Weinfield v. Yellow Cab Co.

120 So. 420, 10 La. App. 313, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 430
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1929
DocketNo. 11,488
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 120 So. 420 (Weinfield v. Yellow Cab 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
Weinfield v. Yellow Cab Co., 120 So. 420, 10 La. App. 313, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 430 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

JONES, J.

This is a suit for $5,239.50, damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused to plaintiff by the negligent driving of defendant’s chauffeur on the night of January 14, 1926, at 7:45, at the intersection of St. Mary and Prytania Streets, in this city. The defense is contributory negligence.

Before trial, plaintiff died and his widow and heirs have been made parties plaintiff. From a judgment based on the jury’s verdict for $2,739.00 defendant has ’appealed.

Although there is some dispute as to the exact spot in the intersection at which plaintiff crossed, as to the exact direction in which plaintiff was going when strucj¡, and as to his speed at the time, and also as to the speed of the cab, the main facts may be briefly stated as follows:

On the night of the accident plaintiff, who was about 55 years old, but active and in good physical condition, was walking on St. Mary Street towards St. Charles, from the river, and the streets in this vicinity were greatly crowded and congested with automobiles, as a miniature carnival parade, given for the benefit of the Fruit Growers Convention, was passing at the time on St. Charles Avenue one block away. The two streets there cross at right angles, Prytania being thirty-nine feet, six inches (39' 6") wide and St. Mary, twenty-six feet, six inches (26' 6") wide. The adjacent sidewalks on each street are twelve and one-half (12%') feet in width and there are buildings on all four corners. On Prytania Street there are two street car tracks. The one on the river side is known as the downtown track and the other as the uptown track. The distance between the two tracks is four feet five and one-half inches (4' 5%").

As the downtown car track was filled with standing automobiles, which were only able to move a few feet at a time on account of the congestion of traffic, plaintiff, when he reached Prytania Street, had to cross between two autos in the intersection of St. Mary- Street, nearer the center of the street than the uptown sidewalk, on which he alleges he had been walking as he came up. After crossing hurriedly between two cars, about two or three feet apart, plaintiff looked downtown to see if anything was approaching on the uptown track and, seeing nothing, started to cross that track in a slightly diagonal direction, and when he was almost over the outside rail, was struck by the left fender of the taxicab, which had been coming down Prytania Street, straddling the street car rail next St. Charles Street. The taxi driver (who had been driving a yellow cab at the time for about a year, [315]*315and had had no accidents up to the trial), along with all of the other automobiles, had been coming down Prytania Street in the regular line of traffic, as required by the city ordinance, and about three-fourths of a block away from St. Mary Street, after seeing that nothing was ahead of him on the uptown track, turned to the left and came down towards St. Mary at a fast speed, until he was within a few feet of plaintiff.

Though he had no speedometer, the chauffeur says that he was going at the rate of fifteen or eighteen miles per hour when he approached St. Mary Street and that he did not see plaintiff until he was right on him, coming from between two stationary automobiles, about five or six feet below the uptown crossing in a diagonal direction toward his cab; he then blew his horn, jammed on his foot-brakes and veered as much as possible to the right to avoid the accident, but plaintiff, when he heard the horn and saw the oncoming cab, hopped twice towards St. Charles Avenue, right in the front of his car.

At the time of the accident, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. King, of Cincinnati, who were temporarily in the city, were passengers in the taxicab, and the testimony of King was taken under special orders of the court on January 26th, a few days after the accident. King, who impresses us as a frank and fair witness and certainly must have recalled the accident vividly, testifies as follows:

He was seated on the right hand side of the cab and therefore had a good view of the accident; the chauffeur had been coming down Prytania Street, at a speed of at least' twenty-five miles per hour, until he almost reached the uptown crossing of St. Mary Street, when Weinfield came out of the line of traffic about fifteen or twenty feet in front of the cab, and chauffeur applied his brakes and started to sound the horn; plaintiff then looked around and, when he saw the car coming down on him, made two hops towards St. Charles Avenue and was struck by the left fender of the car; he had felt uneasy when the chauffeur turned our. of the downtown traffic line, because he felt it was a dangerous procedure, as traffic might come out St. Mary Street and turn up Prytania, and there would be no way to' escape; when the cab struck plaintiff he was knocked forward about ten feet.

On cross-examination he says that the accident occurred on the uptown side of St. Mary Street. He thought chauffeur was driving a little too fast when he approached the intersection at a speed of at least twenty-five miles per hour with all the congestion then existing.

The statements of King as to speed are confirmed in a measure by Yarnado, who was driving the car in front of which plaintiff passed when he crossed over the downtown car track. This witness says that he did not see the accident, but he heard the brakes grinding immediately after plaintiff passed in front of him, and when he turned his head he saw the form of a person “hurtled through the air.”

Defendant, both in his oral argument and his able brief, contends most strenuously that the judgment of the lower court should be reversed because plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in trying to cross in front of the cab when he might have saved himself by stepping back two or three feet. In support of his argument he has quoted many decisions and authorities, which undoubtedly are good law, but we do not think applicable here. If we accept the statement of defendant’s chauffeur, his only witness, that plaintiff ran [316]*316through the downtown traffic diagonally right into his cab, and that he did not see him until he was right on him, not more than four or five feet away, we hardly think that plaintiff could have stopped in time to avoid the accident and step back.

On this point we think the evidence of King is more probable and more consistent with the facts when he says plaintiff was coming at a rate of twenty-five miles per hour until he was within fifteen or twenty feet of plaintiff, when he suddenly began to blow his horn, slam on his brakes and veer his car to the right. Under such circumstances a pedestrian can hardly be considered guilty of contributory negligence, although the course he selects results in injury which he might have escaped had he acted otherwise. This principle has been repeatedly upheld by both this court and the Supreme Court.

In Isaac D. Stone vs. N. O. Public Service Inc., No. 10,460, Court of Appeal 119 So. 757 (not yet [officially] reported), 45 C. J. 962, the Court said:

“Conduct which might otherwise constitute negligence may not be so considered where the acts and omissions of the person injured occurred in the presence or under a reasonably well founded apprehension of impending danger, or in an emergency which is calculated to produce fright, excitement or bewilderment and affect the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 420, 10 La. App. 313, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinfield-v-yellow-cab-co-lactapp-1929.