49 La. Ann. 7 | La. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought this suit to recover of defendants the sum of ten thousand dollars damages, for the use and benefit of his minor child who was injured by defendants’ car.
The child was eighteen months old when the injury was inflicted. He was on defendants’ track.
The car was going at the rate of five miles an hour. It was forty feet from the child when it was discovered that the child was on the track. It is in evidence that an electric car going at that rate of speed can only be checked or stopped not at less than that distance.
The testimony is that the motorman did everything in his power to avoid injuring the child, after he saw it on the track. A passenger in the car gives the most satisfactory account of the efforts of the motorman to stop the ear. There is no contradiction of his testimony. The mother and brother of the child attribute the accident to the fact that the motorman was not looking “straight down,” or he would have seen the child in time to avoid the accident, but they say he was looking forward, which was the proper direction for him to view the track.
Judgment affirmed.