Adams v. Burnett

150 So. 403
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 1933
DocketNo. 4673.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 150 So. 403 (Adams v. Burnett) 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
Adams v. Burnett, 150 So. 403 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff seeks to recover from defendant the cost of labor and material alleged to be necessary to restore his Ford car to the condition it was in before being damaged by defendant’s car while operated by him, and for $1 per day for the loss of use of said car from the date it was damaged until damage is paid.

Plaintiff alleges that at about 8 o’clock in the evening of January 6, 1933, his car was parked, unoccupied, in gear, and with brakes set, next to the east curb, facing north, on Tulsa street, in the city of Shreveport; that defendant, at said hour, was traveling north on said Tulsa street, at an unlawful rate of speed, possibly 50 miles per hour, and this, coupled with his lack of attention to his surroundings, and the failure on his part to keep a proper lookout for the position and movements of other cars, caused him to run intoj and damage petitioner’s car. It is also alleged that the brakes of defendant’s car were defective, and that these wei-e not applied by him, when so doing would have averted the collision resulting in said damage.

Defendant denies the allegations of plaintiffs petition in so far as they relate to the nature and extent of the collision and his responsibility therefor. In the alternative, should it be shown that his car collided with plaintiff’s, then he avers that the collision was not caused by any negligence on his part, but was caused “ * * * solely through the negligence of the driver of an automobile, the name of the driver being unknown, in proceeding at a rapid rate of speed out of 60th Street and into the intersection of 60th Street and Tulsa Street, into the path of your respondent’s automobile as he was proceeding north on Tulsa Street and after your respondent had entered the intersection of said streets and thus presenting an emergency and that in an effort to avoid a collision with the automobile of the unknown driver, your respondent swerved his car back to the right in an attempt to straighten out the said automobile in the direction in which it was traveling.

“15. Tour respondent shows that it was only after the said emergency had presented itself and your respondent had avoided a collision with the automobile driven by the unknown driver and had pulled his ear back to the right as alleged in the foregoing paragraph, that any collision or contact was made with any automobile parked on the right hand side of Tulsa Street in proceeding north on said avenue.”

Further, in the alternative, should it be found and held that his negligence to any extent caused or contributed to said collision, that plaintiff cannot recover on that account because of his own contributory negligence in that his automobile -was parked without lights of any kind thereon, in violation of an ordinance of the city of Shreveport, and the laws of the state, relative to the parking and lighting of cars at night.

Before filing answer, defendant interposed an exception of nd cause and no right of action. This was overruled. There was judgment of the city court for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.

In this court defendant insists upon said exception. This exception is leveled at the alleged failure of plaintiff to set forth that he has sustained any damage as the re- *405 suit of the collision between the two cars, for which defendant coaid be held responsible. Exceptor, after quoting paragraphs X and XI of plaintiff’s petition, says that: “ * * ⅞ The plaintiff nowhere in that paragraph or any other part of his petition, alleges that the items set out in that paragraph were the result of the collision with the automobile of Mr. Burnett. He nowhere alleges that he sustained damages to the various parts of his automobile in that collision. This paragraph is merely an allegation of a conclusion or opinion as to the amount for which the defendant is indebted unto him.”

We do not think this argument sound. The petition could have been made much clearer than it is in the respects against which the exception is directed, but, taken as a whole, we are of the opinion it is sufficient ta disclose a cause of action for the amount of the alleged damage to «plaintiff’s car.

In paragraph IV of the petition, the charge is made that defendant drove his car into and against petitioner’s with such force and violence that it was seriously “smashed and damaged.” The collision is then alleged to have happened because of the negligence of defendant in several particulars. It is alleged in paragraph X that, “as a direct result of defendant’s negligent damaging of petitioner’s automobile, as above set out, defendant is justly and legally indebted to petitioner in the sum of $97.55, with legal interest from judicial demand until paid, itemized as follows.” Here follows a list of the alleged damages to the ear, opposite to each of which is placed certain figures to indicate the amount necessary to repair the injured part or to replace same with a new part. The total of these extensions is $97.55. It is alleged in paragraph XI “that as a direct result of defendant’s negligent damaging of his automobile, petitioner suffered inconvenience and loss of use of¡ his car,” etc. The prayer for judgment, as to amounts, follows the allegations of the petition.

Damage to the car was damage to its owner. Where it appears that a plaintiff’s property has been damaged on account of the acr tionable negligence of another — and from the ■petition as a whole it appears that the suit is prosecuted for the purpose of having the owner, so far as may be done by repairs to the damaged property, restored to his former status — whether such repairs have actually been made or not, or whether the owner has, or has not, contracted with another to do the repairs at the price sued for, such owner is entitled to recover the proved amount of damages to his property the measure of which is the cost of labor, parts, and material necessary to recondition the property and to restore it to its condition at the time it was damaged. A different rule is applicable when the damage is so great that the car cannot be repaired except at a cost greater than its value when injured. We think thei exception was properly overruled.

The Merits.

Tulsa street is in the southern part of the city of Shreveport. It runs north and south, and is paved. So far as the record discloses, it is not a right of way street, though generally considered as such. It is 26 feet wide from curb to curb. Sixtieth street, which runs at right angles to and crosses Tulsa street, is not hard-surfaced nor paved. It is about the same width as Tulsa. At the southeast corner of the intersection, there is a street light that fairly well illuminates the intersection and the four street comers there. At the time of the collision of defendant’s car with that of plaintiff, there was a truck parked, facing south, on the west side of Tulsa street, about 30 feet from the corner, and plaintiff’s car was parked on the east side of Tulsa street, next to the curb, facing north, about 100 feet from Sixtieth street. Defendant had had a doctor’s prescription filled, and, with three of his children in his car, was driving north on' Tulsa street, evidently, from the movements of his car after entering the intersection, at a rather rapid rate of speed. He did not reduce his speed as he approached Sixtieth street, assuming that there would be nothing in his path of travel to interfere with his progress across the intersection.

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-burnett-lactapp-1933.