Taylor v. Shreveport Yellow Cabs, Inc.

163 So. 737
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1935
DocketNo. 5171.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 163 So. 737 (Taylor v. Shreveport Yellow Cabs, Inc.) 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
Taylor v. Shreveport Yellow Cabs, Inc., 163 So. 737 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff was run down by a taxicab of the defendant, near the intersection of Johnson street with Texas avenue in city of Shreveport, about 11 o’clock, p. m., October 27, 1934. He brings this action to recover damages for the injuries by him sustained, for pain and suffering, and for medical and hospital expenses incurred in treating him for said injuries. He alleges that he left the east side of Texas avenue, at Johnson street, the usual place for pedestrians to cross, and in a *738 careful manner undertook to walk to the opposite side thereof, and when he had reached a point a few feet west of the center of the avenue, defendant’s cab, going in a westerly direction, struck him violently, knocked him to the pavement, from which he was rendered unconscious; that said taxicab was at the time being driven by an agent and employee of defendant company in the discharge of duties within the scope of his employment.

The specific acts of negligence attributed to defendant’s operator and agent are that he was at the time of accident driving the cab at an excessive and unlawful rate of speed, in violation of the law of the city of Shreveport; that said driver was negligent, careless, and reckless in that he was not keeping a proper lookout and in failing to give any warning of his approach, and, further, did not have the taxi under proper control; that he was negligent in not seeing plaintiff in time to bring the machine to a stop and avoid striking him; that these acts of negligence constitute the sole and proximate cause of the accident.

Defendant carried a policy of public liability insurance with Traders & General Insurance Company, and that company was impleaded as defendant. Defendants admit the accident, and that the cab was being operated by an agent and employee of the insured, but the charges of negligence on part of said employee are specially denied, as well as all liability for the results of the accident. In the alternative, defendants plead that if it should be held by the court, for any reason, that the operator of the cab was negligent, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, then they show that he was contributorily negligent in the following particulars, without which the accident and injury to plaintiff would not have occurred, viz.:

“(a) The plaintiff, without looking to the right or the left for traffic, walked out into a main travelled roadway.

“(b) The plaintiff walked out into said roadway at a point other than an intersection, and not at a pedestrian crossing.

“(c) The plaintiff walked into said roadway and into the path of vehicles passing while talking to and listening to another pedestrian who was on a nearby sidewalk.

“(d) That plaintiff at the time of said accident, and prior thereto, was intoxicated, and in such condition attempted to cross a main travelled street.

“(e) That plaintiff still without looking in either direction for moving traffic, and at a point other than a pedestrian crossing, in the condition specified above, walked out into the street, and instead of moving directly toward the other curb or' stopping to let defendant’s cab pass, stepped or staggered suddenly into a vehicle belonging to the Shreveport Yellow Cabs, Inc.

“(f) That the negligent acts and omissions of plaintiff continued to the instant of the accident.”

The Maryland Casualty Company intervened, and alleged that at the time plaintiff was injured he was in the employ of Tri-State Liquor Company, to whom in-tervener had issued its policy insuring the liquor company against any loss which it might sustain under the Employer’s Liability Act of Louisiana (Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended); that intervener, in fulfillment of its obligation under said policy, had paid- compensation to plaintiff, and medical and hospital expenses for his account, amounting to $291.34, which are itemized; that under said law it is legally subrogated to all rights the plaintiff, as employee, has against the defendants to the total amount it has paid or for which it is liable. Judgment was prayed for in consonance with the allegations of the petition of intervention.

After trial had on the issues tendered by the petitions and answers, there was judgment for plaintiff against defendants in solido for $1,000, and in favor of inter-vener, and against defendants, for the amount sued for by it. Defendants appealed. Plaintiff prays for increase in the judgment in his favor.

On May 17, 1935, defendants filed supplemental • answer praying for trial by jury. This was objected to on ground that it came too late, the case having been put at issue and having been fixed, for trial. The objection was sustained and trial had without intervention of a jury. Appellants here complain of error in this ruling and insist that their application for jury trial was timely. The record facts are these: Defendants filed answers on April 17, 1935. On April 25th counsel who prepared and filed these answers, with approval of the court, withdrew from this case, and on their application defendants were granted a stay of *739 proceedings of twenty days to “enable them to employ other counsel and for the preparation of such other counsel to defend the case.” On May 8th, on motion of plaintiff’s counsel, the case was fixed for trial on May 16th, and on May 11th, on application of defendants, through new counsel, this fixing was upset and case refixed for trial on May 23d.

The position of appellants is not well founded. • Article 495 of the Code of Practice is clearly against their contention. In part it says: “The defendant, in order to avail himself of the same privilege, must pray for a jury in his answer, or previous to the suit being set down for trial.” Louisiana State Bank v. Duplessis, 2 La. Ann. 651; Gallagher et al. v. Hebrew Congregation of Baton Rouge, 34 La. Ann. 526.

These two cases hold that if a case has been set for trial and continued without definite fixing of trial date, that a prayer for jury trial filed while this status exists is timely; but where, as in the present case, trial is postponed to a definite date and trial is had on that date, the prayer for jury filed after the case has been re-fixed for trial comes too late. The case of Town of Minden v. Stewart et al., 142 La. 467, 77 So. 118, relied on by appellants, does not conflict with the plain provisions of the Code of Practice, nor with the two cases cited. It does not support appellants’ contention.

The lower court properly denied the prayer for trial by jury.

Plaintiff’s version of the accident is substantially as follows: That he was assisting in loading a car of liquors for his employer, Tri-State Liquor Company, about 11:30 o’clock the night of the accident, and was directed by an assistant clerk to go across Texas avenue to buy some soda water; that he walked down the street (some 80 feet) to Johnson street, which intersects Texas avenue, but does not extend beyond its western side; then, before starting across the intersection, he looked east and west and saw no cars approaching .from either direction, and when two steps across the center of Texas street he was suddenly and violently run into by defendant’s cab and knocked unconscious. At this point the street is 36.8 feet wide.

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163 So. 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-shreveport-yellow-cabs-inc-lactapp-1935.