Aguillard v. State

7 So. 2d 645
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 24, 1942
DocketNo. 2382.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 So. 2d 645 (Aguillard v. State) 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
Aguillard v. State, 7 So. 2d 645 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Kirby Aguillard, the plaintiff in this suit, was seriously injured in a collision between a bread truck which he was driving and a dray truck loaded with gravel and being driven by an inmate of the Louisiana State Penitentiary, on the morning of April 18, 1939, at a point near Tunica, in the Parish of West Feliciana, on State Highway No. 124, also known as the Angola Highway. By comparison in weight, the bread truck, as the truck plaintiff was driving will be hereafter referred to, was much lighter than the other truck which belonged to the State of Louisiana and which we will hereafter refer to as the penitentiary truck.

The topography of the surrounding country where the accident occurred indicates it is hilly and the road, which is hard-surfaced, is a winding one with some very sharp curves. Although not directly so, we will assume that the road runs east and west. The two vehicles were traveling in opposite directions, the bread truck toward the east and the penitentiary truck toward the west.

For the personal injuries which he sustained and which he claims are permanent, as well as for the pain and suffering which he endured, plaintiff is asking to recover from the State the sum of $15,000. He claims to have already incurred medical, hospital, and nursing expenses to the amount of $530.02 and that he will require medical attention in the future which will cost approximately $1,000. We note, however, that he prays for judgment against the State, which is the sole defendant, in the sum of $16,000 only.

The State is sued on the theory that it owned the truck which collided with the plaintiff's truck and which had been purchased by it for the use of the State Penitentiary, one of its agencies, and that at the time of the collision it was being driven by John Glisson, a trustee, on a mission and errand for the penitentiary. The required legislative authority to sue the State had been obtained, as appears from Act No. 357 of the Legislature of Louisiana for the year 1940.

The plaintiff alleges that just prior to, and at the moment of the accident, he was driving his truck at a reasonable rate of speed on his extreme right-hand side of the road; that he had just reached the top and was going down the grade of a small hill. He avers that the penitentiary truck was proceeding toward him on its driver's left-hand or wrong side of the road, a fact which he had no means of knowing, because of the hill which he was climbing and which obscured his vision until he had reached the crest. He alleges further that he then applied his brakes and did his best to avoid the collision, but the trucks were then too near each other and they ran head-on into each other on his right-hand side of the road. He then charges the *Page 647 driver of the penitentiary truck with negligence in the following respects: (1) In operating his truck on his left half of the highway which was his wrong side; (2) In failing to give the bread truck one-half of the main traveled portion of the highway at least 200 ft. before meeting it; (3) In failing to hold his truck under control and as reasonably near the right-hand side of the road as he should, especially while going over a hilly highway and (4) In not keeping a proper look-out ahead. All of these acts of negligence, he avers, were committed by the driver of the penitentiary truck while in the course and scope of his employment and in the performance of his duties for the Louisiana State Penitentiary, and they constituted the sole and only cause or causes of the accident and of his resulting injuries and damages, for which the defendant herein, the State of Louisiana, is responsible. He then states the nature and extent of his injuries which will later be referred to in detail.

There was first filed on behalf of the State an exception to the effect that the act by which the plaintiff claims he is authorized to prosecute his suit is a local law requiring notice thereof to be published, under Section 6 of Article 4 of the Constitution of Louisiana and as there is no allegation made in the petition that such notice had been given, the constitutional provision must have been violated and hence the State has not consented to be sued. The exception was then overruled and answer was then filed.

In its answer the State denies the acts of negligence charged against the driver of the penitentiary truck and avers that it was the truck plaintiff was driving which came over the hill on its wrong side of the road and at an excessive rate of speed. In a supplemental answer the defendant pleads, in the alternative, that in the event it should be shown that the driver of its truck was negligent in any manner as charged, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as he had full view of the road for a distance of 1,000 ft. and that when he reached the crest of the hill the penitentiary truck was still 750 ft. away from him and he therefore had ample distance and time in which to stop his truck on the right shoulder of the highway or drive it along a shallow depression to the right of that shoulder. As a further alternative the defendant pleads that the plaintiff had the last clear chance to avoid the accident.

In the lower court, after trial of the case, there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the State in the sum of $12,554.02. The State has appealed and the plaintiff has answered the appeal praying for an increase in the amount of the award to the sum originally demanded by him.

The contention made in support of the exception filed on behalf of the defendant is answered adversely in the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Lewis v. State of Louisiana,196 La. 814, 200 So. 265, 266, which like the present, was a tort action. In that case the court stated that "the waiver of immunity or exemption from suit of the sovereign State and the authorization by the Legislature of a person to sue the State is not a law within the meaning and contemplation of Article 4, Section 6 of the Constitution, and, therefore, publication of notice of the proposed introduction of the bill was unnecessary." On that authority alone, the exception in this case was correctly overruled.

Plaintiff was alone in the bread truck, and Glisson alone in the penitentiary truck. Plaintiff claims that he remembers absolutely nothing about the accident, that his mind is a perfect blank concerning what happened at the moment and also all that followed in connection therewith. Glisson, who lived in Mississippi at the time the case was tried, was not available as a witness. The record is therefore barren of the testimony of any eyewitnesses to the accident. A young negro girl named Anna Bell who was working in a field abutting the highway, saw the two trucks approaching each other from a distance and heard the crash, but says that she did not see the actual collision.

To decide the very important question relating to the point on the highway where the impact took place, we have therefore to rely almost exclusively on the physical facts consisting principally of the skid marks left by the wheels of the trucks. As near as these can determine the question, it occurred on the up-grade of the hill about 250 ft. from the crest, and over the center line of the hard-surfaced portion of the highway with regard to the direction in which the penitentiary truck was driving. *Page 648

Several witnesses testified having seen skid marks left by the tires of the penitentiary truck beginning at a point 150 ft. from the place of the impact.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bohlender v. Bayou Tours, Inc.
156 So. 2d 255 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Cook v. Dance
96 So. 2d 350 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1957)
Lewis v. State
20 So. 2d 917 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 So. 2d 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aguillard-v-state-lactapp-1942.