calhoun street and proceeded along the lower side of Magazine street •in the space between the banquette and the railway track.

Magazine, at the intersection of Calhoun street, is perfectly level, and is straight, looking down town, for a distance of nine hundred feet. Along this straight, level track, at this moment, came car No. 162 of defendant company, going up town. It stopped at ITenry Clay avenue, 1he first street below and parallel to, Calhoun street, and distant from the latter 304 feet.

When the car started on its upward journey! after its momentary stop at Olay avenue, there were five persons aboard. They were Plathorne, the conductor, Eenwick, the motorneer, Diest, a motor inspector and repairer of cars of defendant company, who had hoarded the car some blocks below and was on his way to his home up town for his mid-day meal, and two passengers, Vance and Perilloux.

In releasing the brake of the car to start from Henry Clay avenue, the crank or-handle of the brake slipped from the hand of Eenwick, the motorneer, and, rapidly revolving, struck him in the stomach. T)iest, the car repairer, was on the front platform with Fenwick. The blow from the crank of the brake sickened the latter, and he requested Diest to take charge of the car. The latter consented, stepped into [111]*111Fenwick’s place, and Fenwick, opening- the door, entered the car to sit ■down. The two passengers were sitting in the interior of the car and the conductor was on the rear platform.

Diest was not a motorneer, but had learned something of the business of running cars on the route, and had had a good deal of experience in running them up and down the car barn, testing the apparatus after making repairs. ,

He was not a skilled or experienced motorneer in handling cars on the regular runs. Indeed, beyond a half day’s work running cars on regular runs he had had no experience in that line of service.

His right eye had been injured in an accident, and it is a fact that he was almost blind in that eye.

As the child, who was run over, was to the right of the car as it went up town, it will be noticed she was on the blind side of this temporary motorman.

One hundred feet from Henry Clay avenue, going towards Calhoun .street, is a circuit breaker, i. e. where the continuity of the trolley wire is broken, and at which point it is usual to turn off the current until ■the trolley wheel has passed this break of continuity.

Diest took charge of the car just before it reached the circuit ■breaker.

He was then something over 193 feet from Calhoun street, that street is 42 feet wide, and according- to his testimony, the child was .about ten feet above the Calhoun street crossing. It thus appears that •she was, in the view most favorably to defendant, at least two hundred and forty-five feet up Magazine street at the moment Diest assumed control of the car. The street was, as stated, level and straight and nothing- obstructed the view of the child. As Diest was on the front platform when the car left Henry Clay Avenue, there was nothing to prevent his seeing- her as far back as that point.

As the car passed the circuit breaker in his charge he increased its speed and went rapidly forward.

Diest did not see the child until his car had reached the crossing ■of Calhoun street. Indeed, in his examination in chief, he says his ■car was'midway of the two crossings of Calhoun street at the time he saw the child.

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 791, 51 La. Ann. 108, 1899 La. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-crescent-city-railroad-la-1899.