Adams v. Wood
This text of 285 So. 2d 870 (Adams v. Wood) 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.
Opinion
Marie Hasley ADAMS et al.
v.
J. K. WOOD et al.
NORTHLAND INSURANCE COMPANY et al.
v.
J. K. WOOD et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*871 James J. Durio, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Sam J. D'Amico, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellee Woods.
Horace C. Lane, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellee State Farm.
Before SARTAIN and TUCKER, JJ., and WATSON, J. ad hoc.
WATSON, Judge ad hoc.
This is an appeal in connection with litigation resulting from an automobile accident involving three fatalities and serious personal injuries. We agree with the trial court that the fundamental issue to be resolved is factual. The issue is: which automobile was in the wrong lane of travel at the time of the impact?
In his written reasons for judgment the trial court has stated ably the facts and the conclusions of law to be deduced from them, and we will quote these with approval, excluding only that portion of the trial court's opinion which we do not find necessary to the disposition of the case:
"Plaintiffs in these consolidated cases seek recovery for losses sustained resulting from an automobile accident which occurred on March 15, 1969, on U. S. Highway 61, approximately 2.4 miles north of the intersection with Louisiana Highway 10, near St. Francisville, Louisiana.
"In suit #4280, Marie H. Adams, widow of Charles E. Adams, brought suit for herself and for her five minor children, as did John and Annie Mae Adams for themselves and their children, against J. K. Wood, as parent and natural tutor of his then minor son, Alexander N. Wood, and against State Farm Mutual Insurance Company, as automobile insurer of J. K. Wood. Alexander N. Wood has since become a major and pleadings in his behalf were amended forthwith. In suit #4448, Northland Insurance Company, automobile insurer of John Adams, Jr., seeks recovery of the cost of repairs to the Adams vehicle paid for under its policy, claiming subrogation to the rights of its insured against the defendants. John Adams, Jr. desires recovery from the defendants of the $50 deductible contained in his policy with Northland Insurance.
"All plaintiffs in suits #4280 and #4448 allege negligence of Alexander N. Wood as the sole cause of the accident while defendants deny any fault on their part, insisting instead that the collision occurred because of negligence by Charles E. Adams, such negligence being imputable to all plaintiffs. J. Kenneth Wood and Alexander Wood, defendants in suit #4280, filed a reconventional demand asking relief for damages in suit #4521.
"This accident occurred just after midnight as a result of a collision between a vehicle driven by Charles Adams, traveling in a northerly direction, and a vehicle driven by Alexander N. Woods, traveling in a southerly direction, on Highway 61 near St. Francisville, Louisiana.
"The Adams vehicle was owned by John Adams, Jr. Passengers in the Adams car were: Charles Adams, the driver: John Adams, Jr., owner of the vehicle; Annie Adams, wife of John Adams; four of the minor children of John Adams, and Linda Fay James, daughter of Annie Adams.
"The Wood vehicle was occupied solely by Aleander N. Wood, the then minor son of John K. Wood.
"Three occupants of the Adams vehicle were killed as a result of the accident; namely, Charles E. Adams, Linda Fay James, and John Calvin Adams.
*872 "From the evidence and testimony it is clear that this case presents solely a question of fact, namely: which vehicle was proceeding in the wrong lane of travel? Resolution of the dispute as to location of the point of impact is determinative of the issues and liabilities here presented.
"Upon this question volumious evidence was introduced at trial in the form of testimony of witnesses, physical evidence, photographs and expert testimony.
"State police Trooper Albert Arbour was the investigating officer at the scene of the accident. By his testimony plaintiffs attempted to establish the point of impact in the northbound lane traveled by the Adams vehicle. Trooper Arbour testified that his investigation indicated that the collision point was in the northbound lane. His conclusion was based on gouge marks that he found in the northbound lane. However, he could not say exactly where or how far into the northbound lane the point of impact was. He further testified that he found gouge marks only in the northbound lane and that he attributed all of these to the Adams vehicle and not to the Wood auto.
"When Trooper Arbour arrived at the scene injured and dead were numerous, scattered over the area, and his main concern was attending to their needs. Darkness of the midnight hour further burdened and hampered the performance of his investigation. Trooper Arbour established that Highway 61 at the accident scene is a two-lane asphalt-surfaced road marked by five painted lines: one solid white line edging each side of the shoulder of the highway; one broken white line splitting the highway down the center flanked by two solid yellow lines indicating a no-passing zone.
"Passengers of the Adams vehicle testified for the plaintiffs that their auto was moving to the right before the accident to avoid hitting the Wood auto and was at least partially onto the right-side shoulder of the northbound lane at the moment of impact.
"The principal witness for the defendants, Wood, et al., as to the point of collision was Alvin Doyle, Jr., a widely recognized expert in the field of automobile accident investigation. Mr. Doyle spent six days investigating the accident, employing the services of various assistants including those of Victor Blanchard, an expert chemist. Mr. Doyle's conclusion was that the point of collision was in the southbound lane traveled by the Wood auto and not the northbound lane as Trooper Arbour had concluded. Mr. Doyle's findings were based on extensive, detailed investigations and scientific tests. He discovered gouge marks in the southbound lane that went unnoticed by Trooper Arbour. His findings and corroborative testimony and physical evidence left no doubt that the gouge marks in the southbound lane were made by the Adams vehicle. Paint samples, asphalt samples, comparisons of size of gouge marks to size of the frames of the two cars involved (the two inch square-cut gouge mark in the southbound lane matched perfectly the two inch frame of the Adams auto but not the three and three-fourth inch frame of the Wood auto), and other evidence including extensive photographs all strongly support his conclusion of impact in the southbound lane.
"The gouge marks in the southbound lane were shown to start six inches west of the broken white center line. Testimony by Mr. Doyle established that the frame member making these gouge marks was 17 inches inward from the left side of the Adams vehicle, thereby placing the Adams vehicle a minimum 23 inches into the southbound lane rightly occupied by the Wood auto. There was a ten inch overlap between the two vehicles when they collided left-front to left-front. Thus, the Wood vehicle was at least thirteen inches into his southbound lane and thirteen inches away from the center line. Mr. Doyle felt that the 23 inches was a minimum because the *873 force of collision quite probably knocked the Adams auto to the right toward the center line and this seems especially logical in view of the testimony of plaintiffs' own witnesses, in suits #4280 and #4448, that the Adams vehicle was pulling to the right at the moment of impact.
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285 So. 2d 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-wood-lactapp-1973.