Weiss v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co.

62 So. 216, 133 La. 14, 1913 La. LEXIS 1990
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 28, 1913
DocketNo. 19,350
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 62 So. 216 (Weiss v. New Orleans Ry. & Light 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
Weiss v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co., 62 So. 216, 133 La. 14, 1913 La. LEXIS 1990 (La. 1913).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

The action was for damages in an amount over $20,000.

Plaintiff was thrown from his wagon about 3 o’clock in the afternoon on the 30th of January, 1911. He was driving his horse in a slow trot down Camp street toward Canal street. The car of the defendant company was running in the same direction. When the car was about 20 feet from the wagon, plaintiff left the track on which he was driving and turned - to the right. The wheels of his wagon fitted the track of the car. The car hit the wagon, threw plaintiff to the ground; his head falling near the curbing. The horse became frightened and ran against a telegraph pole and broke loose from the badly damaged wagon and ran off.

Plaintiff is an elderly man and has been driving his wagon fur a number of years.

The place of the collision was on Camp street about 100 feet south of Second street. The street is not wide, less than 50 feet. The rails are about 5 feet, 2% inches. The width of the ear is 8 feet, 4 inches. The projection of the step from the body of the car is about 2y2 inches. The depth of the platform is 4 feet, 10 inches. Its weight, 31,500 pounds. The measure of the street, and the size and weight of the car, is given above in order to add that, because of the narrow street and the weight of the car, care should be taken when wagons and cars are crossing each other or running along parallel lines.

Plaintiff had come from Sixth street, and drove onto the track on Camp street. At the moment that he drove into Camp there were no wagons or cars on the street. After crossing Second street, he heard the car bell. He turned to the right. Soon after the car hit the wagon. He was dashed to the ground; lost his senses.

Plaintiff testified in the case, and in answer to the question, “Was your wagon straightening out?” he said, “No; of course, I turned on the track, and I must have been cater-cornered.” The hind wheel was just out of the track, and his horse continued trotting. The seat of the wagon in front, on which plaintiff was seated, was about four feet from the ground. He was badly hurt, and suffered for some time great pain, from which he has not yet recovered.

Mr. Gayle Aiken, a witness for plaintiff, testified: That the street where the accident occurred is not very broad. That a driver should be careful; he must keep a lookout at the head of the car. That he passed cars frequently, but always kept an eye on them. He did not have a direct view of the accident. He came on the scene immediately afterward; saw plaintiff on the ground near the curb.

Mr. Frank Parley, an employé of the Standard Paper Company, another witness for plaintiff, testified that he was a passenger in the car sitting on the third seat on the right-hand side. He heard the motorman’s, bell as the car was advancing on the wagon, both moving in the same direction; [17]*17it drew his attention. Looking up, he saw the plaintiff turning off the track. He did not see. the car hit the wagon. He inferred, we take 'it, that the two, the ear and the wagon, collided a few feet from the front of the car. This conveys 'the idea that the wagon had already turned from the track and was on that part of the street between the car and the curb.

Another of plaintiff’s witnesses was Kennedy, a colored man, at work washing winaowpanes at the residence of the late Judge Eenner near by. He in the first place testified that the wagon had passed the front part of the car; afterward he changed his statement as a witness, and said that the car hit the wagon while the wagon was in front. He insisted, after some contradiction, that the wagon was hit while in front.

Another witness, Farlow, testified, as Kennedy had: That he saw a wagon turning out of the track and that while turning off the front part of the car it struck the back part of the wagon; threw it off. He said that he was not certain whether the wagon was struck 'by the steps or the dashboard. . That the impact broke the shafts of the wagon.

Another of plaintiff’s witnesses, Clarence Cooper, said that there was ample room for a wagon to pass between the car and the curb by driving the wheels of the wagon in the ditch along the curb.

The foregoing is, in the main, the testimony of the witnesses before named.

The issues are mainly of facts, and the question, as we appreciate the facts, is whether the wagon was struck by the car in front or in the rear. If it was struck in front, there is liability. If in the rear of the car, in our opinion, there is not.

We will as briefly as possible review the evidence of the witnesses for defendant.

A witness upon whom defendant places a great reliance is Reverend Mr. Daul, who was a passenger on the car. He said that he saw the wagon when the car passed it, and that he had already passed when the wagon was struck, referring to himself as a passenger in the car. If it be as he stated, it follows inevitably that the impact between the car and the wagon was not in front, as he was seated in the rear end of the car on the right-hand side, the side on which the accident happened.

“It must have been struck by the rear steps of the cars,” said the witness. “When I passed the wagon, no collision had taken place. It was only afterward.”

He said that he felt the shock of the impact after the wagon had passed, and therefore, according to this testimony, the wagon was struck near the rear end.

William Hanafy, motorman on the car, who had left the employ of the defendant company and was a member of the fire department when the case was tried, said: That he rang the bell. The horse and wagon turned as before stated. That the driver of the wagon must have pulled too'near to the car and struck its hind step. That plaintiff and his wagon had passed the front end of the car. His horse became unmanageable, and he immediately stopped. According to all the testimony, there was no delay in stopping the ear.

It was stopped at once. This witness, Hanafy, adds that there was a distance of about a foot or 18 inches between the car and wagon after it had left the track, and plaintiff was continuing on his road between the sidewalk curb and the ear. 1-Ie said, also, that he knew nothing of the accident at the moment it occurred; he had stopped the car because he saw the horse running off, and because of the different bells which the conductor had sounded. Plaintiff had passed the front of the car, and he thought nearly all the car had passed when the accident occurred. He also states that he had his power off, and had his car under full control when the wagon pulled off the track. [19]*19He was certain, he said, that, while the car was running, the wheels of the wagon were clear enough to allow the front step of the car to pass without touching the wagon; that his car was about 25 feet from the wagon when it turned. The car was running at five points, as we understand, at half speed, and the horse continued slowly trotting on the street.

Murphy, a motorman, who was riding as a passenger on the car, but who was on the front platform with the motorman, testified that the car was going down at half speed, and that when it reached Second street the motorman rang his gong, and that about 14 feet from the wagon it turned; that the motorman looked to the side and saw that the wagon had passed entirely to the street. The testimony of this witness is about the same as that of the motorman of the car.

August Richard, a conductor on the.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 216, 133 La. 14, 1913 La. LEXIS 1990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiss-v-new-orleans-ry-light-co-la-1913.