Scanlan v. New Orleans Railways Co.

3 Teiss. 123, 1906 La. App. LEXIS 12
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1906
DocketNo. 3790
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Teiss. 123 (Scanlan v. New Orleans Railways 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
Scanlan v. New Orleans Railways Co., 3 Teiss. 123, 1906 La. App. LEXIS 12 (La. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

Plaintiff sued the defendant for damages arising from injuries inflicted upon two of his mules by a car of the defendant company.

The petition alleges that the accident occurred whilst plaintiff’s float, to which was hitched a team of three mules, was crossing from one side of North Peters steet, and across the double line of car tracks, to the other side of the street so as to take the car track on that side; that the driver before proceeding to cross the street had satisfied himself that no car was coming towards him in either direction, he being in a position from his seat upon the float at that time to take a clear, unobstructed look of North Peters street for more than 150 yards in both directions; that the [124]*124said driver crossed the up-town track without mishap and had already swung his team around to enter the down-town track when the car bound down-town, struck his right pole, and lead mule, permanently injuring the latter, that the said car at the time of the collision was running at an. unusual and extraordinary and dangerous rate of speed, that no attempt was made to stop the car until after same had struck the mules; that no gong was sounded and that at the time of the accident the motorman had his back turned and was engaged in conversation with some one on the car, presumably, the conductor.

The answer tenders the general issue with the averment that the accident was caused by the contributory negligence of the driver of plaintiff’s float.

There was judgment for defendant and plaintiff appeals.

The place where the accident occured is on North Peters street, between Bienville and Conti streets, and at about 75 feet from the latter street and about 225 feet from the former. There is a double line of car tracks on North Peters street; the one on the river side being for the cars operated by the defendant company going down town, cars going up town using the track on the wood side. On either side of the tracks are paved streets. Cars going down North Peters street turn into that street from Canal street and from the point where they turn off from Canal street a clear and unobstructed view of their approach is offered all the way to Conti street, a distance of three blocks, or about 900 feet.

On the occasion of the accident, the plaintiff’s float, hauled by what is known as a “spike” team, that is, a team of 3 mules, two of which, ar.e harnessed- to the pole of the float and one hitched forward and proceeding them, and known as the “lead,” had loaded at a point on the wood side of North Peters street at a point about 75 feet from Conti street, the mules being headed down town, or towards Conti street; float and mules being clear of both line of tracks.

When the float was loaded, the driver mounted the float and without turning around or looking in the direction towards Canal street, swung his team of mules around to the right, bringing the [125]*125lead mule from the wood side of the street, on which the float and mules were before they were put in motion, thence across the first line of tracks and on to the further, or down town track, and thence over to the river side of the street. This brought the two pole mules immediately on the down town track, and the float partly on this track and partly on the wood side of the street.

Whilst in this position the defendant’s car, which was on its down town trip, ran over the leg of the right pole mule, crippling it to such an extent that the mule had to be killed, and slightly injuring the lead mule.

This much we gather from plaintiff’s witnesses, two in number, who with the plaintiff himself testified that they were eye-witnesses to the accident.

One of them happened to be looking from the inside through a window of the establishment where the plaintiff’s float was receiving its load, “watching the float pulling out.” From his window, however, his attention was turned to a car coming down “at an unusual rate of speed,” the speed being so great, faster than he had ever seen a car go down that street before, that it caused him to observe it.

From his position he said he could see only to the corner of Bienville street 225 feet away from him, and it was there he first observed the car, and then noticed that the motorman had his face towards the inside of the car apparently talking to some one; that it at once “struck me (him) that the car was going to hit the float, which it did, and it hit with such force, that the car bounced back, and when the car bounced back, it looked like the motorman got confused; and the car came again and the driver of the float swung his leader around, trying to get the mules on the track, and the car came again and rolled over the mule’s leg.” He says that when the car got within 50 feet of the float the motorman then turned and looked ahead, “but it was too late because the car was coming at such a rate of speed that he could not stop it;” that no brakes were put on and that when the car bounced back, the motorman, “thinking he was backing the car, put on speed again and the car came along and hit the mules.”

[126]*126On cross examination, however, he says that the car did “not strike the float at all” but that it struck the mules and “with such force that the car bounced back, and it came up again and hit the mules again;” and, singular to relate, he says not only were the mules not thrown any distance at all, but simply “fell where they were and the car jumped back,” but that the “driver got them (the mules) up again and tried to swing his mules around -again, and as he did so, the car came again and hit the mule which was shot afterwards, ran over his leg.” It would tax the credulity of the feeblest mind to give credence to such a statement. We can readily appreciate the statement of the motorman, when testifying in the case, to the effect that even at the speed at which his car was going, — five notches, or half speed — had he struck the mules with that speed on, the impact would have been so great as not only to have “smashed the dashboard of his car to pieces,” which it did not, but the car would have “dragged the mules to the corner” before he could have stopped it. Yet, withal, we are asked to believe that at the extrqodinary high speed at which plaintiff’s witnesses say the car was going, the brakes not put on, the current not reversed and the overhead not thrown off, the mules were simply thrown off their feet, and were at once pulled up again, and that the car on a rebound from the impact with the mules, inflicted the injuries complained of.

This improbable story is substantially corroborated by the plaintiff and the other witness who testified in his behalf. The plaintiff testifying on his own behalf says that as he was coming out Bienville street two negroes standing at the corner said to him “look!” then he turned and saw the car, then at that corner and 225 feet from the spot where the accident, occurred, going at an unusual speed. He says that when the negroes called his attention to the car, he “looked around quick and saw the car at Bienville street,” and added, “I looked down and saw my float 'coming across the track and I seen the car hit the mules and throw the three of them down.” What time elapsed between his looking around from the corner of Bienville and North Peters streets and his seeing the car “hit the mules and throw the three of them down” is not stated by him. At any rate, when he did [127]*127see the mules hit he ran back to where they were,

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3 Teiss. 123, 1906 La. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scanlan-v-new-orleans-railways-co-lactapp-1906.