Allen v. Louisiana Creamery, Inc.

184 So. 395
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1938
DocketNo. 1904.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 184 So. 395 (Allen v. Louisiana Creamery, Inc.) 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
Allen v. Louisiana Creamery, Inc., 184 So. 395 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

The plaintiff as the father of his five year old child, Carolyn Allen, sues the Louisiana Creamery, Inc., its insurance carrier, The New Amsterdam Casualty Company, and James R. Hooper, the driver of a milk truck for the creamery company, for injuries received by the little Allen girl on April 2, 1937, when the child was struck and run over by a car driven by Mrs. J. R. Langlois on Jackson Avenue in the City of Baton Rouge. The amount claimed by the father in his own behalf is for expenses incurred by him in treating the child totaling $410.26,'and the sum,of $18,250 for the injuries suffered by the child. Judgment was rendered in favor of the father in his individual capacity for the amount claimed, and in favor of the child in the sum of $2,500. The defendants have appealed, and plaintiff has answered the appeal and asked that the amount awarded the child be increased to the sum of $7,750.

The petition contains fifty-two articles in which all the details are set forth in showing negligence on the part of the driver of the .creamery truck as the proximate cause of the unfortunate accident. Condensed into their essential elements these acts of negligence on the part of the truck driver consisted in the fact that he parked his truck on the left side of Jackson Avenue, facing west, while he delivered some milk to a customer on that side of the avenue ; that the Allen child and a little companion came up to the parked truck to get some cracked ice as had been their custom (the Allen child living across the avenue on the north side); that when the driver came back to the truck, he put it in motion on the left side of the street when Mrs'. Langlois was approaching in front of him from the west about 100 feet away at about 15 miles per hour; that the' driver of the truck on seeing the approach of the Lang-lois car turned the truck sharply to the right; that Mrs. Langlois centered her attention on the approaching truck being driven on its left side of the road, and in order to avoid striking the truck, Mrs. Lapglois pulled her car to the left side of the avenue; that about the time the truck driver pulled the truck to the right in front of the approaching Langlois car, the little girl started across the street from the south side where she and her companion • were standing behind the truck toward the *397 northwest; that the little girl was struck by the Langlois car about 5 -feet from the north side of the avenue; that Mrs. Lang-lois did not see the child running across the street in front of her car until the child was within 3 or 4 feet of the front of'her car.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the acts of negligence on the part of. the truck driver in parking his truck on the wrong side of the street, in setting the truck in motion on that side of the street and pulling the truck toward the right in the -face of the oncoming Langlois car, created an emergency by reason of which Mrs. Langlois was forced to her left side of the' road and was compelled to center her attention on the approaching truck, and for that reason was unable to see the child as she ran from behind the truck on the south side of the avenue and attempted to -cross the street in front of the car.

Defendants deny that the truck driver was guilty of any negligence, and they allege that the accident was caused by the negligence of Mrs. Langlois and the child; and in the alternative, they allege that if the driver was guilty of any negligence in the operation of the truck, the accident was occasioned in part by the negligence of the ■child in attempting to cross the street in the path of the .Langlois car, which negligence is a bar to the right of plaintiff to recover in his own behalf and on behalf of the minor child; that plaintiff was grossly negligent in leaving his minor daughter unattended on said street, which negligence is pleaded in bar of plaintiff’s right of recovery.

There is no question that the truck driver parked his milk truck on the left side ■of the street while he delivered milk to a ■customer; that when he returned to the truck the two little girls were in or on the truck and he gave them some ice as he had ■done on several previous occasions, and the children then got down on the side of the truck.

According to Hooper, he started the motor of the truck and moved up about one-half the length of the. truck when the Allen child started around the front of the truck (which was sufficient to put him on guard that the child intended to cross the street to her home) ; Hooper stopped, the truck, and the child went to the rear of the truck and stood on a bridge across a driveway with the other little girl. He then started up his truck again slowly and saw the Langlois car coming about 100 feet away; he drove along the left side of. the street not over 10 or 12 miles per hour, and did not pull his truck to the right before he passed Mrs. Langlois; he passed Mrs. Langlois after he had gone about 15 feet and then pulled over to the right and as he had gotten about in the middle of the street he heard the thud' caused by -the Langlois car striking the child. "The important part of his testimony is that he had started his truck in motion and was traveling slowly along the left side of the street, facing oncoming traffic, and had gone about 15 feet when he passed the Langlois car which was- slightly to the north of the center of the street.

In our opinion, the testimony of Hooper himself shows that he was guilty of negligence in violating a city ordinance prohibiting the parking of a car on the left side of the street and in driving his truck along the left side in the face of oncoming traffic. Lacy v. Lucky et al., 19 La.App. 743, 140 So. 857.

The serious question in the case is whether or not this negligence was- a proximate cause of the accident — i. e., whether or not the negligence of Hooper in driving along the left side of the street facing the oncoming car of Mrs. Langlois was a material element or substantial factor in causing Mrs. Langlois to fail to see the child in time to stop her car, in causing the child to leave its place of safety and attempt to run across the street behind the truck and in causing Mrs. Langlois to be on her wrong side of the street at the point of the accident- — all to the knowledge of Hooper, who knew that the child intended to cross the street, and who must have had a mental picture thereof. No general rule can be formulated as to when an .act or series of acts.may be said to be the proximate cause of an accident. Each case must depend on its own peculiar facts and circumstances.

The proximate cause is the efficient cause — the cause that sets other acts in motion that produce the accident without an intervening and independent agency. If the only negligence of which Hooper was guilty was the illegal parking of his truck on the left side of the street, and the child had run suddenly from behind the truck into the path of the oncoming Langlois car, such negligent parking alone would not in such a case be the proximate cause of the accident, as it is obvious that the *398 child could just as well run from in front of the truck parked the proper way, and suddenly rush in front of the oncoming car.

This very point is discussed in Section 2532, page 344, Blashfield Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Permanent Ed., vol. 4, the last paragraph of this section reading as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-louisiana-creamery-inc-lactapp-1938.