Searcy v. Interurban Transp. Co.

179 So. 75, 189 La. 183
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 10, 1938
DocketNo. 34547.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 179 So. 75 (Searcy v. Interurban Transp. Co.) 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
Searcy v. Interurban Transp. Co., 179 So. 75, 189 La. 183 (La. 1938).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Plaintiff, a minister of the gospel, purchased a ticket and took passage on a passenger bus, operated by the Tri-State Transit Company, for Alexandria, La., about 22 miles way. While on the way he suffered a stroke of apoplexy, as a result of which he was paralyzed. When the bus was driven into the Union. Bus Station at Alexandria, all of the passengers except the minister left it. The bus, it seems, had to be put in readiness for another trip immediately, and the bus driver who had brought it to Alexandria, observing that the minister was still in his seat in the bus and seeing that he was apparently asleep, attempted to arouse him. He was unable to do so, and thinking, as he said, that the man was drunk, called a helper, and the two lifted him bodily from the seat in the bus, carried him into the waiting room, put him in a chair, and left him. They say they left the station immediately, thinking they had done their duty by the passenger, and thought no more about him. This was about 11:45 a. m.

*187 A short time thereafter, an outsider went into the waiting room and saw the minister lying prostrate on the floor. He told the ticket agent that a man who seemed to be drunk was lying in the waiting room. The ticket agent looked at him and, assuming that he was drunk, telephoned police headquarters that there was a drunken man at the station lying on the floor, and asked that someone be sent to take charge of him.

The desk sergeant at police headquarters notified the police, two of whom went to the bus station, found the man lying on the floor, and, assuming that he was in a drunken stupor, as the ticket agent had stated, picked him up, put him in a taxi, and carried him to police headquarters, where one of them made a charge of drunkenness against him. He was then carried to the city jail by the police officers and locked up. There is some testimony that they laid him on a cot, but, if they did, he soon rolled off, probably due to some convulsive movement, to the concrete floor, where his body lay limp for a little more than 24 hours. The police officers said they assumed that the man was in a drunken stupor and would soon revive. They paid no further attention to him, and he lay on the concrete floor, partially covered by some old matting, without the slightest attention or assistance from any one, until after 12 o’clock on the following day.

It was finally discovered that the man had not aroused, and the city physician, Dr. Wallace, was notified. Dr. Wallace discovered immediately that he had suffered a cerebral hemorrhage, which had almost completely paralyzed and rendered him speechless. Though the man could speak only a few words incoherently, the doctor finally learned from him that he was a minister of the gospel and that he had a brother living in Winnsboro, La., about 100 miles, away. Either the doctor or someone connected with police headquarters telephoned the marshal at Winnsboro that the minister was in jail. The marshal notified the minister’s brother, who immediately drove to Alexandria, took charge of him, and carried him to Winnsboro. His condition has improved considerably, but he is still paralyzed and totally incapacitated.

He brought suit against the Tri-State Transit Company and the Interurban • Transportation Company for damages totaling $27,500, which he itemized as follows: (1) $15,000 for total disability, alleged tO' have been caused by the failure of the defendant companies to obtain for him medical aid immediately following the discovery by defendant’s employees of his stricken condition; (2) $5,000 damages for his suffering due to neglect and to the treatment accorded him by defendant’s employees ; (3) .$7,500 for slander to his good name and reputation. •

The Tri-State Transit Company filed answer, in which it admitted that plaintiff was a passenger for hire on one of its passenger busses and that, while on his way from Colfax to Alexandria, he was stricken with apoplexy, and further admits that, after the bus reached Alexandria, he was taken therefrom, put in a chair in the waiting room, fell therefrom to the floor; that its agent and employee telephoned to police headquarters and had plaintiff removed from the station,. *189 all' as alleged by. plaintiff. But it denies liability on the ground that its agents and employees believed, and had good reason to believe, that plaintiff’s condition while on the bus and after being removed therefrom was due to drunkenness, and that its employees had performed reasonable services to him.

It is alleged in paragraph 8 of the answer1 that “after plaintiff boarded the said TriState passenger bus he apparently dozed off to sleep, and manifested, every appearance of a man who was intoxicated, and was, in fact, thought to be intoxicated by the driver of the said Tri-State bus, and others who observed him” ; and in paragraph 9 that the bus driver looked back at plaintiff and saw .that he was “apparently, asleep ; that the. bus driver and attendant on the bus, both employees of the Tri-State Transit Company, attempted to arouse the plaintiff but were unable to do so. * * * The bus driver and the attendant on the bus smelled liquor on plaintiff’s breath, although plaintiff did. not appear at that time to be intoxicated. * * * Both the bus driver and the attendant on the bus thought, from his appearance and because of his conduct, etc., that he had been drinking and was intoxicated.”

In paragraph 10 of the answer it is alleged that the bus driver, the attendant on the bus, and the employees, “all concluded that he was intoxicated and that in .view of the fact that he was in a helpless condition, and unable to look after himself, respondent’s employees in charge of the bus station concluded that it was best to notify the police authorities of the City of Alexandria, and that accordingly respondent’s station agent called the <lesk sergeant at the Alex- • andria Police Station and notified him that there was a, man in the bus station who ap-' parently was intoxicated, and asked that the' police department give the-1 matter its attention.”

It is further alleged that “there never was at any time anything which occurred in the bus station- to indicate that plaintiff was in fact ill, and was not drunk, as all who saw him supposed him to be.” It is -further alleged in paragraph 13 of. defendant’s answer “that nothing occurred at any time, to respondent’s knowledge, to indicate that plaintiff needed or required medical attention”; and defendant “disclaims any responsibility for any treatment which he may. have received at the hands of the police authorities.” .

The case was tried by jury, which rejected plaintiff’s demands. He appealed to the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit, and, on first hearing, the court’ ordered the entire case transferred to this court, on the ground that it'had no jurisdiction. 171 So. 468. A rehearing was granted, and, on rehearing, the court held that it had jurisdiction except as to the item of damage resulting from slander. 179 .So. 93. Plaintiff applied to this court for writs, which were granted, and the entire case is now before us for review.

The Court of Appeal héld that plaintiff had failed to make out his case in so far as he claimed damages for permanent and total disability. We concur in the court’s view on this branch of the case. Ac *191

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Bluebook (online)
179 So. 75, 189 La. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/searcy-v-interurban-transp-co-la-1938.