Spearman v. Toye Bros. Auto & Taxicab Co.

114 So. 591, 164 La. 677, 1927 La. LEXIS 1799
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1927
DocketNo. 28141.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 114 So. 591 (Spearman v. Toye Bros. Auto & Taxicab 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
Spearman v. Toye Bros. Auto & Taxicab Co., 114 So. 591, 164 La. 677, 1927 La. LEXIS 1799 (La. 1927).

Opinions

This is a suit for damages. The plaintiff charges that, while she was riding on the front seat of a sight-seeing car operated by the defendant as a public conveyance, the chauffeur, "with his right hand, grasped her left thigh, squeezing it, greatly to her humiliation, mortification, mental pain, and anguish." She claims $15,000 damages "for the humiliation, mental anguish, pain, and suffering" which she says she endured "as the result of the insult and outrage." There is no claim for damages for physical injury, nor allegation that any such injury was inflicted. The civil district court, trying the case without a jury, gave judgment for the plaintiff for $2,500, from which the defendant appealed to the Court of Appeal. That court, on its own motion, transferred the case here for want of jurisdiction. The appellant insists that the case is within the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal, and should be retransferred.

On the Question of Jurisdiction.
The third paragraph of the tenth section of article 7 of the Constitution of Louisiana, defining the jurisdiction of this court in civil cases, makes this exception, viz.:

"Except in suits for damages for physical injuries to, or for the death of a person, or for other damages sustained by such person or his heirs or legal representatives, arising out of the same circumstances."

The cases coming within the exception are, by the general terms of the 29th section of the same article of the Constitution, appealable to the Courts of Appeal. This case, however, is not within the exception, for it is not a suit for damages for physical injuries or for damages caused by or resulting from an act which caused also a physical injury. As far as the allegations and the proof go, there was no more of a physical injury to the plaintiff than there would have been if she had been insulted verbally by the chauffeur. The purpose of excepting from the jurisdiction *Page 680 of this court suits "for other damages * * * arising out of the same circumstances" as those causing physical injuries was to confer upon one and the same appellate court jurisdiction over a suit for the damages of every character resulting from a wrongful act or negligence causing physical injury to a person. As the wrong complained of in this case, if it occurred, did not cause physical injury to the plaintiff, and as the amount in dispute exceeds $2,000, exclusive of interest, the appeal is within the jurisdiction of this court, and not of the Court of Appeal.

On the Merits.
The defendant filed an exception of no cause of action, before answering the petition, and renewed the plea in this court, on the ground that the plaintiff did not allege that she had paid her fare as a passenger on the car. It is true that she did not allege, in so many words, that she had paid for transportation as a passenger on the car, but the context of the petition showed plainly enough — and it was never disputed — that she was rightfully on the car, as a passenger, entitled to proper treatment and respect at the hands of the employees in charge of the vehicle. The judge was right, therefore, in overruling the exception of no cause of action.

The plaintiff and a Mrs. Brogdon, an aunt of her husband, boarded the car on Canal street, near Carondelet street, in New Orleans, at the beginning of one of the scheduled sight-seeing trips. When the car stopped, according to custom, at the entrance to the Roosevelt Hotel, on University place, to take on other passengers, the plaintiff asked permission to bring with her a six year old child of a friend living on the other side of University place. She offered to pay the child's fare, but was told by the chauffeur or the lecturer, who were in charge of the car, that there would be no charge for the child. When she returned with the child, she requested *Page 681 to be transferred from the seat which she and her companion had taken, immediately behind the driver's seat, to the driver's seat, so that Mrs. Brogdon, who was a stranger in the city, might have a better view along the route. The so-called lecturer, with his megaphone, occupied the left end of the front seat, and the chauffeur sat next to him. The plaintiff selected the seat next to the chauffeur, and placed the child between her and Mrs. Brogdon, who sat on the right end of the front seat. The five persons filled the the seat to its capacity; and the record shows beyond any doubt that, with five persons on the front seat, the chauffeur had to be very careful to avoid letting his hand come in contact with the leg of the person beside him whenever he manipulated the lever controlling the speed of the car, which he had to do often, and sometimes hurriedly, in obedience of traffic regulations. On the trip in question, according to schedule, the car went first through the downtown section of the city, as far as Esplanade avenue, and thence proceeded uptown as far as Audubon Park. According to the plaintiff's testimony, the chauffeur's hand touched her leg twice during the whole trip. She says that, on the way downtown, his hand touched her knee, and that, though he apologized immediately, she thought the occurrence unusual, and knew it was intentional, because she had ridden in such cars many times before, sitting closer to the chauffeur than she was on that occasion. She says that she moved away from the chauffeur as far as possible, and sat in an uncomfortable position during the rest of the journey downtown, and until the car had gone uptown to Audubon Park and was returning down St. Charles avenue, when, according to her testimony, somewhere near Louisiana avenue, the chauffeur's right hand grasped and squeezed her left thigh. She says that she immediately demanded that he stop the car and let her out, and that he *Page 682 begged her pardon, and asked her not to report him to the company. She testified that, when she and her companions had alighted, or when they were about to alight, she asked the lecturer to give her the name of the chauffeur, and the latter laughed and said: "Harold Roberts." In fact that is not his name. The plaintiff wrote and kept a memorandum of the name Harold Roberts, and says that her husband inquired at the company's office, by telephone, and was told that there was no one of that name employed by the company. Several months afterwards she identified the chauffeur, talking to a policeman, at the place where the company sold tickets, on Canal street, and she asked the ticket seller the name of the man talking to the policeman, and was given his true name. She then approached him, and asked if that was his name, and he acknowledged that it was.

He testified that, on the occasion complained of, his hand merely brushed the woman's leg, which was unavoidable, when he shifted the gears, and that he immediately apologized, saying: "Pardon me, lady; if you will move over a little, that won't occur." He denied that he gave a false name when she got offended and insisted upon getting out of the car.

The two other witnesses who testified in the case were Mrs. Brogdon and the so-called lecturer, neither of whom saw the chauffeur put his hand upon plaintiff's leg or heard him give a false name when the plaintiff insisted upon getting out of the car. Mrs. Brogdon, however, saw the plaintiff write the name, Harold Roberts, after asking for the chauffeur's name, and after he had made a reply which Mrs. Brogdon did not hear, or did not understand. All that she or the lecturer heard or observed was that the plaintiff suddenly demanded that the chauffeur stop the car and let her out, complaining bitterly that he had *Page 683

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 591, 164 La. 677, 1927 La. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spearman-v-toye-bros-auto-taxicab-co-la-1927.