Adams v. Golson

171 So. 403
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1936
DocketNo. 1649.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 171 So. 403 (Adams v. Golson) 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. Golson, 171 So. 403 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

Plaintiff was injured as a result of a collision between his motorcycle, which he was riding, and an Oakland sedan automobile belonging to the defendant Lamont P. Gol-son, which was being driven at the time by his wife, Mrs. Willie McCoy Golson, the other defendant, at the intersection of North street, with North Twelfth street in the city of Baton Rouge, at about 6:30 o’clock in the evening of March 7,1934. Claiming that the accident occurred because of the negligence ’of Mrs. Golson in making a left-hand turn from North street into North Twelfth street, plaintiff instituted this suit for damages against the two defendants, seeking to recover the sum of $7,866.39 from them each, individually and in solido. The demand against Lamont P. Golson is predicated on the theory that the automobile which was a community asset, was being driven *404 by his wife at the moment with his consent and approval; that she was then on an errand entailing an expense of the community, and therefore the community is answerable in damages for the tort committed by her.

The Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company, which carried workmen’s compensation insurance for the plaintiff’s employer, having paid the plaintiff the sum of $730 in settlement of his compensation claim, intervened and asked that it be refunded the amount so paid by it out of any judgment that may be rendered in favor of the plaintiff, by preference and priority over all other persons whatsoever. There does not appear to be any special defense made against the claim of this intervener, and it seems to be conceded that it is entitled to the relief it seeks in the event plaintiff would be successful in obtaining final judgment against the defendants or either of them.

Judgment in the lower court was in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff and intervener dismissing the former’s suit and the latter’s intervention, and they have both appealed. We might state here also that the defendant Lamont P. Golson had reconvened, praying for damages against the plaintiff in the sum of $13.50 for damages to his automobile and that that demand was also rejected in the lower court. No appeal was taken from that part of the judgment, arid the claim apparently has been abandoned.

In his petition plaintiff charges negligence on the part of Mrs. Golson (1) in respect to her violation of a city ordinance of the city of Baton Rouge by having executed a left-hand turn in the intersection without going far enough to 'the right and beyond the center thereof, which violation, it is contended, constituted the proximate cause of the accident; (2) in failing to- keep a proper lookout for traffic; (3) in turning her automobile directly to the left in face of the approaching motorcycle at the moment when she-ought to have seen it; and (4) in the alternative, if she was looking and saw the motorcycle, then in making the left-hand turn directly into it.

The defendants deny the various charges of negligence made against Mrs. Golson and that she was at fault whatever, and aver on the contrary that it was plaintiff who was negligent in driving his motorcycle without lights after dark, and immediately behind an automobile where it was impossible for her to have seen him. They aver also that she gave the proper and necessary signals incidental to making a left-hand turn into the intersection, but that, as plaintiff was not keeping a proper lookout, he failed to observe her about to make the turn and negligently ran his motorcycle into the front of the automobile. His negligence, they aver, was the sole and proximate cause of the accident. In the alternative, they pleaded that, even though Mrs. Golson be held to have been negligent, plaintiff’s own negligence, as set out by them, contributed to the accident and therefore he cannot recover. With regard to the demand made against Mr. Golson as head and master of the community, it is denied that the community is liable at all, as at the moment of the accident Mrs. Golson was not engaged on a mission which involved the community in any way whatsoever.

North street in Baton Rouge runs east and west and North Twelfth street, north and south. North Twelfth street enters North street on the south and stops there. North street, according to measurement placed on a map made by E. A. Navis, civil engineer, and filed in evidence, is 29 feet 3 inches from curb to curb and North Twelfth street, 26 feet 11 inches wide.

Mrs. Golson had spent a part of the afternoon with a friend of hers, Mrs. C. W. Damiano. Together they had attended a style show in one of the large department stores in Baton Rouge. After the show, Mrs. Golson drove Mrs. Damiano to her home, which is east of the intersection of North Twelfth street. After letting her out, she turned her car around and came back down on North street, driving west, with the intention of turning south into North Twelfth street as she reached the intersection.

The plaintiff, C. L. Adams, was riding his motorcycle on North street, headed east. As he was nearing North Twelfth street, he was following a truck at a distance which he estimates to have been about 35 feet. The relative speed at which each was going does not enter into consideration as an element of negligence on the part of either party, and responsibility for the accident rests on the negligence vel non on the part of Mrs. Golson in making the left-hand turn in violation of the city ordinance and of the ordinary driving regulations, or on the alleged negligence of the plaintiff Adams in driving after dark without lights *405 and failing to keep a proper lookout, or, again, on the combined negligence of both.

The learned district judge assigned no written reasons for judgment, but apparently he ' found that both parties were negligent, as he rejected the reconventional demand against the plaintiff as well as latter’s demand against the defendants. Our consideration of the evidence leads to a different conclusion, as we are unable to find negligence on the part of the plaintiff.

The preponderance of the testimony shows that it was the automobile that ran into the motorcycle and that the impact took place at a point 8 to 10 feet from the southeast corner of the intersection. With those two points of proof established, the conclusion follows that Mrs. Golson started to make her left-hand turn into the street several feet before reaching the center of the intersection, and at a time when the motorcycle was well past that point. This was in direct violation of the provisions of the city ordinance of the city of Baton Rouge and also of the plain and ordinary rules of safe driving in attempting to execute such a dangerous maneuver. To use the expression which is commonly applied to such an act, she was “cutting the corner" in front of the motorcycle which had already pre-empted the right of way. Such an act on the part of the driver of an automobile in some cases constitutes gross negligence. The following we quote from Bab-bit’s Motor Vehicle Law (4th Ed.) p.

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Blanchard v. Ogima
215 So. 2d 902 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1968)
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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-golson-lactapp-1936.