1 La. App. 197 | La. Ct. App. | 1924
Plaintiff alleges that her husband, Roman Barabin, while riding in a truck belonging to his employer, was killed on the public highway in the Parish of St. Mary in a collision which occurred with a motor Bus Transfer operated at the time by defendant company. She alleges that Albert Green, the driver of the Bus at the time, and the agent of defendant company, carelessly, negligently, willfully and flagrantly, in violation of the law of the road, ran into the truck on which her husband was riding with the result that he' was by the impact thrown to the ground, or that to save himself from the impending impact, as a reasonable, prudent man would do, jumped from the truck to avoid the threatened danger, from which he suffered a fracture of the second or third cervical vertebra, causing his death.
Plaintiff sues for herself, and as the tutrix of a minor child issue of her marriage with Roman Barabin, claiming individually $7500.00; and a like amount for the minor, against defendant.
Plaintiff first urges the doctrine of res wsa loquitur — that is to say, that a presumption of negligence arises from the fact itself of the accident, and relies in support of this contention on the case of Lykiardopoulo vs. New Orleans Light and Power Co., 127 La. 309, 53 South. 575. In the case cited a young Greek, a coal heaver, was in the act of shoveling coal into a pile, when the tube exploded and the steam and hot water came out of the fire door of the boiler, scalding him. In that case the Court said plaintiff could not be expected to have any information of the cause of such an accident, and that it had to assume defendant was in a position to know what had brought about the injury. Here, the occupants of the car, obviously, were the parties who were in. a position to know the cause of the collision, and the information of the incidents which accompanied the accident was equally obtainable to plaintiff and defendant. A case of this character falls under the general rules of pleadings and proof governing . ordinary damage suits. In such cases the burden of pleading the facts constituting the alleged fault or negligence, and the proof necessary to sustain the demand, rests upon the complainant, and the rule above referred to, invoked by defendant, does not apply.
The proof shows that Alfred Moresi was driving a Ford Truck and Albert Green was driving a Motor Bus for defendant on the public road in the Parish of St. Mary. The record shows that while driving on the highway, and before, reaching the place where the accident occurred, Moresi and Albert Green, a colored man, had had a quarrel altercation, in which Mr. Moresi. attempted to beat Green, who made his escape. Moresi continued on his way in the truck, followed by Green in the Bus, both traveling northward towards Jeanerette, Green was alone in the Bus, but there were four men in the truck, besides Mr. Moresi who was driving. Mr. Hydel, a white man, sat on the front seat to the right of Mr. Moresi, while Barabin, the deceased, sat in the rear of the truck, between Alexis and Mansen, two colored men. They were riding in an old Ford Car which had been converted into a truck and had no top. Alexis, Barabin and Man-sen were seated on a box which had been nailed in the rear of the truck. The proof shows that Alexis was facing northward the direction the Truck was moving and the other two southward from which direction the Bus was coming. It is well established that the Truck and Bus were moving at a rapid speed, about 25 or 30 miles an hour. The proof shows that when this Truck and Bus reached that part of the road about opposite the home of one, Mr. Dumesnil, that Barabin fell from the truck into the highway, receiving injuries from which he died shortly thereafter. It is claimed by plaintiff, as is alleged in her petition, that Green who was driving the Bus ran into the truck negligently, by the impact throwing Barabin to the ground, or forcing him to jump out of the truck to save himself from the impending impact. Mr. Moresi says the bus struck the hub cap of the rear wheel of his truck, causing it to change its course, and ‘to swerve from the right side of the road to the left side; that he immediately looked around and noticed that Barabin was missing from the car. He says, he examined the truck the evening of the accident, and the next morning. He found a dent in the rear wheel of the car where the hub cap seemed to have been polished from an automobile tire rubbing on it. It is doubtful, from the evidence of the other witnesses, if such a dent existed, and if it did, that it was of recent date. At most, this dent was slight. This was the only injury on the truck which could
Judgment affirmed.